Monthly Archives: March 2011

Demolition starts at Nicholas condo site

15 St Mary Street site for Nicholas Residences

April 1 2011: 15 St Mary Street site for Nicholas Residences viewed from St Nicholas Street. The interior of the building’s first floor has been completely gutted as site demolition gets underway.

 

Nicholas Residences condo tower

Crews have begun preparing 15 St Mary Street for demolition. The brick building, seen here on Thursday, occupies part of the site on which the 35-storey Nicholas Residences will be built at the corner of St Mary and St Nicholas Streets

 

Nicholas Residences condo site at 15 St Mary Street

A view Thursday afternoon of the north and west sides of 15 St Mary Street, where work crews have begun demolishing the building interior.

 

It’s going: Construction has begun on Nicholas Residences, a controversial highrise condo building that will tower above a quiet tree-shaded side street in the bustling Yonge & Bloor area. Work crews have fenced off the north side of 15 St Mary Street and parked a giant red dumpster outside the building as they begin gutting the interior of what was once Regis College, the Jesuit Graduate Faculty of Theology at the University of Toronto.

The two-storey brown brick building sits at the southeast corner of St Mary and St Nicholas Streets, directly behind the Church of Scientology Toronto building on Yonge Street. 15 St Mary is one of three buildings that will be demolished to make way for the condo tower; the other is a three-storey brick building at 65 – 67 St Nicholas Street, while the third structure to be torn down sits behind those two buildings, at the rear of commercial buildings which front onto Yonge Street. The brick facade for 65 – 67 St Nicholas will be reconstructed and incorporated into the podium for the new condo tower.

Although project developers Urban Capital and Alit Developments, along with people who have purchased condos at Nicholas Residences, must be thrilled that construction has finally commenced, numerous neighbourhood residents will be tremendously disappointed to see the work begin. They had staunchly opposed the development, which originally proposed a 44-storey peanut-shaped building for the site, and launched a strident “Save St. Nick” campaign to oppose plans for development on the cobblestone St Nicholas Street, home to a row of Victorian cottages dating from the 1880s. 

In an August 6 2008 preliminary report, city planners identified numerous issues and concerns with the development proposal, including its height, density, its relationship to the streetscape and its impact upon “the overall character of St Nicholas Street.” The developers revised their plans, proposing in part to reduce the tower’s height to 29 storeys and to retain the facade of 65 – 67 St Nicholas Street, a mill building dating to the 1880s, by incorporating it into the condo building.  Details and building renderings, some of which I’ve posted below, are outlined in a 15 St Mary Street Development Application report on the City of Toronto website.

In a September 24 2009 report, city planning staff recommended a 29-storey condo be approved on certain conditions, including payment of $685,000 toward capital improvements to nearby Queen’s Park along with streetscape improvements to St Mary and St Nicholas Streets. Toronto and East York Community Council adopted the report at their meeting on October 13 2009; their decision was reported in an October 14 2009 article in the Globe and Mail. The rezoning application subsequently was approved at the October 26 2009 meeting of Toronto City Council. But that didn’t end conflict between the local community and the condo developers.

Although the developers had agreed to lop 15 floors off their initial tower proposal and settle for building a 29-storey condo instead, residents were enraged when they learned that a potential buyer had been offered a unit on the 33rd floor. The developers subsequently asked City Hall to enact a minor variance to the bylaw that had been passed to permit construction of the 29-floor tower — they wanted permission to add another six storeys to Nicholas Residences. When the city’s Committee of Adjustment unanimously refused, the developers appealed to the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB). 

The Save St Nick group hired lawyers to oppose the developers at the OMB hearing; however, the developers, the City and the residents’ organization negotiated an agreement to resolve the dispute once and for all. In return for approval to build six more storeys, the developer agreed to pay $750,000 toward a community benefit project, the details of which would be worked out by the parties later. 

Below are some of the photos I’ve taken of the Nicholas Residences site, along with renderings by the project designer, Core Architects Inc., of both the original tower proposal and revised 35-storey building that will be constructed. Those illustrations appear in the project application report on the City of Toronto website.

 

Renderings of the Nicholas Residences condo tower

From the City of Toronto website, artistic renderings of the original (left) and the revised Nicholas Residences condo tower. Instead of the curvaceous Figure-8-shaped 44-floor tower initially proposed, a 35-storey condo will be built.

 

Renderings of the Nicholas Residences condo tower

Also from the City website, artistic renderings of the St Nicholas Street-level appearance of the original (left) and the revised Nicholas Residences condo tower.

 

Illustration of Nicholas Residences condo tower and entrance

From the Nicholas Residences website, artistic illustrations of the 29-storey glass-walled condo tower and its main entrance at 76 St Nicholas Street.

 

Nicholas Residences development proposal sign

The original development proposal sign posted at the condo site in 2008.

 

St Regis College at 15 St Mary Street

September 28 2008 view of 15 St Mary Street, which at the time still bore signs for its former occupant, Regis College (long since relocated to 100 Wellesley Street West). The Church of Scientology Toronto building stands to the east, at the corner of Yonge & St Mary Streets.

 

65 St Nicholas Street and the Oak cottage on St Nicholas Street

September 28 2008: 65 St Nicholas (left) and the Victoria-era Oak cottage

 

The 1880s-era planning mill at 67 St Nicholas Street

September 28 2008: Once a planing mill, the building at 67 St Nicholas Street dates from the late 1880s. Its facade will be built into the condo tower podium.

 

Save St Nick protest sign on St Nicholas Street

October 30 2008: A Save St Nick protest sign on a St Nicholas St. telephone pole

 

St Nicholas Street view of the Nicholas Residences site

October 30 2008:  St Nicholas Street view of the Nicholas Residences site

 

65 - 67 St Nicholas Street

October 30 2008: The former mill building at 65 – 67 St Nicholas was occupied by Regis College until the faculty relocated to Wellesley Street West.

 

65 - 67 St Nicholas Street

October 30 2008: Another view of the old mill building at 65 – 67 St Nicholas Street

 

15 St Mary Street Toronto

October 30 2008: West side of 15 St Mary Street

 

A Save St Nick campaign sign on St Nicholas Street

November 14 2008: A Save St Nick campaign sign on St Nicholas Street

 

A Save St Nick campaign sign on St Nicholas Street

November 14 2008: A Save St Nick campaign sign on a  St Nicholas Street lamp post. The mill building at 65 St Nicholas, along with the condo development proposal sign, can be seen across the street.

