Monthly Archives: February 2011

Aftermath of the big fires: Empty lot at 335 Yonge; 200 Wellesley undergoes major structural repairs

335 Yonge Street

Empty lot where heritage building once stood at 335 Yonge Street


200 Wellesley Street East

Major structural repairs to three floors at 200 Wellesley Street East


Cleaning up: Two fires that made headlines four months apart have left their mark on downtown Toronto. The heritage building at 335 Yonge Street that was irreparably damaged in a fire early in January has been completely demolished; all that remains is an empty lot where the historic structure used to stand, and scorch marks on the walls of the 10 Dundas Street East entertainment complex and HMV store next door. The only good news — for drivers and pedestrians, anyways — is that the road and sidewalks should be re-opened for full regular traffic soon, for the first time since part of the brick facade of 335 Yonge collapsed onto Gould Street last April.  Hoarding that surrounded the site was removed this week, and barricades that restricted vehicular and pedestrian traffic on the east side of Yonge Street should be dismantled shortly. What will become of the property now that the fire debris has been cleared away remains to be seen. Meanwhile, major structural surgery is being performed on the exterior skin of 200 Wellesley Street East as cleanup continues on damage from a September blaze that displaced hundreds of residents from their apartments. A three-storey-tall section of the building’s west wall has been cut away, and crews have been working for weeks on major repairs to at least three balconies. Looks like it will be many weeks, if not months, before several dozen residents will be able to return to their homes (most tenants have been allowed back in). Below are photos taken this week at each of the two fire scenes.

335 Yonge Street

Yonge Street view of 335 Yonge Street fire site on February 3


335 Yonge Street

Yonge Street view of 335 Yonge Street fire site on February 3


335 Yonge Street

Gould Street view of 335 Yonge Street on February 3


200 Wellesley Street East

200 Wellesley Street East fire repairs on February 1


200 Wellesley Street East

200 Wellesley Street East fire repairs on February 1


200 Wellesley Street East

200 Wellesley Street East fire repairs on February 1


Here’s looking at U, Condos

U Condos

U’s Turn: In just a few short years, things will really be looking up for the St. Michael’s College campus at the University of Toronto. Way up. From the old ivy-clad stone and brick bastions of academia to the shiny new glass and steel towers of luxury condo living 45 and 50 storeys up. That’s how high the two towers of U Condos, currently starting construction, will soar above the college campus from their perch at the southeast corner of Bay and St. Mary Streets near Yorkville. It’s going to be a huge and dramatic change for a wedge-shaped piece of property that previously contained an unremarkable asphalt parking lot and a wide field of green grass. For people who were lucky to buy in when the buildings initially went on sale, U Condos undoubtedly will prove to be an incredibly wise investment. I’m willing to bet a substantial number of buyers are real estate- and personal finance-savvy parents who scooped up suites so their kids will have accommodations when they attend U of T; after graduation day, mom and dad will sell the units at a tidy profit, perhaps even paying off the kids’ substantial university tuition bills and other education expenses in the process.  Contractors have been preparing the site for excavation since December; heavy machinery has been moving mounds of earth, while pile drivers have been punching away at several different places on the U Condos property.  Below is an architectural rendering of the U Condos podium, along with photos I’ve taken in the U Condos neighbourhood at various times since 2008.

U Condos

Architectural rendering of U Condos towers and podium


U Condos

Billboards along U Condos Bay Street location November 14 2008


U Condos

View towards Bay Street from west end of U Condos site November 1 2010


U Condos

U Condos site viewed from St. Mary Street on November 1 2010


U Condos

U Condos site viewed from Bay Street on November 11 2010


U Condos

Billboard on U Condos site November 11 2010


U Condos

View towards U Condos site from west end of St Mary Street on December 4 2010; in two years, the new towers will totally dominate this view towards Bay Street


U Condos

Idle excavation equipment on U Condos site December 4 2010


U Condos

Idle excavation equipment on U Condos site December 4 2010


U Condos

Idle excavation equipment on U Condos site December 4 2010


U Condos

Last glimpse of green: This lawn, seen December 4 2010, will soon be dug up


U Condos

All quiet on the U Condos site on Sunday January 9


U Condos

Snow-covered excavation machinery at the U Condos site January 9


U Condos

U Condos site under a blanket of snow on January 9


U Condos

Pile driving machinery on January 24 after a light snowfall


U Condos

Pile driving machinery on January 24


U Condos

U Condos billboards along Bay Street on January 29


U Condos

Early stages of excavation at U Condos on January 29


U Condos

Grass has been completely cleared from the western half of the site


U Condos

U Condos hoarding along St Mary Street January 29


U Condos

U Condos hoarding along St Mary Street January 29



Richmond/Sherbourne corner looking more Modern as construction of condo midrise reaches 7th floor

