HousingNowTO
Senior Member
"Estimated Construction Start: July 2026"
(end-date : Q1-2028, which seems very long for a MASS-TIMBER building at only 94-units).
SOURCE - https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2026.RA24.2
SPA is in to the AIC.
No change in height, or architects............
But if the docs are to be be believed, 20 housing units have disappeared, with this dropping from 94 to 74. If so, I assume there's been an increase in family units..
From the Project Data Sheet:
View attachment 728160
Stats. (From the Arch. Drawings)
View attachment 728161
View attachment 728164
Ground Floor Plan (Orange is retail, and fronts Dundas)
View attachment 728169
Noting, for the record - that Brook Mcllroy who did the 2023 conceptual plan for this site is now no longer in business as of April 2026 -
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Last week, Brook McIlroy closed its doors after more than 25 years. It was an unexpected and difficult moment, and one that marks the end of a firm that contributed so meaningfully to the built… | Luke Mollet | 16 comments
Last week, Brook McIlroy closed its doors after more than 25 years. It was an unexpected and difficult moment, and one that marks the end of a firm that contributed so meaningfully to the built environment and to so many communities. I'm incredibly grateful to have been a part of such a fun...www.linkedin.com
Comparison of 2026 numbers to the "Demonstration Plan" stats from CreateTO in March 2023 -
TOTAL GFA (2023) = 7,730 m2
TOTAL GFA (2026) = 6,279 m2
Unit Mix (2023)
Studio = 18
1-Bedroom = 56
2-Bedroom = 15
3-Bedroom = 5
Unit Mix (2026)
Studio = 0
1-Bedroom = 42
2-Bedroom = 25
3-Bedroom = 7
Revised 2026 plan cuts away 32-units of Studio & 1-Bedroom apartments, and converts them into adding 12 x more 2-Bedroom / 3-Bedroom apartments, also it looks like they are also bumping-up the average sq. ft size of all of the apartments, with even the smallest units being 600+ sq ft...?
The City and CreateTO may already have a specific operator in mind for this project where those unit-mix choices make sense, but I can't see how they will help the overall delivery of 'affordable rents' on this site -- or any options for 'deeply affordable' on any of the units..?
As a simple example of 'strange choices', does a tiny 'Affordable Rental' project like this really need a stand-alone mini-gym on-site when your priority is supposed to be trying to deliver affordable rental housing on these surplus lands, when you have a full City recreation centre and pool on Crawford Street a 6-minute walk away..?
...for now...This is going to be highly visible as most of the West End is much lower.
I do hate it. Sterile, dark, sad. Could they not have made the massing red, for God’s sake?Don't completely hate it but this gives off more of a university institutional vibe. A bit more stoic than what I've prefer to see at Dundas & Ossington.
Continuing my multi-thread diatribe against Toronto architects’ obsession with asymmetry (I’m clearly in a bad mood lol):SPA is in to the AIC.
No change in height, or architects............
But if the docs are to be be believed, 20 housing units have disappeared, with this dropping from 94 to 74. If so, I assume there's been an increase in family units..
From the Project Data Sheet:
View attachment 728160
Stats. (From the Arch. Drawings)
View attachment 728161
View attachment 728164
Ground Floor Plan (Orange is retail, and fronts Dundas)
View attachment 728169
Oh....and you thought I forgot.............. Current Renders:
View attachment 728170
View attachment 728171
View attachment 728172
View attachment 728173
View attachment 728175
Continuing my multi-thread diatribe against Toronto architects’ obsession with asymmetry (I’m clearly in a bad mood lol):
****
Does this seemingly random sequence actually serve a purpose? Is there some legitimate technical design reason for doing it this way?
If I were the project proponent, I’d immediately regularize the building layout. That means only one type of window with uniform width, evenly spaced out across the massing. I’d also make the building more box-like, funny enough — I’d eliminate the weird offset seen in the second photo causing the upper portion to look like two cubes fused together.
Whatever meagre savings these changes create would go straight into procuring red cladding (which, judging by most recent Toronto projects, has a huge markup over saturated gloomy colours at the cladding store). And if I’m feeling risqué, I’d add a little visual interest to the ground floor (perhaps incorporating a simple, cheap, mass-producable motif inserted between the ground and second floors, adding texture and delineating the different uses — see 1071 King West or INDX condos for nice examples of that).
..... . Would love to hear people’s thoughts on this.