 

Nicholas Residences Sales Centre at 67 St Nicholas Street

April 19 2010: The Nicholas Residences condo sales centre at 67 St Nicholas Street

 

Nicholas Residences condo sales centre at 67 St Nicholas Street

April 19 2010:  The Nicholas Residences condo sales centre at 67 St Nicholas Street

 

15 St Mary Street site for the Nicholas Residences condo tower

January 9 2011:  Nicholas Residences development site viewed from St Mary Street just west of St Nicholas Street

 

15 St Mary Street

January 9 2011: The north side of 15 St Mary Street, where demolition work on the building interior commenced this week

 

Laneway between 15 St Mary Street and 67 St Nicholas Street

April 1 2011: A laneway between 15 St Mary Street and 67 St Nicholas Street leads to a parking and garbage area behind the buildings.

 

Parking area behind 15 St Mary Street

April 1 2011: The small parking area behind 15 St Mary Street, looking south toward the rear one-storey extension of 67 St Nicholas Street. Part of this area will be included in the Nicholas Residences development.

 

Parking area behind 15 St Mary Street

April 1 2011: The Nicholas Residences highrise will tower above these buildings which front on Yonge Street. The building at left houses a Flight Centre travel agency, while the one at right is Zelda’s restaurant (the tacky structure with the sloped roof shelters an outdoor dining terrace).


Angular cube frame draws eyes to northeast corner of Living Shangri-la Toronto hotel/condo tower site

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

The large metal frame at the Living Shangri-la Toronto construction site

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

University Avenue median view of the cube frame on  March 29 2011

 

Big white cube: Downtown Toronto has been teeming with highrise building projects all winter, but the Living Shangri-la Toronto hotel and condo tower construction site has been grabbing my attention the most.

Its location — where the University Avenue median ends as the broad boulevard tapers and veers to the southeast at Adelaide Street — certainly helps; whenever I look south on University, my eyes are instantly drawn to the site. (Once the tower reaches its full 65 storeys, it will be impossible to miss.) The various bold shades of pink on construction hoarding and on-site billboards command my attention from blocks away, too. So do the angled, creased windows gradually being installed as the tower adds floors and climbs skyward.  And, of course, there’s the Bishop’s Block of heritage row houses at the corner of Simcoe Street and Adelaide, shrouded under white protective wrapping while they are rebuilt and restored as part of the Living Shangri-la Toronto development.

Now there’s something else new and striking to see on the site — a large white cube-shaped metal frame that has been erected on the northeast corner of the property. According to floorplans for the Living Shangri-la’s luxurious amenities, this cube is where a third-floor restaurant and a fifth-floor “revitalization pool” (a feature of the building’s posh spa) will be situated. I’m anxious to see how the cube will be clad; building renderings suggest it could be a shimmering, transparent glass surface.

Meanwhile, the tower keeps climbing taller and is roughly halfway to its final 65 floors. I counted 33 storeys a few days ago, which means Living Shangri-la Toronto will soon start soaring above its neighbour, the 35-storey Boutique Condos building on the west side of Simcoe Street.

Below are more photos of the cube and tower construction progress this week, along with some other recent pictures of the building.

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: The view toward Simcoe Street from Adelaide Street West. The Living Shangri-la Toronto tower will soon overtake the height of the 35-storey Boutique Condos building on Simcoe (top left).

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Northeast view of the tower, which has reached 33 floors.

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Tower and cube construction viewed from University Ave.

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Floorplans indicate a spa pool and restaurant will occupy the distinctively-shaped structure at the northeast corner of the hotel-condo complex.

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Another northeast view of the cube

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: The condo-hotel tower and the cube add interesting angles to the University Avenue streetscape.

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Another view of the cube from the University Avenue median

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Pinks signs atop the Living Shangri-la Toronto tower reflect off the eastern glass wall of the Boutique Condos tower on Simcoe Street.

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: The upper east side of the Living Shangri-la Toronto tower

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: The top of the tower (so far), viewed from the northeast

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Tower construction viewed from the west along Adelaide Street

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 14 2011: Living Shangri-la Toronto construction viewed from a laneway between Nelson Street and Adelaide Street West, behind Boutique Condos

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Wraps on the Bishop’s Block heritage house being rebuilt

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: West side of the Living Shangri-la Toronto tower

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 14 2011: Simcoe Street view of the west side of the complex

 

Living Shangri-la Toronto hotel condo tower

March 14 2011: Simcoe Street view of the Living Shangri-la Toronto lower levels

Living Shangri-la Toronto condo hotel tower

March 29 2011: Living Shangri-la viewed from University Ave. near Dundas St.


Construction climbs to sixth floor on King St. flank of Freed’s six50 King West condo complex

Six50 King West condo construction

King Street view of Six50 King West construction on March 29 2011

 

Six50 King West condo construction

Bathurst Street view of six50’s east wing on March 29 2011

 

Two-thirds of the way up: The Six50 King West condo project already has a strong presence in the King & Bathurst area — and construction of one of its two wings hasn’t even topped off yet.

A project of Freed Developments, six50 King West actually will be two buildings in one, an L-shaped complex wrapping around the back of two brick buildings on the northeast corner of King & Bathurst Streets. The east section of the complex, a 9-storey building with frontage on King Street, is going up first, and construction has reached the sixth floor. Foundation work is still underway for the west wing, which will be a 15-storey midrise tower overlooking Bathurst Street.

The project, which is 80% sold, was designed by Toronto’s Core Architects Inc.

Below are some pics I snapped yesterday at the six50 construction site. You can see the progress that has been made since January by comparing them to photos I published in my first post about six50 King West back on January 20  2011.

