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Old Posted May 3, 2018, 5:54 AM
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Wpg_Guy Wpg_Guy is offline
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Winnipeg | 290 Colony St. | Muse Flats | 14 Floors | Completed

LOCATION / Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
TYPE / Mixed-Use Development
SIZE / 103,000 SQ FT
STATUS / Under Construction
Design Architect / Michael Maltzan Architecture
https://www.mmaltzan.com/projects/290-colony/

Quote:
The project, a 119-unit residential building for The University of Winnipeg Community Renewal Corporation 2.0 (UWCRC 2.0), is comprised of a range of unit types, including (28) studios, (59) one bedroom units, (29) two bedroom units, and (3) three bedroom units, with an integrated affordable housing component. The building is 14 stories tall, with a 15th level penthouse which houses mechanical equipment. The ground floor level contains 3,700 square feet of commercial program, 17 stalls of street level parking, and new offices for the owner. On the 10th floor, amenity spaces and an adjacent rooftop terrace area provide shared common spaces for tenant use.

The architectural concept for the building emphasizes the verticality of the massing by creating a “bundle” of five residential towers organized around a central circulation tower. The individual towers have varied footprints and heights to emphasize their individuality and give the massing a twisting bias. The modulations in shape and size also lend a more human scale to the urban presence of the project. By maximizing the number of corner units, the residential suites are afforded sweeping views of the surrounding context, creating more powerful relationships between the building and the city of Winnipeg. The building fenestration complements its massing, with diagonally organized windows accentuating the twisting bias of the towers while choreographing the residents’ views of the city. At the ground level, floor to ceiling storefront glass along the property line captures the greatest area for commercial program, and is capped by a thin roof slab. The residential towers rest upon this transparent base, appearing to floating above the ground.



http://uwcrc.ca/505-st-mary-avenue





Quote:
Project Description
UWCRC 2.0 is currently developing a mixed-use, mixed-income residential tower at the corner of Colony St. and St. Mary Ave. The 505 St. Mary project will be replacing a small commercial building and existing surface parking lot (adjacent to the WAG’s Inuit Art Centre).

The project includes 119 studio, one, two and three bedroom units

– 46 of the units (39%) will be rented at Manitoba affordable rates
– 60 of the units (50%) will be rented at market rates
– 13 (11%) of the units at premium market rates
– At least 10% of the units will be barrier free
– 100% of the units will be visitable
– 4-6 of the units, and associated creator spaces, have been set aside for a visiting artists’ short stay rental program (in collaboration with Artspace Inc.)

The project also includes approximately 3,700ft2 of street level commercial space, fronting Colony Street, St. Mary Avenue and Good Street.

Development Cost
$28.5 million

Main Floor Commercial Opportunities
The 505 St. Mary Avenue project is seeking business owners, entrepreneurs, companies and organizations, interested in opportunities to become ground floor tenants. In particular, we are seeking specialty retail, new food and beverage concepts, neighbourhood-scale commercial uses, and other community services. For more information visit our Request For Expressions of Interest page: Commercial Expression of Interest

Timing
Anticipated construction start: Late Spring 2018

Key Participants Owner: UWCRC 2.0 Inc.
Developer: UWCRC 2.0 Inc. Architect: Michael Maltzan Architecture and Cibinel Architecture
Construction Manager: Bockstael Construction Limited


Quote:
Downtown Commons: the sequel
University of Winnipeg spearheads new mixed-income residential project
By: Murray McNeill
Posted: 08/14/2017
The University of Winnipeg is hoping to duplicate the success of the city’s first truly mixed residential complex — the 102-unit Downtown Commons — by building another one less than a block away.

The proposed new tower would be similar in size to the original 14-storey, $30-million tower and would be built on property the university recently acquired at the corner of St. Mary Avenue and Good Street.

The project is contingent upon the university acquiring financing. The plan is to have the new tower developed by a new non-profit entity — UWCRC 2.0 — which the university created to be a sister organization to its University of Winnipeg Community Renewal Corp.

The renewal corporation developed the Downtown Commons and was involved in most of the more than $200 million in infrastructure projects the U of W has undertaken during the past 12 years.

Managing director Sherman Kreiner said until this year the focus has been on meeting the U of W’s infrastructure needs. Now that those needs have mostly been met, the university wants to take the skills and expertise it has gained and assist other organizations that have sustainable infrastructure projects they want to undertake, but do not have the expertise to do it on their own.

"We thought, ‘what do we do with what we’ve created here in terms of competency and experience?’ I think there’s a value to it for the community and a value to it for the university," Kreiner said.

"So we created another not-for-profit development organization (UWCRC 2.0) whose mandate is to do other value-driven, sustainable development, either on our own or with other partners."

The new entity would also provide a new stream of revenue for the university, he said.

Kreiner said the renewal corporation "cut its teeth" working with outside developers when it partnered with community groups to convert the former Merchants Hotel on Selkirk Avenue into a community learning hub and social enterprise café. The project included the construction of 30 units of subsidized student housing.

"That (project) also led us to understand that these skills and experiences and competencies that we have could be valuable in the community," he said.

The new entity’s first outside project involves partnering with Brandon University on a mixed-use and residential development in downtown Brandon. The development likely will include a residential component patterned after the U of W’s Downtown Commons.

The Downtown Commons building at 320 Colony St. includes 102 premium market, affordable and rent-geared-to-income suites. The units range in size from bachelor to three-bedroom suites, and the tenants include students, seniors, Indigenous families, immigrant families, Syrian refugee families and professionals.

Kreiner said the complex, which opened last year, is believed to be unique in Canada for offering high-quality, downtown rental housing for people from a variety of backgrounds and financial circumstances.

