42-storey “luxury” student residence for U of T?

U of T residence

Diamond and Schmitt Architects rendering of proposed U of T residence


Towering Dorm: The biggest university in Canada could lay claim to having the tallest and most expensive student residence in the country if the City approves a development application for property on College Street. But will community concerns about the project’s height and density derail the proposal or knock down the height of what would be a stunning, landmark tower for the neighbourhood?

The potential development site  — 245 – 251 College Street — is situated on the south side of College, just a stone’s throw east of Spadina Avenue and directly across the street from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). The university owns part of the property while a private developer, Knightstone Capital Management, owns the rest.

In an article published last July, the Globe and Mail reported that U of T had “quietly” begun plans for a new residence which Knightstone would finance and build near the university’s downtown campus. Just one month later, a rezoning application was filed with the city seeking approval to build a 42-storey tower with “academic residences” and a three-storey podium “containing retail, academic services and lecture halls for University of Toronto.”

In an article published in its online edition today, the Toronto Star offered more details about the plan. It said U of T has leased its land to the developer,  which will build a $120 million, 42-storey residence housing 1,000 students. However, the building will not be a typical university dorm housing “ordinary” Canadian students — they couldn’t afford to live there. Instead, the tower will offer expensive rental accommodation — costing approximately $15,000 per year — that is expected to appeal primarily to wealthy international students, along with some graduate and out-of-province students.  However, accommodation would not be restricted to U of T students; those attending the city’s other educational institutions could rent rooms, too, if they have the cash.

“The glass and panel tower, a series of wonky boxes stacked one on top of the other, would rise a dizzying 42 storeys above its Lilliputian neighbours on College St., commercial buildings that are two, three or five storeys at most,” the Star article says.

To the south, on the other hand, sits a vast residential area; in fact, Glasgow Street — a quiet, narrow road lined with small homes — runs north from Cecil Street, dead-ending at the proposed tower location. “If someone can get 40-storey buildings shoehorned into that neighbourhood, all of the (future development) sites will come back as 40-storey applications,” the Star quotes local city councillor Adam Vaughan as saying.

The newspaper says city staff have recommended that the developer reconsider the tower’s height, and that Vaughan hold consultation meetings with the landowners and residents. But Knightstone’s CEO,  David Lehberg, told the Star that U of T “needs bigger, shinier buildings to compete internationally.”

So, too, does the City of Toronto, in my humble opinion. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that this project gets the A-OK; I think it would improve the look of the area immensely, not to mention put U of T on the radar of privileged students around the globe. With several new five-star hotel towers opening in Toronto over the next two years, the city will finally be able to attract elite tourists who have been travelling to high-end hotels in destinations elsewhere, at the expense of our local tourism industry. I say let the residence tower go up so all those wealthy parents will come visit, spend money and boost our economy while their kids attend U of T in style!

Below is another rendering of the proposed tower, by Toronto’s Diamond and Schmitt Architects, along with some photos I snapped of the project site this afternoon from College and Glasgow Streets.

 

U of T residence

Diamond and Schmitt Architects rendering of proposed residence tower


U of T residence

Proposed U of T residence tower site viewed from south side of College Street


U of T residence

Site viewed from the north side of College Street


U of T residence

Development proposal sign on College Street


U of T residence

Another site view from the north side of College Street


U of T Residence

A printing centre once occupied this two-storey building


U of T residence

A view of the proposed development site looking east along College Street


U of T residence

The tower’s neighbours include the LillianSmith library, left.


U of T residence

View towards the tower site from the corner of Glasgow and Cecil Streets


U of T residence

Glasgow Street view of the proposed tower location


U of T residence

Another Glasgow Street view of the proposed tower location


U of T residence

Proposed tower location viewed from the north end of Glasgow Street


U of T residence

Proposed tower location viewed from the north end of Glasgow Street


U of T residence

Proposed site viewed from a parking lot at the end of Glasgow Street


U of T residence

View south on Glasgow Street from the proposed tower location


U of T residence

View of the site (the short white building and the three-storey brown brick structure to its right), looking southwest from corner of College and Huron Streets


U of T residence

The CAMH building directly across College Street


U of T residence

Another view  of the CAMH building on College Street


Shovels in the ground at X2 Condos site

X2 Condos

The earth is moving at the X2 Condos project site


X2 marks its spot: I felt a touch of nostalgia when I saw a drilling machine and backhoe cutting into the snow-covered ground at the corner of Jarvis and Charles Streets this afternoon.