 

Six50 King West condo construction

A building rendering on hoarding along King Street

 

Six50 King West condo construction

Northwest view of construction from the opposite side of King Street

 

Six50 King West condo construction

King Street wing of the six50 complex viewed from the opposite side of the street

 

Six50 King West condo construction

Northeasterly view of construction progress on six50’s King Street building

 

Six50 King West condo construction

six50 construction viewed from the intersection of King & Bathurst Streets

 

Six50 King West condo construction

Construction viewed from the west side of Bathurst Street

 

Six50 King West condo construction

The numbers on the construction elevator may read 23 and 24, but the east wing of six50 King West will rise only 9 storeys tall

 

Six50 King West condo construction

The CN Tower is still visible in this Bathurst Street view of the six50 King West construction activity. The condo building will soon block the tower from sight


Fly condo tower site ready for crane installation

fly condos construction site

The construction crane for the Fly condo tower will be mounted on this pad near the east side of the building excavation, seen here on March 29 1011

fly condos building excavation

The Fly Condos excavation, looking north from Front Street West


fly condos building excavation

The east side of the excavation pit for the Fly condo tower

 

Awaiting a crane: Looks like a construction crane will be installed on the Fly Condos building site on Front Street West near Spadina Avenue any day now. The excavation for the 24-storey glass, stone and precast tower is four levels deep on the east half of the site, and a concrete pad for the crane base has been prepared in the middle of the pit. A project of Empire Communities, Fly Condos was designed by Graziani & Corazza Architects Inc. Below is a billboard with a rendering of the Fly condo tower, followed by photos taken March 29 2011 of the excavation site.

 

Fly condos marketing billboard on front street west

Fly condos marketing billboard on Front Street West

Fly condos excavation

Ramp leading from Front Street into the Fly condos excavation

 

Fly condos excavation seen on March 29 2011

Front Street view toward the northeast corner of the Fly Condos excavation

Fly condos excavation seen on March 29 2011

A trailer at the bottom northeast corner of the pit

 

Fly condos building excavation

The ramp curves downward to the pad for the construction crane base

 

Fly condos building excavation

Southeast corner view of the excavation for the 24-storey condo tower

 

Fly condos building excavation

A view of the crane pad, near top left, and excavation equipment in the pit

 

east side of the fly condo site excavation

The excavation on the east side of the site is about four levels deep

 

fly condos building excavation

Three men make the long walk up the ramp at the end of the workday

 

fly condos building excavation

Looking west across the Fly Condos excavation


City Scene: Burano gaining on the Muranos

Burano and Murano condo towers on Bay Street

Catching up to its cousins: The Burano condo tower, left, is slowly but surely closing in on the height of the two Murano condo towers on the opposite side of Bay Street. When topped off at 48 floors, Burano will be the tallest of the bunch — Murano North is 35 storeys, while Murano South is 45. All three condo towers, seen here on March 25 2011, are projects of Lanterra Developments.

 

 

Grocery store & Ryerson University sports centre gradually taking shape inside Maple Leaf Gardens

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization project

Construction progress inside Maple Leaf Gardens on March 29 2011.


Under the big top: The enormous cavern under the big white domed roof of Maple Leaf Gardens keeps buzzing with construction activity. But there’s an awful lot of work remaining to be done before the interior of the historic hockey shrine starts looking like a grocery store and a university athletic facility. Latest word is that the Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization is scheduled for completion in December but — as is always the case with any construction project — that deadline isn’t cast in concrete and is always subject to change. In my February 2 post about the project, I mentioned what little construction progress I had been able to see when passing the Gardens while one of the construction entrance doors was open. I’ve since had a few more quick glimpses inside and today was lucky to have my camera with me when doors were opened to allow construction vehicles in and out of the building. I managed to snap a few photos which appear below, along with some other recent pics of Maple Leaf Gardens.

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

The interior arch on the west side of the hockey arena’s famous domed roof is visible above the spotlights. The new Ryerson University sports and recreation centre will occupy two floors under the dome. It will have an NHL-sized ice rink as well as a running track, basketball and volleyball courts,  a fitness centre, gym and academic space. The university facility alone is costing more than $60 million.

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

Maple Leaf Gardens interior viewed from the northeast corner of the building

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

The revitalized Maple Leaf Gardens will become home to a 70,000 square foot Loblaw grocery store at street level, with one floor of underground parking below it (partly visible at the bottom of the photo).

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

This is a typical street view of the cavernous interior of Maple Leaf Gardens — a dark, dusty space buzzing with activity as the Loblaw corporation and Ryerson University transform the Gardens into a unique multi-purpose facility.

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

A concrete pumping truck slowly backs into the Maple Leaf Gardens construction entrance on Wood Street. Earlier this winter, a hole was knocked into the wall to create an extra entrance at this location.

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

It’s a tight squeeze, but the truck manages to ease inside in less than a minute

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

February 20 2011: Windows will eventually be installed for the grocery store

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

Wide windows along the Church and Carlton Street walls of Maple Leaf Gardens will create a more pedestrian-friendly streetscape

 

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

February 20 2011: The southeast corner of Maple Leaf Gardens on Carlton Street

Maple Leaf Gardens revitalization

March 25 2011: Scaffolding above the Gardens’ Carlton Street entrance

 

Maple Leaf Gardens

March 25 2011: The boarded-up Carlton Street entrance to Maple Leaf Gardens


City Scene: 17 balconies at The 500

Balconies at The 500 condos & lofts on Sherbourne Street

Southern exposure: Rows of balconies along the south side of the condo tower at 500 Sherbourne Street, seen here on February 28 2011. Called The 500 Condos & Lofts, the 34-storey building was designed by Paul Northgrave of Northgrave Architect Inc.  in Toronto.

 

 

2nd crane installed at WC Hospital building site

Construction crane at Womens College Hospital building site

March 27 2011: With the installation of this crane at the north end of the Women’s College Hospital construction site on Saturday, there are now two cranes building a new medical facility on the east side of the hospital property

 

Construction cranes at the Women's College Hospital building site

The two construction cranes at the Women’s College Hospital building site, seen in a photo shot from Grenville Street this afternoon. The crane in the center of the picture was installed earlier this month; the other, on Saturday.

 

Two cranes in the crater: A second crane was installed yesterday at the excavation site where a new Women’s College Hospital building is under construction. It joins another crane that went up on the site earlier this month, as I reported in a March 14 post. Meanwhile, site excavation continues. Below are some photos taken Friday, showing work crews preparing the pit for the installation of the second crane. There’s also several photos of the new crane being assembled on Saturday, along with some pics from today of the crane and the excavation site.