The Modern condos

Construction progress at The Modern on February 3 2011


Almost halfway up: I can barely recall what the northeast corner of Richmond and Sherbourne Streets looked like up until three years ago; all I remember is that a busy 24-hour gas station — very popular with downtown taxi drivers — used to occupy the site. When I walked past this morning, I saw that construction of The Modern on Richmond, a 17-storey condo midrise, has reached the seventh floor. By this time next year, the location should become popular with cab drivers once again — for picking up and dropping off fares, rather than filling their tanks. Below is a building rendering from The Modern’s website, plus some of my photos of the site since the fall of 2008.

The Modern Condos

Building rendering from The Modern condos website


The Modern condos

Condo sales office at The Modern on Richmond site Sept 3 2008


The Modern condos

Excavation activity at The Modern condos site March 9 2010


The Modern condos

Site viewed from Sherbourne Street just below Queen Street on March 17 2010


The Modern Condos

Construction approaches the second floor on November 9 2010


The Modern condos

Construction approaches the second floor on November 9 2010


The Modern condos

Occupancy this summer? Not a chance!


The Modern Condos

Building climbs above Sherbourne Street on February 3


The Modern condos

View from Sherbourne looking south towards Richmond Street February 3


The Modern condos

View from Richmond Street looking northeast on Sherbourne February 3


The Modern condos

Construction at corner of Sherbourne and Richmond on February 3


The Modern condos

Construction along Sherbourne Street on February 3


The Modern condos

View from southwest corner of Richmond & Sherbourne February 3


Go, fish! Governments believed ready to splash some cash to lure aquarium to base of CN Tower

Ripley Aquarium

Ripley aquarium

Architectural renderings of the proposed Toronto Ripley Aquarium


Shore thing?: Toronto may finally get a much-needed new tourist attraction now that various levels of government are prepared to pump millions of dollars into the project — a Ripley Aquarium that will sit at the base of the CN Tower off Bremner Blvd.

In a story posted on its website last night, the Toronto Star reports that governments are prepared to take the plunge and invest taxpayer dollars in the aquarium project because of the obvious spin-off economic benefits such a major attraction would provide to the city. Ripley’s had applied to the city in November 2009 for zoning approval to build the three-storey entertainment complex which would include the aquarium as well as retail and restaurant facilities. The City gave approval last summer, but negotiations have continued to work out project details. Now the project is even closer to fruition, with sources telling the Star that construction is on the horizon since contracts could be signed as early as this summer. If so, the 150,000-square-foot attraction could be ready in time for the Pan Am Games in July 2015. 

One of the aquarium’s top tourist draws will be “the largest underwater tunnel in North America,” Ripley’s Entertainment president Jim Pattison Jr. told the Star. “There will be tens of thousands of different (marine) animals,  and some features that will be unique to Toronto,” he said. Further details about potential government investment in the aquarium are outlined in the Star story available at this link. Additional information about the Ripley’s Aquarium and its location beneath the CN Tower is provided in a public art plan that was submitted to the city’s Public Art Commission last July.

Building the aquarium beneath the CN Tower is a brilliant idea, I think, since the Tower draws nearly 2 million visitors a year to the area, and the Rogers Centre and convention centre are both right next door. Other nearby tourist draws include the Air Canada Centre just a five-minute walk away on Bremner Blvd., and Harbourfront just a 10-minute walk to the south. Toronto desperately needs more tourist attractions; as the Star points out, the Hockey Hall of Fame was the last major tourist attraction to open in the city, and that was 20 years ago.

It’s almost embarrassing to read the Toronto forum on TripAdvisor.com and see how short the list of city tourist attractions actually is (besides recommending visits to the Royal Ontario Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, Eaton Centre, Hockey Hall of Fame and CN Tower, locals usually recommend tourists leave the city for day trips to Niagara Falls and Niagara-on-the-Lake instead.)

Personally, I’ll be thrilled to see construction commence since I have heard talk about bringing an aquarium to Toronto since I moved here nearly 30 years ago. That’s been more than enough time for talk and wishful thinking. It’s high time now to finally get this project going!