Don’t know why, but I suddenly started thinking about the ugly three-storey office building that used to occupy the site. For the longest time it housed an overpriced Becker’s convenience store and a sports bar called Caps that served awesome — but wickedly hot — BBQ chicken wings, good burgers and reasonably-priced beer. Caps was popular with sports teams as well as the cops who worked across the street in a police building that ultimately met its demise when the hugely popular 44-storey X Condominium tower started construction several years ago.

Eventually, the Becker’s store and the bar closed down. The PizzaPizza company acquired the property, spruced up the building, and moved its headquarters inside. But the days of the PizzaPizza place were numbered. X Condos was a tremendous success; its units sold like gangbusters, leaving no doubt there was a strong demand for more condos in the immediate neighbourhood. It was obvious that the PizzaPizza property would be worth an absolute fortune as a condo tower development site. Inevitably, signs were posted on the property in 2008 to advise the neighbourhood that plans were afoot to build a 44-storey condo highrise there.

In November 2009, a sales office for X2 Condos was constructed on Charles Street on the site of two brick mansions that formerly housed law firms and other offices (properties that also would ultimately be demolished to make way for the condo highrise.) Demolition of all three buildings began last August, and throughout the autumn the lot sat empty while soil testing and other preliminary site preparation work was performed.

In the meantime, the city approved the developer’s request to add more floors to X2, bringing the tower’s total height to 49 storeys. Now, digging has begun in earnest on the northeast perimeter of the site.

Don’t know why, but suddenly I’m craving beer and chicken wings! Too bad I can’t walk up the street to Caps anymore.

Below is a rendering of the X2 Condo building (designed by Toronto’s Rudy Wallman Architects, by the way), along with photos I’ve taken of the X2 site over the past three years. More photos can be viewed in an album accessible from the Photo Sets page of the blog (where you’ll find another album with pictures showing the construction of X Condos, from site excavation to fully-finished and occupied tower.

Although X and X2 look a lot alike, as sisters usually do, X was designed by a different architect — Peter Clewes of Toronto’s architects Alliance.)

 

X2 Condos rendering

Artistic rendering of X2 Condo tower at the corner of Jarvis & Charles


X2 Condos

August 14 2008: Condo development proposal sign on X2 Condos site


X2 Condos

Sept 3 2008: View of the former PizzaPizza offices on the X2 site


X2 Condos

Sept 3 2008: Jarvis Street view of the former PizzaPizza headquarters


X2 Condos

December 3 2008:  Charles Street view of the development site


X2 Condos

November 2 2009:  PizzaPizza building being prepared for demolition


X2 Condos

November 2 2009: X2 Condos sales office sign on Charles Street East


X Condos

November 2 2009: X2 Condos sales office being constructed on the project site


X2 Condos

November 22 2009: X2 Condos marketing signs on the PizzaPizza building


X2 Condos

November 22 2009: X2 Condos marketing signs on the PizzaPizza building


X2 Condos

Bright pink signs on exterior of X2 Condos sales office


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: Demolition of the PizzaPizza building underway


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: Big empty lot behind the PizzaPizza building being demolished


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: X2 Condos sales office gradually being demolished


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: Charles Street view of demolition activity at the X2 Condos site


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: Jarvis Street view of the PizzaPizza building demolition


X2 Condos

August 29 2010: Jarvis Street view of the PizzaPizza building demolition


X2 Condos

X2 Condos sales office in its new location: a townhouse at X Condos


X2 Condos

October 3 2010: View of the lot where X2 will be built


X2 Condos

November 11 2010: Work crew tests soil conditions


X2 Condos

November 11 2010: Soil testing operations at the west end of the site


X2 Condos

December 18 2010: X2 Condos site after a light snowfall


X2 Condos

January 9 2011: A blanket of snow covers the X2 Condos site


X2 Condos

February 8 2011: Machines digging away at the perimeter of the property


X2 Condos

February 8 2011: Digging at the northeast perimeter of the X2 Condos site


X2 Condos

February 8 2011: Tag-team excavation activity on the  X2 Condos site


Living Shangri-La Toronto hotel & condo tower construction site signs have the city seeing pink

Living Shangri-La Toronto

Just one of several hot pink signs atop the Living Shangri-La Toronto tower


Think pink: You can’t miss the Living Shangri-La Toronto construction at 180 University Avenue (at Adelaide Street West), even though the hotel & condo tower is only 20 storeys high so far. In-your-face fluorescent pink signs on several upper floors stand out for blocks, and will become even more widely visible across the downtown core as the tower climbs taller towards its 65-storey eventual height.

