I'm sure the committee would be interested to know that the highly successful deep water heating and cooling corporation that was created in the city of Toronto, which presently is overwhelmed with people who want to be part of it, was under my administration in Toronto. But that's not what I wanted to say.
On the heels of that last question—and Mr. Allen was trying to get a sense of the scope and how a municipality would approach a redevelopment—let's use a hypothetical one. This would be a large redevelopment in an urban context, where there are many interests. There are social housing interests; there are transportation and transit interests; there are arenas in an area around probably a 100-acre redevelopment site. In order for it to be phased, many of these opportunities for an integrated energy approach are there. They're not all going to be achieved at once; they're not going to be achieved by one program.
Is Dockside Green the best example you have of that scale of development with those kinds of opportunities, or are there other developments in the national experience that exist out there?