Undead
Senior Member
I will also point out that this area already has 2.5 and 3 storey apartment buildings which blend in perfectly well with the surrounding 2 storey detached houses. The height objections here are ridiculous.
I will also point out that this area already has 2.5 and 3 storey apartment buildings which blend in perfectly well with the surrounding 2 storey detached houses. The height objections here are ridiculous.
It is not a pivot. Both things happen to be true at once, even though this might be uncomfortable for you to face. Do you care to know the status of and the future planning for the renters they are evicting or are you just interested in trolling? Check the City of Toronto submissions to the Committee of Adjustment. The answer is currently, that Haven Developments are refusing to work with the City of Toronto to create assistance plans for any of the current renters. When a project is an equal offender to all, owners and renters alike, that is saying something. It speaks volumes about the character of the people involved, and the question becomes, why should these particular people be given an exception to the Official City Plan which has been put forth for the benefit of all Torontonians. Is the equation just that arrogance, greed and bullying win the day?Interesting pivot from property values to "affordable housing". I can't *wait* to see someone coming forward to build more affordable housing in this neighbourhood then, if that's what this was about! Time to invite TCHC to have a chat.
AoD
I believe you will find the height objections are directly related to the fact they are ALSO proposing to build right back to the property line and that the extra height will further impinge on the privacy of the neighbours. If the depth footprint of the project mirrored that of the condo next door, this objection would become a non-issue.I will also point out that this area already has 2.5 and 3 storey apartment buildings which blend in perfectly well with the surrounding 2 storey detached houses. The height objections here are ridiculous.
Yes, you are correct, Haven is not compelled by legislation. But does everything we do to do the right thing in life have to be compelled by legislation? When Haven stands to make the profit they will make off this property? They won't even fill out paperwork to assist with relocating the tenants. Really? Good folk obviously.The threshold for SIPA to enforce rental replacement / assistance measures is 6 units and up. As this is 5 units, folks are kind of SOL. Legislation can't compel Haven to do anything if they don't want to.
My folks live on Lonsdale and their backyard borders one of the 3.5 storey apartments on Oriole Gardens. 'Privacy objections' are absolute horseshit. Everyone lives happily together there, as they will here.
and the bigger point being it's highly unlikely for property values in this area to fall because of a tiny little infill apartment building LMAOA 20% reduction in value on a 4.5 million dollar house
Your argument is both specious and disingenuous, as you do not really care about greed. Only one entity that stands to make a minimum of 5 million dollars on real estate in this half-block: Haven Developments. But that is not enough for them. No, they want to make 10 million by obtaining approvals to build to the back property line in defiance of the City's Official plan recreating construction standards enforce 40 years ago. Not one of the individual-owned freehold properties as valuable as they are would come anywhere near making this kind of profit if they were sold today. No one stands to benefit excessively from the sale of property in this area but Haven Developments.I'm a little concerned about the double standard you're setting when it comes to the topic of greed. On one hand, you find Haven's need to keep the project in the black as an overreach, one driven by profit and greed, while also arguing that nobody in the area should have to endure any loss of property value. Are you and the neighbours not motivated by greed here? Greed for home and land values? Greed for the desire to control the space beyond your property lines? Houses in the area go for upwards of 2.5 million dollars, with a nearby listing going for 4.5 A 20% reduction in value on a 4.5 million dollar house means it is now a 3.6 million dollar house. Is 3.6 million (I repeat, MILLION) dollars not enough? Sounds tone deaf and privileged to me considering this is more cash than many torontonians could ever hope to have tied to their name in their entire lives.
On the topic of trees - developers are often very willing to negotiate when it comes to landscaping. The city tends to prefer the planting of native species, and our forum tree aficionado Northern Light would surely be happy to recommend some species you could cite as ideal replacement specimens during discussions with the developer.
But if I'm being real frank - lets not pretend like none of the surrounding homeowners can't afford to hire landscapers to help plant new privacy trees and shrubs along the perimeters of their yards. You can do a lot for the biodiversity of an area on your own property without overreaching onto others.
There are lots of things in this city worth being bothered about - this project, it aint' it.