The building site is tickled pink at street level, too, but most of those signs get attention with a warmer, almost coral, shade that isn’t as bold, brash and loud as the signage higher up.

Hot pink is a colour I normally associate with tacky snowsuits and swimwear for five-year-old girls, not luxurious five-star hotels and condos. But since the high-end hotel and condo scene in Toronto is starting to get a little crowded, getting people to think pink is probably a great way to get noticed. Living Shangri-la Toronto

The Shangri-la Toronto is one of four glitzy and glamorous new five-star hotel/condo towers changing the city skyline this year.

Over on Wellington Street West, the Ritz-Carlton Toronto will be opening its doors to guests this month. Up in Yorkville, construction is moving right along for the two shiny glass towers of the Four Seasons Toronto Hotel & Residences. And just two blocks east of the Shangri-la, also on Adelaide, the Trump International Hotel & Tower Toronto is three-quarters of the way to claiming its place as the second-tallest skyscraper in the city.

But the Shangri-la won’t need the pink signs to get attention once more of its striking blue windows are put in place. Glass has enclosed just part of seven lower floors so far, but already the windows are creating some eye-catching colours, textures and reflections. That’s especially the case on the University Avenue side of the tower, where just several panes of creased glass suggest how stunning the tower’s tall and sharply angled east and west glass walls will appear when finished.

A project of Westbank and Peterson Group, the building will  feature a 220-room Shangri-la hotel and spa on the first 17 floors. There will be 279 condo residences on floors 18 to 48, and 73 “private estates” on floors 49 to 65. The project was designed by Vancouver’s James Km Cheng Architects with Toronto’s Young + Wright Architects. 

Below is a rendering of the tower, along with photos I’ve taken at the project site between September 2008 and last week. To view more pics, check out the Living Shangri-la album on the Photos Sets page of the blog.

 

Living Shangri-La Toronto

Artistic depiction of Shangri-La Toronto’s presence on University Avenue


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Marketing billboard at Living Shangri-la Toronto excavation site on Sept 26 2008


Living Shangri-la Toronto

A passerby watches the excavation activity from Adelaide Street


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Site excavation progress on March 5 2009


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Ritz-Carlton Toronto has a head start on construction at its location below the CN Tower, just a few blocks southwest of the Living Shangri-la Toronto site


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Freezing rain delays installation of the Living Shangri-la Toronto construction crane on March 29 2009; the crane went up several days later


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Construction crane awaits installation on a cold, rainy March 29 2009


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Two construction cranes work the site on March 8 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Site’s southeast corner seen on March 8 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Construction progress viewed from Simcoe Street October 20 2010


Living Shangri-La Toronto

Construction viewed from University Avenue on November 15 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Distinctive angular design element on the tower’s southeast corner


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Southeast corner seen from Adelaide Street on November 15 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Simcoe Street view of construction progress on November 15 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

West side of Living Shangri-la viewed from Neilson Street on November 15 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Hotel sign on hoarding along University Avenue’s west sidewalk


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Tower viewed from University Ave. near Queen Street on Nov. 29 2010


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Window installation on tower’s south side January 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Windows on tower’s south side  January 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Tower viewed from Simcoe Street on January 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Tower viewed from Adelaide Street West on January 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Tower viewed from Metro Hall park on King Street January 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Blue glass, pink signs catch attention on University Avenue


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Windows installed on lower floors above University Avenue


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Signature design “crease” in windows above University Avenue


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Looking up the tower from east side of University Avenue


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Angled windows on east side of tower


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Signature “creased” windows on east side of tower


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Reflections in “creased” windows on east side of tower


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Simcoe Street view of windows on west side of tower February 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

West side of tower viewed from Simcoe Street February 3 2011


Living Shangri-la Toronto

Pedestrians under construction hoarding on west side of University Avenue



Greyhounds going, condos coming

Greyhound bus depot

Greyhound depot at corner of Sherbourne and Front Feb 3 2011


Bye bye, buses: The Greyhound parcel centre at 154 Front Street East will be going and a condo building taking its place. But we’ll have to wait a while to find out just how big — and tall — the residential development will be. 