 

Womens College Hospital excavation

March 25 2011: Grenville Street view of the Womens College Hospital excavation

 

Women's College Hospital construction site

March 25 2011: Grenville Street view of excavation activity at the Women’s College Hospital construction site

 

Womens College Hospital excavation

March 25 2011: Excavation activity at the northeast corner of the site

 

Women's College Hospital construction site

March 25 2011: Pink shed in the southwest corner of the excavation

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011: Digging deeper at the north end of the site, to prepare for installation of a second construction crane the next day

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011: The new hospital building is scheduled for completion in 2015

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011: Grosvenor Street view of excavation progress

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011:  Grosvenor Street view of the excavation, looking south

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011: A giant mound of earth still must be removed from the site

 

Women's College Hospital construction site excavation

March 25 2011: Grosvenor Street view of the east side of the construction site

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: It took the entire day on Saturday for these two portable cranes on Grosvenor Street to install a second construction crane on the Women’s College Hospital building site.

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: This crane, erected earlier this month, stands at the south end of the site, near Grenville Street. A second crane was installed at the north end of the site on Saturday

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: Part of the main platform for the second crane is hoisted into position. The new hospital facility will rise between the Burando condo tower at left and the old Women’s College building at right.

 

Construction crane installation at Women's College Hospital

March 26 2011: The crane installation started before sunrise on Saturday and continued non-stop all day until after sunset.

 

Construction crane installation at Women's College Hospital

March 27 2011: The platform is lowered into position

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: Crane segments are assembled on Grosvenor Street

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: Workers maneuver a crane segment on Grosvenor Street

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: The operator of the portable crane that lifts segments of the new construction crane into place above the hospital building site.

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: A worker waits on the partially assembled crane platform while the next piece of the construction crane is hoisted up from Grosvenor Street.

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: Waiting patiently for the next piece of crane to arrive

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital March 26 2011

March 26 2011: Another piece of the crane on its way up

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital March 26 2011

March 26 2011: A Grosvenor Street view of the two portable cranes, the partially assembled crane, and the first crane installed earlier this month.

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: Two workers position a crane segment

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital March 26 2011

March 26 2011: The big hook used to hoist the heavy crane segments into place

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital March 26 2011

March 26 2011: One of the cranes on Grosvenor Street unloads crane segments from transport trucks and moves them into position so workers can bolt them together. Another crane later lifts the assembled boom into place.

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: The partially assembled crane casts its shadow on Burano

 

Construction crane installation at Womens College Hospital

March 26 2011: One crane up, the other nearly there

 

Construction cranes

March 27 2011: The Burano Condos construction crane, left, and the crane on the south side of the Women’s College Hospital redevelopment site, right.

 

Women's College Hospital construction crane

March 27 2011: The crane at the south end of the hospital construction site

 

ounterweight of a construction crane

March 27 2011: The counterweight on the south crane


Women's College Hospital construction crane

March 27 2011: The newly-installed construction crane in late afternoon sunshine

 

Women's College Hospital construction cranes

March 27 2011: The two cranes at the Women’s College Hospital site


 

General sales starting soon for boutique condos on site of historic St Basil’s School in Yorkville

36 Hazelton condo building site

The 83-year-old St Basil’s Catholic School building, site for the 36 Hazelton luxury boutique condo project,  seen on March 24 2011…

36 Hazelton condo building site

…and on March 25, after a huge black banner was removed from the facade. The building sits on the west side of Hazelton Avenue just north of Scollard Street


Website rendering of 36 Hazelton luxury boutique condo building in Yorkville

This rendering, from the 36 Hazelton website, suggests how the luxury boutique condo complex will look once it is built on the St Basil’s schoolhouse site.

 

School’s out, condo’s coming: Exclusive VIP sales previews started last year, but a general sales presentation centre should be opening soon for 36 Hazelton, an exclusive seven-storey, 19-suite boutique condo building to be constructed on the site of the historic St Basil’s Catholic School in Yorkville. A project of Alterra Group and Zinc Developments, the 36 Hazelton development sparked considerable controversy in the Yorkville community when the proposal to redevelop the school property, a designated heritage site, was filed with the city several years ago. Area residents were alarmed by the developers’ plan to demolish most of the 83-year-old schoolhouse while retaining only its neo-Gothic facade on Hazelton Avenue. Residents worried that the height and density for the proposed 8-storey condo complex would look out of place on a street noted for its charming two- and three-storey Victorian houses. They also feared that City approval of the project would set a precedent that could endanger the Yorkville heritage district and put other historic buildings at risk of demolition and redevelopment.

In a March 2 2009 report to the Toronto and East York Community Council (TEYCC) and the Toronto Preservation Board, city planners recommended that the developer’s application to alter the St Basil’s School building be rejected. And in a March 30 2009 report to the TEYCC, planners described the development plan as “inappropriate and out of context,” and recommended that it be refused. When the developers presented a revised proposal, the TEYCC deferred consideration of the refusal report at its meeting in April 2009, and asked city planners to review the new plan. In a June 12 2009 final report to the TEYCC, planners recommended that the revised building application be approved. The TEYCC was supposed to consider that report at its June 2009 meeting; however, that meeting was cancelled after municipal employees went on strike. In July 2009, the developer filed an appeal with the Ontario Municipal Board, but the dispute got resolved when the TEYCC,  and then city council, approved the revised 7-storey project in the fall of 2009. 

With a project sales centre set to open soon, a construction start is possible later this year or early in 2012. As 36 Hazelton goes up, it should quickly become apparent if area residents were correct in claiming that the project wouldn’t be an appropriate redevelopment for the location — and, of course, if it will be too big, and look too out of place, on the leafy, quiet street. I’ve walked around the area numerous times recently, trying to get a sense of how 36 Hazelton might change the neighbourhood. Hazelton Avenue is one of my favourite downtown streets, and I’d be sorry to see its character destroyed by development. But since most of the new condo building will be set back from the street, occupying what is currently a parking lot, it’s quite possible it could fit in rather nicely, especially since it’s situated at the north end of the tony Hazelton Avenue retail strip (rather than being plunked farther down the block between semidetached two-storey brick houses). However, even if 36 Hazelton does wind up being a suitable and attractive addition to the streetscape, I really would hate to see further development of low- or midrise condos elsewhere on the avenue. Below are photos I’ve taken of the St Basil’s School and other buildings and homes in its immediate vicinity, along with condo illustrations that have appeared on the 36 Hazelton website and an illustration, from a city planning report, showing the new building’s east elevation.