An application by Haven Developments to take two single-family homes in Toronto’s Deer Park neighbourhood and convert them into a 12-unit condo building highlights all the legal and political forces that wage war over building even a single new apartment in Canada’s largest city.
“We’re replacing two households with 12, and this is a very large piece of land for two homes,” said architect Roland Rom Colthoff, of RAW Design, who is doing the plans for the proposal for 101-103 Heath St. “We started working on this in 2018; we’re three years into the process and it is still nowhere. I have much larger buildings that sailed through approvals. And you wonder why we have a housing crisis.”
The project is typical missing middle typology: neither a six- to 12 storey mid-rise, nor a single-family dwelling. It is three-storeys tall with a parking garage and it’s in a neighbourhood that has other apartment buildings of the same scale literally across the street. All that is required to build is some minor variance approvals from Toronto’s Committee of Adjustment (COA) on setbacks and a solution for some mature trees that straddle the neighbouring lots.
The project came up for a vote at Toronto’s Committee of Adjustment in July, but a decision was deferred until December. Toronto-St. Paul’s Councillor Josh Matlow does not have a vote on the COA and will not have a vote at council on the development because unlike the typical high-rise building the project does not require by-law changes to go ahead. Nevertheless, he says he did urge the committee to defer a decision in order to arrange for a community meeting between Haven and the neighbours in hopes of forging a dialogue on compromise.
“All the neighbours around the site are objecting to the project, it really does intrude into their properties,” said Cathie MacDonald, the president of the Deer Park Residents Group, and herself an architect and former city planner. At issue is the building’s depth, and nearness to the backyards of multi-million-dollar homes on Deer Park Crescent. The concerns of privacy have led to suggestions that all the second floor windows be frosted glass, that they be smaller, and that there be no walkways along the fence-line (for fear of noise from partying). So far, the attempts at dialogue do not seem to have worked. “We saw some new drawings and it didn’t seem to be changed much. … I think as far as I know it’s all opposition. I haven’t heard of anybody saying they support it,” Ms. MacDonald said.
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Paolo Abate, Haven’s chief executive, said he has had nothing but constructive communications with city planning, but blames the politics of NIMBYism on the delays on this new, much smaller, project.
“Housing of this nature should not take the same timeline for a condo that’s 200-units plus,” Mr. Abate said.
Jordan M. Teperman, executive vice-president and general counsel of Haven, said Haven has collected a dozen examples of COA applications with the same sort of height and setback for single-family monster homes that were approved without delay. That said, he acknowledges these apartments will be luxury ownership units in the area, and are not designed to be a piece of the affordability puzzle.
“There’s some people who are going to want to look at this, and say this is an example of the bigger discussion in our city … to turn it into an existential discussion around the missing middle,” Mr. Matlow said. But he rejects that framing, and said he simply had concerns about Haven’s willingness to listen to the community.
“Muliti-family is absolutely not the issue, apartment buildings are permitted in the area,” said Ms. MacDonald, who noted her own grandmother had lived in one of the rental apartments on Heath that are the same size and scale as the proposed Haven building. What changed, she said, is that when those low-rise apartment buildings were constructed in the 1950s there was no restrictive zoning. “They are non-conforming now,” she said. Essentially, the city’s by-laws wouldn’t allow the mixed-income neighbourhood to be built today.
The question of what kind of change the city is willing to accept is a hot topic after recent city hall debates punted on widely studied pro-housing proposals such as legalizing and regulating rooming houses city-wide.
“If it’s simply an argument made by somebody that there can never be any change, that’s not reasonable. What I do not accept, is that only a supply of new housing is going to be the antidote to solving the affordable housing crisis,” said Mr. Matlow, who points to the boom in high-rise condo-construction that has not lowered prices, and at the same time a lack of affordable-by-design and subsidized housing construction in recent decades. “What I’m convinced of is the status quo is not sustainable.”
Mr. Matlow, who according to recent report by Acorn Canada is among the Toronto councillors who have accepted the least amount of money in political donations from the development industry, says he’s waiting to see the study on the missing middle from Toronto chief planner Gregg Lintern before he comes down on whether single-family zoning areas of the city – the two-thirds of the residential land referred to as the Yellowbelt – need to be rezoned to allow for more types of duplexes, triplexes or multi-storey apartments like on Heath.