The Greyhound service building, offices and parking occupy the southern half of the block bounded by King Street East, Sherbourne Street, Front Street, and Frederick Street. The property was owned by the City until just before Christmas when it was sold by the city’s arm’s-length real estate and development corporation, Build Toronto, to Cityzen Developments for an undisclosed price.

Cityzen is more than familiar with the area; it has been busy transforming the western two blocks of The Esplanade with three separate highrise condo projects: London on the Esplanade, which is completed and occupied, The L Tower, currently under construction behind the Sony Centre for the Performing Arts, and Backstage condos, now in the marketing  stage of development.

Cityzen president Sam Crignano said the company is planning a condo building with ground-level retail shops for the Greyhound location. Height and density for the building are undetermined since the project must still work its way through the city’s approval process. But Cityzen is confident it has picked the right spot for its next development.

“We love the neighbourhood. We like this part of Toronto. We think it is where all the growth will be, at least most of the growth over the course of the next 15 to 20 years, so we want to be a part of it,” Crignano said.

Below are two maps (from Build Toronto’s website) showing the Greyhound location, plus pics I took of the site last Thursday.

 

Greyhound bus depot

Build Toronto website map showing Greyhound bus depot location


Greyhound bus depot

Build Toronto website map showing Greyhound bus depot location


Greyhound bus depot

Sherbourne Street view of the bus depot on February 3 2011


Greyhound bus depot

Sherbourne Street view of the bus depot on February 3 2011


Tableau turns the table on its condo competition

Tableau Condos

Tableau condos

Website renderings of Tableau condos, designed by Rudy Wallman


Great gams: With so many condo highrise projects either already on the market or being proposed for the Entertainment District, there’s a lot of competition for buyers.  How do developers and architects make sure their own projects have more appeal to potential purchasers than the others on sale just around the corner or down the block?

Offering trendy building amenities and features might help, but I find every new condo project seems to offer the same stuff: posh pilates and yoga studios, luxurious city-view lounges, rooftop terraces with bars and BBQs, multimedia entertainment rooms, and stunning entrance lobbies conceived by top international interior designers. For me, it gets difficult distinguishing between them all:  Which condo has the sky club? The infinity pool on the rooftop skyline terrace? The party lounge with the DJ recording studio?

 

9-legged base will make condo tower stand out

Maybe the key is a memorable building design — something unique and markedly different from the typical  glass and steel box towers that keep popping up everywhere else. Something that will catch someone’s eye because it’s unusual and unforgettable. That’s what works for me, and it’s what I think will make Tableau condos at Richmond & Peter Streets a huge sales success. With an attention-grabbing design by Rudy Wallman of Toronto’s Wallman Architects, Tableau literally stands out in the Entertainment District and definitely gets a leg up on its nearby competition. Nine legs, actually. Nine long, slender, in-your-face legs that will be noticed by everyone who walks or drives through the neighbourhood.

Tableau is a 36-storey, 410-suite mixed-use condo tower planned for the southeast corner of Richmond and Peter, on the block where Richmond turns a bend as it continues west to Spadina Avenue. In what the Tableau website describes as the building’s “signature” architectural element, the condo residences will sit on a “structural table” built strategically above the four-storey warehouse building presently situated on the site. “The front of this building is being reinterpreted and reconstructed and will accommodate the commercial office space, ground floor lobby and retail. The table structure also creates a large, four-storey colonnaded public plaza on Richmond Street.”

 

Will Tableau look better than the artistic illustrations?

I have absolutely no doubt that the colonnade will command attention from passersby. I used to work just around the corner from the Tableau site, and still can’t even imagine just how a tower on a giant table is going to look and feel in that location. The words “shock and awe” come to mind, but not in a bad way. I’m just hoping the finished product will look better — much, much better — than the artistic renderings. Sometimes when I view the drawings I think the building looks striking, and will be even more impressive and perhaps even breathtaking to see in person. It has nuances of X Condos on Jarvis, and the TD Centre towers, all of which I really like. Other times, the Tableau base reminds me of the $7.99 Lack table advertised on the back cover of the 2011 IKEA catalogue (though Lack has fewer legs, of course). From my experience, most of IKEA’s products look great in the catalogue, but appear tacky and cheap when you inspect them in-store. I’ll be keeping my fingers crossed that this won’t be the case with Tableau’s table.

