Undead
Senior Member
From a community newsletter:
A conceptual site plan has been submitted to demonstrate how the site will develop with future site plan applications (see Figure 8). The owner is proposing to develop a residential and commercial community with six buildings, 1,668 apartment units, 1,891 m2 (20,355 ft2 ) of non-residential gross floor area (GFA), 1,976 parking spaces, and an overall floor space index (FSI) of 6.2. The site is proposed to be developed in three stages starting from from Langstaff Road westwards:
Stage A: 49 and 11 storey buildings with 736 units and 885 m2 (9,526 ft2 ) of retail
Stage B: 41 and 7 storey buildings with 548 units and 365 m2 (3,929 ft2 ) of retail
Stage C: 12 and 7 storey buildings with 384 units and 641 m2 (6,900 ft2 ) of retail
Another 9-12,000 jobs planned here, although that just sounds like it was copy pasted from the High Tech proposal (same for the unit count).
5 hectares of open space.
From tonight's public presentation:
50-75 storeys:
View attachment 369192
The IBI is calling this design iconic...
I'm blown away by the scale proposed. Between this and High Tech, this could become the largest condo farm in Toronto.
Langstaff Gateway was originally 15,000 units when I started following development a few years ago; and I estimated the land north of the 407 could host another 7,000.
This is almost double.
Something tells me that this increase in scope is them trying to offset the costs of the subway. If they want stations like Royal Orchard to get built, they need to try and pack in as many units as they can to squeeze out as much developer money to justify the rapidly increasing cost.I happen to think this is excessive.
It strikes me as odd to put so much density, at height, so far above the region's water supply. That drinking water comes all the way from the Lake, and it's pumped up hill.
I get that with the subway expansion, that horse left the proverbial barn awhile back.........
But even then....80 storeys.....
I happen to think this is excessive.
It strikes me as odd to put so much density, at height, so far above the region's water supply. That drinking water comes all the way from the Lake, and it's pumped up hill.
Something tells me that this increase in scope is them trying to offset the costs of the subway. If they want stations like Royal Orchard to get built, they need to try and pack in as many units as they can to squeeze out as much developer money to justify the rapidly increasing cost.
Apparently GTA residents will not be playing outdoor sports in the future..............
If a community of this size can't get one park large enough to offer a soccer pitch...........sheesh.
EDIT:just to add that based on the maps, this is barely more than half of Langstaff we're talking about so this is likely a lot more than double, when all is said and done. Not sure what area north of the 407 you were looking at but it's probably more than double there too.I'm blown away by the scale proposed. Between this and High Tech, this could become the largest condo farm in Toronto.
Langstaff Gateway was originally 15,000 units when I started following development a few years ago; and I estimated the land north of the 407 could host another 7,000.
This is almost double.
Context?