 

Website illustration of 36 Hazelton condos

Website illustration of the 36 Hazelton boutique condo building

 

36 Hazelton website illustration of the St Basil's schoolhouse

36 Hazelton website illustration of the St Basil’s schoolhouse facade, which will be incorporated into the new luxury condominium complex

 

36 Hazelton condos

An illustration showing 36 Hazelton’s east elevation

 

36 Hazelton condos

January 9 2011: The St Basil’s Schoolhouse dates from 1928. Access to a large parking lot behind the building is through a laneway on the left side of the school.

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

January 9 2011: The condo site is literally only a stone’s throw away from Yorkville’s chic Hazelton Lanes shopping centre

 

36 Hazelton condos site at St Basil's School

January 9 2011: Condo marketing signs and banners on the St Basil’s School site

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

January 9 2011: Passersby examine the illustrations on the 36 Hazelton billboards

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

January 9 2011: A large banner blocks most of the schoolhouse facade from view

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

March 24 2011: The north half of St Basil’s School

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's school

March 25 2011: The banner has been removed and the full facade is visible


36 Hazelton condos

March 25 2011: A closer view of the St Basil’s School facade on Hazelton Avenue

 

36 Hazelton condo site at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: St. Basil’s School viewed from the rear parking area. The Four Seasons Toronto hotel and condo tower, visible in the background,  is under construction on Bay Street, just one block to the east.

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: Another view of the schoolhouse from the rear of the property

 

36 Hazelton condos St Basil's School parking lot

March 25 2011: The Hazelton Lanes complex sits to the immediate west of the parking lot behind the St Basil’s School building

 

36 Hazelton condos site at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: Northwest view from the parking lot behind the schoolhouse

 

36 Hazelton condo site at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: Looking north from the parking area behind the school

 

36 Hazelton condos at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: Parking lot view of the back of buildings next door to 36 Hazelton

 

36 Hazelton condos site at St Basil's School

March 25 2011: Parking lot view to the south. A walkway on the opposite side of the brick building leads from Hazelton Avenue into Hazelton Lanes

 

40 Hazelton Avenue in Yorkville

March 25 2011: Apartments at 40 Hazelton Avenue

 

40 Hazelton Avenue in Yorkville

March 25 2011: St Basil’s School and 40 Hazelton Avenue

 

40 Hazelton Avenue in Yorkville

March 25 2011: The four-storey 40 Hazelton Avenue building next door to St Basil’s School. The 36 Hazelton condos will stand three storeys higher.

44, 46 and 48 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The brick houses at 44, 46 and 48 Hazelton Avenue

 

56 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The west side of Hazelton Avenue, looking north from outside #56

 

Hazelton Avenue looking south from 52 Hazelton

March 25 2011: Looking south on Hazelton Avenue from outside #52

 

West side of Hazelton Avenue south of Scollard Street

March 25 2011: The west side of Hazelton Avenue below Scollard St.

 

 

Homes on the east side of Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: Homes on the east side of Hazelton Avenue near 36 Hazelton

 

59 57 55 and 53 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: Brick houses at 59, 57, 55 and 53 Hazelton Avenue

 

55 53 51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011:  Looking southeast toward 55, 53, 51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

 

 

51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: 51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

 

53 51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The new Four Seasons Toronto tower looms behind the houses at numbers 53, 51 and 49 Hazelton Avenue

45 43 and 41 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: Numbers 45, 43 and 41 Hazelton Avenue

 

45 43 and 41 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: Yorkville’s upscale shopping district extends north to the buildings at 4, 43 and 41 Hazelton Avenue

Toronto Heliconian Club at 35 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The Toronto Heliconian Club at 35 Hazelton Avenue

Toronto Heliconian Club at 35 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The Four Seasons tower looming behind the Heliconian Club

Toronto Heliconian Club left and 33 Hazelton  Avenue

March 25 2011: Toronto Heliconian Club and 33 Hazelton  Avenue

33 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: 33 Hazelton Avenue at the northeast corner of Scollard Street

33 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The upper levels of 33 Hazelton Avenue

33 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: The northeast corner of Scollard Street and Hazelton Avenue

33 Hazelton Avenue

March 25 2011: Another view of 33 Hazelton Avenue

33 Hazleton Avenue

March 25 2011: Hazelton Avenue view to the northeast at Scollard Street

Scollard Street looking east from Hazelton Avenue

March 24 2011: Scollard Street, looking east from Hazelton Avenue towards the two Four Seasons Toronto hotel and condo towers under construction on Bay Street between Scollard Street and Yorkville Avenue.

Museum House on Bloor tower topping off with construction of two-storey glass penthouse condo

Museum House on Bloor condo

March 24 2011: Construction workers are now focussed on building the two-storey 6,770-square-foot penthouse condo at Museum House on Bloor.

Museum House on Bloor condo tower rendering

Condo building rendering from the Museum House on Bloor project website suggests how the glass-walled penthouse will appear once construction is complete

Puttin’ up the penthouse: Museum House on Bloor is getting its crowning jewel — a sprawling two-storey, 5,618-square-foot penthouse with an 1,152-square-foot terrace.  The posh pad, now under construction, will occupy the 18th and 19th floors of the slender midrise condo  building that has been rising on the north side of Bloor Street just west of Avenue Road.  While I was watching workers assemble forms to prepare for a concrete pour on the penthouse levels this afternoon (from the street, unfortunately; I doubt they’d allow me onto the construction site), a line from the “Green Acres” TV show theme song kept repeating in my mind. I know that Eva Gabor was referring to New York City when she sang, “I just adore a penthouse view,” but I’m sure she would have enjoyed the skyline and scenery from the top of Museum House almost as much. Its expansive — and highly expensive — penthouse suite will overlook The Royal Ontario Museum and the Royal Conservatory of Music on Bloor Street, as well as tree-shaded Philosopher’s Walk, the University of Toronto campus, Queen’s Park and the provincial Legislature buildings. Views extend to the Financial District and CN Tower in the south.  But while its occupants will no doubt savour the panoramic sightlines from their glittering glass box in the sky, they might not get to enjoy it privately once the 32-storey Exhibit Residences condo tower is constructed next door. And I’m sure there will be plenty of curious people living at Exhibit who will enjoy their prime views into the Museum House penthouse just as much as the downtown skyline.  Below are pics I snapped of Museum House this afternoon. Additional photos can be viewed on my January 9 2011 post about Museum House.