(Speaking of X Condos: it will share something in common with Tableau. “Nova,” the sculpture that will be incorporated into the Tableau colonnade,  is the work of Kingston, Ont. artist Shayne Dark, who created the “Double Vision” sculpture standing outside X. I’ve included a pic of it, below.)

Here are some more renderings from the Tableau website, along with photos I’ve taken recently of the Tableau location.

 

Tableau condos

Website rendering of the Tableau colonnade along Richmond Street


Tableau condos

Another depiction of Tableau’s four-storey colonnade


Tableau condos

Artistic impression of Tableau frontage along Peter Street


Tableau condosX Condos

Kingston, Ont. artist Shayne Dark’s sculpture “Nova” will grace the streetscape at Tableau, left. Dark also created the “Double Vision” sculpture at X Condos, right.


Tableau Condos

Tableau condos location seen on Nov. 29 2010


Tableau condos

Tableau condos sign on the warehouse building where the condo tower will eventually rise


Tableau condos

Peter Street view of the warehouse on the Tableau condos site


Tableau condos

Another view of the warehouse site where Tableau will rise


Tableau condos

Peter street facade viewed November 29 2010


Richmond Street West at Peter Street

View of the Richmond Street block which the Tableau tower will dominate


southeast corner of Richmond & Peter Streets

The southeast corner of Richmond & Peter Street where Tableau will rise


Tableau condos

The southeast corner of Richmond & Peter Street


Tableau condos location

Another view of Tableau’s location on the wedge-shaped corner lot


Tableau condos

Original zoning sign (seen here Nov. 29 2010) called for a 29-storey building with condos and a hotel, plus street level restaurants and retail.


Tableau condos

New proposal sign (seen here Feb. 3 2011 on Richmond Street) drops reference to a hotel and calls for a taller tower with condos plus retail and office space.


Keeping tabs on … the Toronto Trump Tower

Trump Toronto

Trump Toronto seen from Adelaide Street West on February 3


46 floors and counting: The Donald’s first construction foray into Canada is three-quarters of its way up.

On Thursday I counted 46 floors on the Trump International Hotel & Tower Toronto, the luxury condo + hotel skyscraper that will ultimately soar 60 storeys above the corner of Bay and Adelaide Streets. With construction crews pouring a new floor about every six days, the granite- and glass-clad tower should top off sometime around mid- to late March.

I’m loving the Trump already — especially its distinctive green glass walls, which will add a refreshing new colour to a skyline that has been basically black, white and bronze for more than two decades. I think the building works well at ground level, too, where it looks right at home in the middle of the Financial District’s canyon of towers old and new. It almost feels like it’s always been there; I can’t even remember what stood on the site before.

Designed by a Zeidler Partnership Architects team led by Lydon Delaney, the Trump will house 261 hotel rooms on the tower’s lower levels, and 118 luxury condominiums from floors 33 to 60. With hotel rooms ranging from 550 to over 2,000 square feet, the Trump will offer the largest accommodations in Toronto, the project’s website brags.  And just as you’d expect for a building bearing business mogul Donald Trump’s imprimatur, it will be “the most luxurious residential building in Canada.”

The superlatives don’t end there, of course. The Trump won’t be just an instant new landmark on the city skyline, the website gushes, it will be “an elegant new beacon for luxurious sophistication” (whatever the heck that means).  “Accentuated by an articulated spire at its peak that commands attention from any angle, the Tower pays homage to classic Manhattan skyscrapers yet embraces the modern cosmopolitan flair that is distinctly Toronto.”

Aw, shucks. Is that The Donald’s kind way of saying Toronto has finally come of age and matured into a world class city? Below are two building renderings from the Trump Toronto’s website, along with some photos I snapped of the tower on Thursday afternoon.