Below are some photos I’ve taken of the proposed aquarium site — presently a grassy knoll between the CN Tower and the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

Aquarium development proposal sign

Aquarium development proposal sign near the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

CN Tower observation deck view of proposed Ripley Aquarium site Nov. 2 2010


Ripley Aquarium site

View towards the Ripley Aquarium site from the base of the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

Aquarium site viewed from walkway along the east side of the Rogers Centre


Ripley Aquarium site

The aquarium would be built on this grassy hillside beneath the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

View toward the Ripley Aquarium site from the south side of Bremner Blvd.


Murano got them first. Is Casa the latest condo to succumb to the broken balcony panel blues?

Casa Condominium

Broken balcony panel at Casa Condominium on January 29 2011


Is it contagious? A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a post about glass panels breaking on a few balconies at the Murano condos North Tower at Bay and Grosvenor Streets. Well, it looks like Murano might not be the only downtown condo highrise whose residents and management are getting their share of grief from faulty balcony panels. The 46-storey Casa Condominium tower on Charles Street is sporting a nasty shiner, too, and Murano has yet another one near the top of its North Tower. 

While I was walking up Bay Street Saturday afternoon, something caught my eye when I glanced up the north side of Murano. I zoomed in for a look with the camera and saw a piece of wood filling the gap on a 32nd-floor balcony. This was not one of the two balconies on which glass panels had shattered only days apart last September; those panels were replaced before Christmas.

About an hour later I was walking near Casa when I looked up and thought I saw a familiar sight, about 27 storeys up the tower’s southwest corner. Sure enough, my camera confirmed that a piece of wood has been secured on a balcony in place of a shattered glass panel, pieces of which are still clinging to the frame. (This morning, the wood panel was still in place — and visible from blocks away.)

What’s up with the balcony glass on these buildings? Why are the panels breaking? Haven’t heard anything in the local news about the latest incidents, so I’m relieved that apparently nobody on the ground has been injured by any glass that may have fallen down. But now I can’t help but wonder just how safe it is to walk below any of the new condo towers constructed downtown recently. I guess I’ll find out if I see protective scaffolding around Casa next time I walk down Charles Street.

Since our own balcony sits directly above a busy back entrance to our building, I’m glad it has metal railings — rather than tempered glass panels — that are firmly cemented into the concrete floor.

Below are pics I took Saturday of the balconies with temporary wood panels at Murano and Casa.

 

Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel and shattered glass on a Casa balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel on a Casa balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel visible on a Casa southwest corner balcony January 29


Casa condominium

Casa condo tower on December 21 2010 (no broken panels visible)


Work on massive Maple Leaf Gardens renovation project still largely hidden from public view

Maple Leaf Gardens

Maple Leaf Gardens rendering from Ryerson University website


Landmark lives on: From the outside, there have been few signs that the iconic Maple Leaf Gardens hockey shrine is gradually being transformed into a multipurpose facility housing a giant grocery store and a university athletic centre. Last fall, scaffolding and green safety nets shrouded the east and south facades during brickwork and window replacement activity. For the past two months, crews have been busy working on utilities beneath the Carlton Street sidewalk and Church Street pavement at the southeast corner of the building. Over the same period, teams have been doing some roofing work atop the arena’s famous white dome. And the past two weeks, workers have been chiselling brickwork from a section of wall on the north side of the Gardens, along Wood Street.  None of the work gives any indication that the storied, historic Gardens soon will be living a renewed life as a modern retail and recreation facility.

However, it’s a different story altogether if you get to peek inside the loading door at the northeast corner of the building whenever a cement or construction supply truck comes out or goes in. Over the past six months, I’ve had that opportunity a handful of times, managing to catch quick glimpses of the cavernous construction zone that’s largely hidden from public view. Unfortunately, I’ve never had my camera with me, so I haven’t been able to track the interior construction progress in photos. In November, I got a brief look inside while the construction workers were on their morning break. With beams of light streaming through the narrow, small windows on the Gardens’ upper walls, the dusty interior had an eerie, haunting atmosphere. The building was just a gigantic brick shell; the inside had been gutted, and the ground was being dug out to create an underground parking garage. I couldn’t see anything holding up the huge walls and vast domed roof, but assume there must have been some kind of support for all that weight. The last few times I peeked inside, it appeared that excavation work was nearly complete; meanwhile, forms several storeys tall were being assembled so concrete could be poured to build walls and floors for the 70,000-square-foot Loblaw supermarket that will occupy the ground level of the “new” Gardens. Just last week I got another look, and it seemed obvious there is an incredible amount of work still to be done to create the upper levels that will house the 150,000-square-foot Ryerson University Sports and Recreation Centre.