Museum House on Bloor condo

Museum House on Bloor condo construction viewed from the southwest corner of Avenue Road and Bloor Street on March 24 2011. At left is the Daniel Libeskind-designed Michael Lee-Chin Crystal of the Royal Ontario Museum

Museum House on Bloor condo

The Michael Lee-Chin Crystal of the Royal Ontario Museum, left, the One Bedford condominium tower at Bloor Street and Bedford Road, center, and Museum House

Museum House on Bloor condo

Southwest view of Museum House from the Bloor Street sidewalk outside the Royal Conservatory of Music. When the Exhibit Residences condo tower is built, it will soar 32 storeys on the east (right) side of Museum House

Museum House on Bloor condo

Southwest view of Museum House from Bloor Street. I haven’t seen any renderings that show how the solid concrete west wall will be clad

Museum House on Bloor condo

The palatial two-storey penthouse is now being constructed atop the tower

Museum House on Bloor condo

Direct view of the Museum House building from the south side of Bloor Street

Museum House on Bloor condo

Upper levels of Museum House; all suites have spacious south-view terraces

Museum House on Bloor condo

Southeast view of the upper floors of Museum House

Museum House on Bloor condo

Upper east side luxury condos

Museum House on Bloor condo

Safety nets along the east side of the penthouse levels

Museum House on Bloor condo

A construction worker in a perilous position high above Bloor Street

Museum House on Bloor condo

Getting forms in place to prepare for more concrete pouring

Museum House on Bloor condo

Westerly view of Museum House from the sidewalk in front of the Royal Ontario Museum. The Exhibit Residences tower ultimately will rise where on the site of the two-storey commercial buildings next to Museum House.

 

Reference library’s new entrance taking shape

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

The frame for the Toronto Reference Library’s new entrance cube takes shape at the corner of Yonge St. and Asquith Ave. on March 24 2011

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

Steel frame installation for the library’s dramatic new glass cube entrance

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

Architectural rendering by Toronto’s Moriyama and Teshima shows how the new glass cube entrance and improvements to the building’sYonge Street facade will enhance the library’s look and streetscape presence.

 

Cube construction: External work on the Toronto Reference Library’s $34 million revitalization program has become a lot more noticeable now that the building’s new entrance is taking shape. Most of the renovation work has been hidden by hoarding for months, and progress on the library’s dramatic glass entrance cube at the corner of Yonge Street and Asquith Avenue seemed to be moving at a snail’s pace during the winter. But this week crews have been busy building the steel frame for the cube; today, Asquith was closed to vehicular traffic while a crane hoisted steel beams into place. More details about the renovations can be found in my January 17 post about the library’s renewal and expansion project. Below are photos from February and from this afternoon showing the ongoing renovation work on the Yonge Street side of the library building.

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

February 23 2011: No sign of progress yet on construction of the new entrance

Toronto reference library revitalization

February 23 2011: A three-storey glass cube entrance at this corner will be the star attraction of the library’s five-year renewal and expansion project

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

February 23 2011: Hoarding blocks views of street-level renovations to the facade, but work on the3rd-floor roof above Yonge Street is more apparent.

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

February 23 2011: Renovation activity is taking place along the full length of the narrow third-floor roof on the Reference Library’s Yonge Street facade

 

Toronto Reference Library revitalization

February 23 2011: Yorkville Avenue view of the Toronto Reference Library.

 

Toronto Reference Library entrance construction

March 24 2011: A crane lifts long steel bars being used to construct the frame for the three-storey entrance cube

 

Toronto Reference Library entrance construction

March 24 2011: The new glass entrance and windows along the Yonge Street facade will improve the building’s appearance as well as its relation to the streetscape

 

Toronto Reference Library entrance  construction

March 24 2011: Sections of the entrance cube’s frame are hoisted into place

 

Toronto Reference Library entrance construction

March 24 2011: The steel frames are lowered behind a rendering of the entrance


Trump l’oeil: Eyes on Toronto’s Trump Tower

Bay Adelaide Centre Trump Tower and 302 Bay Street

Reaching skyward: In this view from the depths of the Bay Street skyscraper canyon, the 13-storey office building at 302 Bay Street (top) appears to rise almost as tall as the still-under-construction Toronto Trump Tower, which is around 50 floors high so far and climbing steadily on its way to 60 storeys.  Originally the Trust and Guarantee Building, 302 Bay was built in 1917 but received a rooftop addition in 1929. The building now bears the Bank of Montreal name above its front entrance.  On the left is the 51-storey Bay Adelaide Centre, Trump Toronto’s neighbour on the north side of Adelaide Street, built in 2009. Part of the 68-storey Scotia Plaza tower built in 1988 is visible at right and in reflection on the south side of Bay Adelaide Centre.

The Trump Tower made the news today in a Toronto Star article that gives an “exclusive peak” inside the Trump Hotel section of the skyscraper, which received an occupancy permit from the City last Friday. The hotel is scheduled to open later this spring. The newspaper article also profiles the tower’s 42-year-old billionaire builder, Alex Shnaider, and hails his “noteworthy accomplishment” of having “built the tallest residential tower in Canada — and the second tallest building in Toronto, after the CN Tower.” Seems the Star is jumping the gun: the Trump isn’t even as tall as the Bay Adelaide Centre yet, and it’s far from “built.” Moreover, when complete, it still won’t rise as high as 72-storey First Canadian Place, so Trump will have to settle for third-highest place on the Toronto skyline. Below are some pics I’ve taken of the Toronto Trump Tower this month.

Toronto Trump Tower

March 14 2011: Adelaide Street West view of Toronto Trump Tower construction

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: Toronto Trump Tower viewed from Bay & Adelaide Streets

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: Southwest view from Bay below Adelaide Street

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: Upper-level construction viewed from the southwest

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: Nathan Phillips Square view of the Toronto Trump construction

 

Bay Adelaide Centre and Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: West view of Bay Adelaide Centre and Toronto Trump Tower

 

Toronto Trump Tower and Scotia Plaza

March 7 2011: From left are the Bay Adelaide Centre, Toronto Trump Tower, Scotia Plaza and the Bank of Nova Scotia building at 44 King Street West.

