travis3000
Active Member
Another 200m building lost what's with all these height downgrades ?
Another 200m building lost what's with all these height downgrades ?
The policy identifies the area around the intersection of Yonge and Bloor as a ”height peak” where the tallest buildings would be located. The tallest approved building at Yonge Street and Bloor Street is at 78-storeys. The area adjacent to this height peak is identified as a “height ridge” with building heights gradually descend away from the Yonge Bloor intersection along the height ridge. The site is located in the height ridge, immediately east of the height peak. The proposed height of 55-storeys is less than the 56-story height of the CASA 2 building and maintains the intent of the area policies within the “height ridge”.
From page 15:
Right, and proposals in those other areas will all be subject to the same approvals process too. I'm not sure what the issue is.
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There is a huge inventory of land in this city to accommodate new population, the largest block of which is in the Port Lands, but it's also spread out across the city in wasted space in 60s-70s-80s tower-in-the-park style apartment complexes, it's along the Avenues where there are now 2-storey buildings and the City wants 8 storeys, it's in former industrial lots along the railways where redevelopment will bring new housing along with white collar jobspace, etc.
We are nowhere near a point where you can push down on one building and see the demand pop up in another identifiable spot, and it will take many decades to get to the point where that's true if ever.
Every building will still be evaluated against a set of criteria that the Planning Department sets out. The criteria change a little bit from time to time, but they are written so as to make the buildings work well within the neighbourhood context, one which will be invariably changed a bit by the building itself. There is consideration given to the province's Places To Grow act—that's why building proposals are so much taller now than they were just a handful of years ago—but there's no real worry about the supposed damage that will be done to some other area of town by—in this case—the lopping off of five floors of a proposal on Charles Street.
Remember the Ford twins' early crazy proposal to build a giant mall with ferris wheel in the Port Lands? They eventually let that go when Waterfront Toronto agreed to "speed up development of the Port Lands". That was all bluster on the part of WT because the truth is that the market will take care of the Port Lands. While plans are being made for that area, there is no development down there yet and there won't be for a while either; demand has not crept that far east yet, and when it does in the next half-dozen years or so, you'll find that the Port Lands will take between 3 and 5 decades to build out as they are that big.
The way to keep the lid on sprawl is to keep the Greenbelt intact. The Regressive Conservatives would be disassembling it now had they won a majority, but as we have avoided that nightmare scenario, we just have to be on the lookout for developers and 905 municipalities looking to thwart it in ways.
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Wow you're right a lot of office space ... supringing given the location really ..