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Zoning Reform Ideas

Mississauga city staff are recommending that the city relax its angular plane policy, and also reduce the amenity space requirements for apartment buildings.

Mississauga city council are set to consider the staff's report on February 23rd.

Here is a diagram from the report on the changes to the angular plane rule for apartments in urban areas.

View attachment 715216
For the amenity space requirements, staff are not recommending abolishing the requirements, but rather reducing them, to 3.0 m2 per unit. Currently, Mississauga has two classes of apartment zonings. Regular apartments have to provide an area equivalent to either 10% of the site area or 5.6 m2 per unit, depending on which is greater. Apartments in designated urban growth areas have to provide 4.5 m2 of amenity space per unit. Both classes of apartments will now have the same 3.0 m2 per dwelling requirement.

Existing apartments will be able to apply to the Committee of Adjustment if they wish to convert some of their amenity space to other uses.

Other proposed changes include reducing the minimum separation required between towers to 25 metres from 30 metres, and reducing the amount of glass required for street level commercial uses to 40% of the street frontage from 50%.

This report is intended to be the first in a series of reviews of Mississauga's planning guidelines.
This was approved by city council yesterday. You can find the presentation and debate at the 1 hour 18 minute 30 second mark of the video recording.

There is one thing I realized from watching yesterday's meeting that I should clarify. The Mississauga city centre area already has no amenity space requirements. The current 5.6 m2 or 4.5 m2 requirements, which are to be replaced by the 3.0 m2 requirement, are for areas outside the city centre. Mississauga already doesn't require amenity space in the city centre.

Also of note, in the staff presentation, they noted that one of the reasons for retaining the 3.0 m2 requirement outside the city centre is that ACORN, a housing activist group, requested it. ACORN was apparently concerned that without amenity space, tenants would not have a place to meet and organize.

In addition, Mayor Carolyn Parrish claimed the minister was pushing the city to review development charges, utility work required for development, and the city's building code. She mentioned the requirements for stairwells sizes as one thing which had come up.
 
Am I to understand that this motion essentially expires on November 13th of this year and fees are then restored?
Technically, I think the fees would not be restored fully until 6 months after November 13th, which would be May 13th, 2027. I have no special knowledge though beyond what is in the motion.

I think the existing 3-bedroom fee waiver for purpose built rentals also sunsets after November 13th. The 50% reduction in development fees passed last year, which applies to all residential developments, not just rental units, also ends on that same date.

For reference, here is the original motion passed by Mississauga city council in January 2025.
Mississauga city council, in a further motion today, extended the development charge tax breaks until Dec. 2027. Developers had apparently told multiple councillors that November 2026 was too tight of a deadline.

My read of this motion is that the fees will now not be fully restored until mid-2028. The discussion begins at the 2 hour 50 minute 43 second mark of the video recording.
 
Where are we in regards to single-stair regulation reform? On anyone’s radar or status quo?

Going nowhere.

You can read up on things here:


Brandon Donnelly discussed this last October, and you can see the practical example of someone who tried to get approval for one.


So again, not happening, for now, anyway.
 
Going nowhere.

You can read up on things here:


Brandon Donnelly discussed this last October, and you can see the practical example of someone who tried to get approval for one.


So again, not happening, for now, anyway.

I believe a permit was recently issued to a Toronto developer for single stair. I'll have to go back through X to find the post, but it was a week or so ago.
 
157-159 Delaware Ave.

Thank you.

Looked this one up.

A few notes.

1) The Building Permit Status page still shows these as under review, not issued. Though the proponent's team do state that have approval for the single-stair option.

2) I wanted to see the plans for this one. No mean feat, I can't find an application in Community Planning or in C of A......
But I am not so easily defeated.

Here's a project page from the design team:


From the above:

1773419689479.png


1773419784328.png

1773419805476.png


There are additional renders if you follow the link.

Site as it is now:

1773419936231.png


Comments: I'm satisfied, on balance, that the alternative safety measures here are sufficient and reasonable, and good units will be constructed.

However, I'll be interested to see how the units are priced out in the end, as when I crunch the numbers based on what I'm seeing, I don't think this housing will be more affordable than the median, and indeed, I strongly suspect that the larger units here will be as or more expensive than renting one side of the duplex would have been.

I'd be pleased enough to be proven wrong on that.

I'm actually not enthused about including an elevator here, which also drives up costs, because the suggestion that this makes non-ground units accessible when in fact any maintenance/repair/breakdowns would render the tenants de facto locked in or locked out of their space if they require the elevator.

So I'm fine w/it overall, but w/the proviso, that in the end, I'm not sure it achieves anything. Lets see.
 
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