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 7 2011: Trump Tower viewed from Bay Street outside First Canadian Place

 

Toronto Trump Tower and the Bank of Nova Scotia building at 44 King Street West

March 7 2011: Toronto Trump Tower and the Bank of Nova Scotia building at 44 King Street West. The 27-storey bank building at the northeast corner of King & Bay Streets was constructed in 1951.

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 14 2011: Adelaide Street West view of Toronto Trump construction

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 14 2011: Toronto Trump Tower, Scotia Plaza and First Canadian Place

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 14 2011: When completed, the Toronto Trump Tower will stand taller than Scotia Plaza — when measured to the top of its spire. But Scotia Plaza’s roof will still be higher, as a diagram on skyscraperpage.com demonstrates.

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 14 2011: Toronto Trump Tower and Scotia Plaza

 

Scotia Plaza Toronto Trump Tower and Bay Adelaide Centre

March 22 2011: Scotia Plaza, Toronto Trump Tower and Bay Adelaide Centre

 

 Toronto Trump Tower

March 22 2011: Northeast view of the Trump Toronto from King Street West

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 22 2011: Upper-level construction viewed from the northeast

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 22 2011: King Street view of the northeast corner of the Trump Toronto

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 22 2011: Toronto Trump Tower street level view from King Street

 

Toronto Trump Tower

March 22 2011: Cement trucks at the tower’s King Street construction entrance

 

City Scenes: Snowy Bay Street building sites

Construction cranes on Bay Street Toronto

Snow day: The calendar says it’s spring, but Toronto is getting another blast of winter with 5 cm. of snow falling throughout the day today. This photo, looking north from Queen Street on another snowy day earlier this winter, shows three major building sites on Bay Street. The orange construction crane is building the Sick Kids Research & Learning Tower at Elm Street; the crane in the middle of the photo is atop the Burano condo tower between Grenville and Grosvenor Streets; and the crane at the rear of the picture, on the east side of Bay, is atop the Four Seasons Toronto hotel and condo tower.

 

Motion apartment construction site on Bay Street

Snow motion: This photo was taken on the same day as the one above, a few blocks further north up Bay Street. It shows the Motion on Bay highrise apartment building construction site at left, along with the Sick Kids and Burano towers to the north.

 

Sick Kids Research and Learning Tower construction progress

Ice view: This was a view this afternoon of the Sick Kids Research and Learning Tower construction site from an ice-covered webcam high above the building.

 

webcam view of Aura condos construction site

Snowy Aura: Although it’s not on Bay Street itself, Aura condos is part of the College Park complex that occupies the entire eastern block of Bay between Gerrard and College Streets. This is a webcam view of the Aura condos construction site earlier this afternoon.

 

Great Gulf Homes plans 46-storey condo tower for corner in sketchy Dundas-Jarvis neighbourhood

Pace Condos site at Dundas and Jarvis

Developer Great Gulf Homes has acquired this property at the southwest corner of Dundas and Jarvis Streets for its proposed 46-storey Pace Condos tower

 

Pace Condos billboard at Dundas and Jarvis Streets

On-site promotional billboard for the Pace Condos tower

 

Seedy site: I had been wondering when a developer was going to announce plans to build a condo tower at the seedy southwest corner of Dundas and Jarvis Streets. It’s not a nice neighbourhood by any stretch of the imagination, but real estate is all about location and that’s one of the few redeeming features for this prime piece of downtown property just a short walk from the Toronto Eaton Centre and the Yonge subway line. Late last year I noticed that the three businesses in the small commercial plaza on the corner had been closed and their windows papered over. I kept waiting to hear word about a development proposal for the property, but didn’t see any signs on the site in either January or February. But when I passed by the corner just over a week ago, and saw that chainlink fencing had been erected around the plaza, I knew an announcement was imminent. On March 14, it happened: prominent Toronto condo developer GreatGulf Homes filed a rezoning application with the City, proposing to build a 46-storey condo tower with 417 suites, five levels of underground parking and a 10-storey podium with street-level retail space. A billboard promoting Pace Condos — “downtown tower suites from the low $200s” — promptly went up on the corner where it’s certain to catch the attention of motorists driving along busy Jarvis Street on their way to and from the Financial District.

When I told some friends earlier this winter that I suspected a condo would be built on the site, they looked incredulous and said: “No way! Who the hell would want to live there?” Obviously, Great Gulf is confident they can find 417 potential buyers, and I’m sure they’ve done their research. After all, they know their stuff: they’re the company behind several of downtown Toronto’s hottest condo developments.  Their X Condominium tower only eight blocks north of the Pace Condos site was a huge hit with buyers, and two other condo towers Great Gulf is currently constructing — X2 Condos at Jarvis & Charles, and Charlie condos on King Street West in the Entertainment District — were enormously successful, too. One Bloor Condos is destined to achieve similar stellar sales; construction of that tower is expected to commence later this year at Yonge and Bloor Streets.

Still, it’s fair to say that the area around the Pace Condos site is a helluva lot less desirable than the locations of GreatGulf’s other projects. Dundas & Jarvis sits on the periphery of one of the poorest residential areas in all of Canada, a vast downtown district with one of the country’s largest concentrations of homeless people and residents earning poverty-level incomes or collecting social assistance — people who have no hope of ever being able to live at Pace Condos or in a condo anywhere, for that matter. Meanwhile, if Pace Condos does get built, anyone who buys an east-facing unit will have views overlooking dozens of rooming houses, homeless shelters, government-subsidized apartments and social service agencies — all just a short stroll from their front door. And as the Toronto Star pointed out in a photo gallery on March 18, the epicentre of the city’s worst area for overall crime is the intersection of Dundas and Sherbourne Streets, just two blocks east. While I was taking photos on Dundas Street this afternoon, a young black man approached me. “Make sure you take pictures showing this place like it really is — me standing here drinking from a bottle of booze in a paper bag in broad daylight, those guys over on that corner dealing crack cocaine, all those homeless people over there and the guys doing drugs down there,” he told me, pointing at each corner of the Dundas-Jarvis intersection before taking a long drink from his bottle. He, along with all the street people who kept staring at me or asking for spare change, made me wonder why anyone would want to pay $200,000+ to buy a condo there. Until he added: “And make sure you take pictures of how everything looks like now so you can remember it because, in a few years, there’s probably gonna be lots of new buildings all around here. This is gonna be a good place to live. It’s not always gonna look like this.”