Trump Tower Toronto

Rendering shows Trump standing tall with Scotia Plaza and First Canadian Place


Trump Tower Toronto

Website rendering of Trump Toronto’s lower levels above Bay & Adelaide Streets


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump rising behind Commerce Court West (57 floors; built 1972)


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump Toronto rising behind the Bank of Nova Scotia tower (27 floors; built 1951)


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump Toronto seen from Bay Street just above King Street


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump Toronto climbs skyward beside Scotia Plaza (68 floors; built 1988)


Trump Tower Toronto

Looking up to the top (so far) of the Trump Tower from Bay Street


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump Toronto is clad in granite and glass


Trump Tower Toronto

Green glass windows and cladding on the tower’s southwest corner


Trump Tower Toronto

Construction workers on a platform high above Bay Street


Trump Tower Toronto

Granite exterior on the lower southwest corner of the tower


Trump Tower Toronto

One of the construction workers’ elevators stops at the 28th floor


Trump Tower Toronto

Platforms extend from nearly a dozen different floors on the south side


Trump Tower Toronto

Two angled platforms on the exterior of the tower’s south side


Trump Tower Toronto

Construction workers on a swing stage two storeys above Bay Street


Trump Tower Toronto

Classic granite facade fits right in on the Bay Street corridor


Trump Tower Toronto

Bay Street view of Trump Tower behind Commerce Court West


Trump Tower Toronto

Trump Tower cozies up to its next-door neighbour, Scotia Plaza


On the waterfront: $175M health sciences building is first phase of new George Brown College campus

George Brown College waterfront

Rendering of the new George Brown College waterfront campus


Lakeside learning: George Brown College is giving the new Corus Quay office building some company on the waterfront.

Corus Quay, headquarters to the Corus Entertainment media company, opened last fall at 25 Dockside Drive near the foot of Jarvis Street — right beside the similarly brand-new urban park, Canada’s Sugar Beach. Along with the beach and nearby Sherbourne Common, which also opened last autumn, Corus Quay was the first project finished under Waterfront Toronto’s massive East Bayfront revitalization program. Since they moved into their new digs, the 1,100 Corus Quay employees have had the Muskoka chairs and custom park benches at Sugar Beach and Sherbourne Common mainly to themselves during weekdays. But that will soon change.

The second major Waterfront Toronto project is the George Brown College Health Sciences Centre campus, currently under construction between Corus Quay and Sherbourne Common. Scheduled to open for the 2012 fall semester, the 330,000-square-foot building will accommodate 3,500 students in the the schools of Dental Health, Health and Wellness, Nursing and Health Services Management.

Designed as a joint venture by Stantec Architecture and Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects,  the building will have eight floors including a three-storey glass podium and a rooftop terrace. Besides classrooms and office facilities for the health care faculties, the full-service campus will house a health care clinic, bookstore, administrative offices and food service operations.  The project cost is $175 million, of which $61.5 million is being paid by the Ontario government, and $30 million by the federal government.

That’s just phase one of the campus development; the facility will grow further in its second phase, for which the College is still seeking to raise funds from individual and corporate “partners.” And in several years’ time, the College plans to add a third campus in the vicinity. Once all the college faculty and students start joining the Corus employees on the waterfront in 2012, the East Bayfront lakeside promenade and boardwalk should be buzzing with activity all year long. 

Those lucky kids won’t even have to cut classes to hit the beach — they’ll be able to catch some rays or walk along the lake during lunch breaks or between labs and lectures.  Below is a college webcam photo of construction progress at the campus site, along with some of my photos of building activity between last August and this past Thursday.

 

George Brown College waterfront

College webcam view of new campus construction on Feb. 5 2011


George Brown College waterfront campus

George Brown College sign on Queen’s Quay August 29 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Construction site viewed on August 29 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Waterfront campus excavation and foundation work Aug. 29 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Waterfront campus excavation and foundation work Aug. 29 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Nov. 2 2010 CN Tower view of two cranes on the construction site immediately to the east of the new Corus Quay office building.


George Brown College waterfront campus

Construction viewed from walkway at Corus Quay on November 9 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Site viewed from walkway at Sherbourne Common on November 9 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Site viewed from walkway near Sherbourne Common on November 9 2010


George Brown College waterfront campus

Two cranes perched high above the campus construction site


George Brown College waterfront campus

One of the construction crane operators working at the campus site


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape on February 3


George Brown College Waterfront Campus

Underground levels taking shape on February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape on February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape on February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Underground levels taking shape February 3


George Brown College waterfront campus

Construction on February 3, viewed from the promenade along Lake Ontario. By this time next year, an 8-storey building will occupy this site.

 

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)