The Centre is a $60 million project for which the federal government is contributing $20 million under the Canada Infrastructure Stimulus Fund (the university and Loblaws are responsible for the rest). However, projects that qualify for stimulus funding must be completed by March 31 of this year — and there is clearly no way on earth the Maple Leaf Gardens transformation will be done in time. Certainly looks like an extension or exemption will be required here. I’m anxious to see work start on the building exterior — the installation of street-level windows for the supermarket, the pedestrian entrances to the two separate facilities, and of course the vehicle entrance to the underground lot. Project details are provided in a Ryerson University press release available at this link. The complexities of the Maple Leaf Gardens transformation are outlined in this article from the Daily Commercial News and Construction Record, while seven construction photos by The Globe and Mail‘s Fred Lum can be viewed at this link on the Globe website. Below are some of my photos of the Gardens exterior at different times over the past several years.

Maple Leaf Gardens

Southeast view of Maple Leaf Gardens on November 28 2008


Maple Leaf Gardens

Former Carlton Street entrance to Maple Leaf Gardens on November 28 2008


Maple Leaf Gardens

East wall brickwork and window replacement on September 4 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Scaffolding was removed from the east wall in early December 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

New windows in the east wall along Church Street


Maple Leaf Gardens

Work crew atop the Maple Leaf Gardens domed roof December 21 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Exterior work on the west end of the Carlton Street facade December 26 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Ryerson University and Loblaws sign on the Church Street wall


Maple Leaf Gardens

Brick removal from the Wood Street wall on January 14 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Construction equipment along Wood Street on January 30 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Facade work continuing along Wood Street on January 30 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Maple Leaf Gardens viewed from Wood Street on January 30 2011


Keeping tabs on … Aura Condos at College Park

Aura CondosAura condos

Night and day: condo tower renderings from Aura’s website


Filling in fast: The giant excavation for Aura condos has been filling in fast, with considerable progress being made on the building’s underground levels since my last Aura construction update 10 days ago.  Below are several site photos from January 29, along with some renderings of the tower from Aura’s website.

Aura condos

Aura condo construction approaches grade level along Yonge Street


Aura condos

Once an enormous excavation, the site is filling in fast


Aura condos

In fine form: Underground floors and walls take shape


Aur condos

In fine form: Underground floors and walls take shape


Aura condos

In fine form:  Underground floors and walls take shape


Aura condos

Construction approaches the site’s north side observation windows


Aura condos

Website rendering of Aura condos retail levels


Aura condos

Website rendering of Aura condos lobby exterior


City Scene: Yorkville’s highrise building boom

Yorkville condo and hotel towers

Davenport Road (near Bay Street) view of new towers being built in Yorkville


Growing up: Construction activity is apparent in practically every corner of downtown, and the Yorkville neighbourhood is no exception.

Pedestrians and drivers approaching Bay Street along Davenport Road are greeted by this view of three highrise towers currently under construction: The Florian condo building (left) and the two towers of the new Four Seasons Toronto Hotel and Private Residences.

Meanwhile, just beyond the bend in the road, east of Bay, there’s more construction in progress.  Excavation is underway for the Milan condominium tower on Church near Yonge, while in a few years’ time there could be as many as three towers rising right behind The Florian on McMurrich Street.

 

Keeping tabs on … SickKids Tower on Bay Street

SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Elm Street view of SickKids Tower progress January 29 2011


Floor pours: A lot has been happening at the corner of Elm & Bay since I profiled the new SickKids Research and Learning Tower in a post on January 11. The tower’s underground levels have been filling in quickly, and the construction team expects to finish pouring the P1 floor by the end of next week. Below are some pics I snapped this past Saturday through the security fence and the smudgy peekaboo portholes in the hoarding along the Bay Street sidewalk.

 

SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower construction viewed from Bay Street below Gerrard Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower construction viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research and Learning Tower

Floor pour for the P1 level should be finished next week


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed through an observation window on Bay Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

West end tower construction seen from an observation window on Bay Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower fourth level construction viewed from Elm Street