Maybe he’s right — maybe things are finally starting to look up for this down-on-hard-times district. There’s already several condo buildings close by, including the popular and pricey Merchandise Lofts, as well as two hotels — with a third hotel and more condos in the works. Right across the street, the Ontario government is retrofitting and modernizing the massive building at 222 Jarvis Street into a new workplace for the Ontario Public Service. And the rapidly-growing Ryerson University campus is just a block away. Could the arrival of Pace Condos herald a turn-around for this sketchy streetcorner? We’ll have to wait a few years to see. In the meantime, here’s some photos showing the Pace Condos site and its immediate neighbours as they look now.

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

January 3 2011: Looking west at the small plaza at Dundas & Jarvis Streets

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

January 3 2011: The office towers of the Financial District are only blocks away

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

February 18 2011: The Eaton Centre is just a 10-minute walk west

 

proposed location for the Pace Condos tower

March 22 2011: Looking south on Jarvis Street toward the Pace Condos site. If built, Pace would obstruct this view of the 45-storey Spire condo tower on Lombard Street, visible in the center of the photograph.

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

March 22 2011: Pace Condos site seen from northeast corner of Dundas & Jarvis

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

Commercial tenants of this plaza — including a convenience store, two restaurants and a coin-operated laundry facility– closed up shop months ago. The parking lot was fenced off just within the past 10 days.

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

The buildings to the west and southwest include luxury condos, rental apartments, co-op apartments and government-subsidized rental accommodation

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace Condos tower

South view of the Pace Condos site from the opposite side of Dundas St. The brown brick building is 192 Jarvis, a 14-storey condominium built in 1985.

 

Pace Condos marketing billboard

A billboard advertises Pace Condos to passersby on Dundas and Jarvis Streets

 

192 Jarvis Street condo building

The 192 Jarvis condo rises above the fenced-off plaza on Dundas Street

 

Dundas-Jarvis site for proposed Pace condos tower

A view of the exterior of two of the plaza’s former commercial tenants

 

the site for the proposed Pace Condos tower

These now-vacant properties — ICITS computer training at 155 Dundas East, New Moon Bar at 157 Dundas East, and Palmers West Indian Restaurant at 159 Dundas East — are all part of the site for the proposed Pace Condos tower

 

Vacant properties next to the Pace Condo towers site

The Grand Hotel on Jarvis Street and the 192 Jarvis condominium building sit to the south and southeast of the site of the proposed Pace Condos tower

 

Vacant properties next to the Pace Condo towers site

If approved by City Hall, Pace Condos would stand three times taller than these two buildings; it would be the highest tower in the neighbourhood

Ho Lee Chow and Grand Hotel on Jarvis Street

The Ho-Lee-Chow takeout restaurant on the southeast corner of Dundas & Jarvis; the Grand Hotel is situated a few doors south at 225 Jarvis Street

 

Hilton Garden Inn on northeast corner of Dundas & Jarvis

The Hilton Garden Inn on the northeast corner of Dundas & Jarvis. Years ago, before it was converted into a hotel, this building housed offices of the federal unemployment insurance department

 

222 Jarvis across the street from proposed Pace Condos site

222 Jarvis sits across the street from the Pace Condos site, directly to the north. At one time the headquarters for Sears Canada, the building is being retrofitted and modernized as offices for the Ontario Public Service

 

Mutual Street Deli

Mutual Street Deli on the north side of Dundas St. across from Pace Condos

 

New Lumiere highrise condo building on Bay Street finally getting its exterior finishing touches

Lumiere condos on Bay Street

An idle lift machine and stacks of aluminum panel trim seen on the west side of Lumiere Condos along Laplante Avenue on Sunday March 20 2011

 

Lumiere condos on Bay Street

Aluminum panel installation on the west side of the Lumiere condo tower

Final touches? Major construction concluded a few months ago, residents have been moving into the building ever since, and now it appears that Lumiere Condominiums on Bay Street is finally getting finishing touches to its exterior. Or is it? In my first post about Lumiere on January 5, I noted that aluminum panels were missing from large, long sections of the building podium. About two weeks later, as I reported in a January 21 update post, I saw crews working on some of the unfinished areas. But they didn’t do much, and the podium’s exterior remained incomplete throughout the winter. However, aluminum panel installation has resumed, so it’s possible the podium cladding project could literally wrap up this spring.  Crews are concentrating on the west side of Lumiere, along Laplante Avenue, but still have some small areas to attend to on the south side as well. Below are some pics I snapped Sunday afternoon of the podium work underway at Lumiere.

Lumiere condos on Bay Street

South side of Lumiere condo podium. The underground garage entrance is at left, while the moving & delivery bay is behind the women walking in the driveway.

Driveway between Lumiere condos and The Penrose condos on Bay Street

East view toward College Park from the driveway between Lumiere condos (left) and The Penrose condo building at 750 Bay Street (right)

 

Driveway between Lumiere condos and The Penrose condos on Bay Street

View toward The Residences at College Park North Tower on the east side of Bay Street from the driveway between Lumiere condos and The Penrose condos

 

South side of Lumiere condos podium

Unfinished podium exterior outside the Lumiere parking garage entrance

 

Lumiere condos

Looking up the southwest corner of the Lumiere condo tower

 

Lumiere condos

Aluminum panels to be installed on the podium are stacked outside the rear of the tower along Laplante Avenue.

 

Lumiere condos

Curved aluminum panels to be installed on Lumiere’s round podium support pillars

 

Aluminum panels to be installed on Lumiere condos exterior

Aluminum panels to be installed on the Lumiere condos exterior

 

Aluminum panels to be installed on Lumiere condos exterior

Curved aluminum panels to be installed on Lumiere condos exterior

 

Lumiere condo tower

Unfinished areas on the northwest corner of the Lumiere condo tower

 

Lumiere condo tower

Support pillars remaining to be clad with the curved aluminum panels

 

Southwest corner of the Lumiere condo tower

Looking up the southwest corner of the Lumiere condo tower