"It was fully occupied within three months... and we have a pretty significant waiting list, which is why we feel this could be a replicable model for the neighbourhood. We haven’t fully tapped the demand (for that type of housing)."

Stefano Grande, CEO of the Downtown Winnipeg Business Improvement Zone, said another complex like the Downtown Commons would be a welcome addition downtown.

"There is definitely a need for good, affordable housing in our city, never mind downtown," Grande said, adding the fact the Downtown Commons was fully occupied within three months and has an extensive waiting list is proof of that.

He said it’s encouraging to see the U of W launching a new entity that can share its expertise in building sustainable communities.

"I think they’ve discovered that the private sector will not do not-for-profit housing because it’s such a challenge. The numbers don’t work," he said. "So there is demand, and it’s a very specialized skill. It seems the university developed their capability, and the fact that it is now bringing that into the community and helping (other organizations) is wonderful."

Kreiner said UWCRC 2.0 plans to work with other post-secondary organizations and community groups. It’s already working with a number of First Nations groups in Winnipeg and on reserves. It’s getting inquiries from out-of-province universities interested in copying the venture.

"I think we’ll have a series of announcements about this over the next six months or so" he said.

Kreiner said once financing is secure, the plan is to demolish the one-storey building at 505 St. Mary Ave. and begin foundation work this winter. The hope is to have the tower ready for late summer or early fall 2019.

Kreiner and Jeremy Read, chief operating officer of the renewal corporation, said they’re exploring the possibility of including suites for artists in the tower. They said that would tie in nicely with the area, which includes the Winnipeg Art Gallery and the proposed Inuit Art Centre.

Kreiner said there were two commercial tenants in the building at 505 St. Mary Ave. Dessert Sinsations has moved out, but the Perth’s dry-cleaning outlet plans to remain until demolition begins.

murray.mcneill@freepress.mb.ca

Last edited by Wpg_Guy; Oct 14, 2019 at 6:26 AM.
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  #2  
Old Posted May 3, 2018, 2:12 PM
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I really like this project and I hope that it happens. It'll inject some more life in that area with University Commons just completed and the extension of the WAG Inuit Art Centre. These are the kind of developments that are needed in our downtown. I'm not hating it at all.
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  #3  
Old Posted May 4, 2018, 12:01 AM
YWG-RO YWG-RO is offline
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I agree. Looks great.
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  #4  
Old Posted May 4, 2018, 6:04 AM
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surely you agree with me
 
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I wonder if those tiny black dots are windows.
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  #5  
Old Posted May 4, 2018, 1:47 PM
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Looks kind of like they are going to build a grain elevator, then convert it to residential by punching some small holes for windows. I know it is a bad image but...

....hard to tell what is going on there.
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  #6  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2018, 1:31 AM
LilZebra LilZebra is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Biff View Post
Looks kind of like they are going to build a grain elevator, then convert it to residential by punching some small holes for windows. I know it is a bad image but...

....hard to tell what is going on there.
That is the Investors Group building in the background.
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  #7  
Old Posted May 4, 2018, 2:01 PM
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Definitely hard to tell with that rendering what it will actually look like.
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  #8  
Old Posted May 4, 2018, 3:44 PM
CoryB CoryB is offline
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So they have four classes of units and 10% of the total units will be barrier free. Wile those barrier free units be spread across the four unit types?

Hopefully at a minimum the affordable units and the creators temporary spaces are included in the barrier free list.
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  #9  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2018, 9:06 AM
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https://bockstael.com/project/505-st...l-development/

Quote:
The project, a 116 unit residential building for the University of Winnipeg, is comprised of a range of unit types, including (16) studios, (44) one bedroom units, (33) two bedroom units, and (23) three bedroom units, with an integrated affordable housing component. The building is 16 stories tall, with a lowered half level which accommodates half of the necessary parking. The remaining parking is accommodated by a raised half level parking. The ground floor level contains the commercial program. Level 2 contains shared common spaces along with artist oriented studios, while levels 3-16 contain apartment units.
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  #10  
Old Posted Jul 18, 2018, 5:19 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BuildUpWpg
Anyone have a proper render of it yet?
Posted from previous page:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wpg_Guy View Post
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  #11  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2018, 2:39 PM
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Could turn out rather nice.
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  #12  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2018, 3:35 PM
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Design development well under way on this one.
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  #13  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2018, 5:01 AM
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forgive the cattiness but it kind of has a styrofoam prison thing going on.

Will certainly meet the new energy code.
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  #14  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2018, 10:22 AM
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Originally Posted by trueviking View Post
forgive the cattiness but it kind of has a styrofoam prison thing going on.

Will certainly meet the new energy code.
Agreed. What that thing needs is a few more windows. I can handle the Chinese take-out box thing but the lack of glass is very monolithic.
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  #15  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2018, 5:38 AM
Urban recluse Urban recluse is offline
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There's Danish influence. Alt looks like a chalkboard, this project looks like styrofoam, hahahaha.
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  #16  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2018, 3:49 PM
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Ya I just don't get how you can build an apartment with so few windows. Especially since only 10% of this is "affordable" – there's lots of market-priced units. Even the Downtown Commons got balconies.
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  #17  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2018, 8:28 PM
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^ I can live with small windows but this building is taking it to extremes... when I first glanced at the rendering my first thought was that it resembles the tall towers used for telephone/internet infrastructure that you often see in downtowns of large cities, like the pre-renovation Verizon Tower in Lower Manhattan.
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  #18  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2018, 3:17 AM
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Originally Posted by esquire View Post
^ I can live with small windows but this building is taking it to extremes... when I first glanced at the rendering my first thought was that it resembles the tall towers used for telephone/internet infrastructure that you often see in downtowns of large cities, like the pre-renovation Verizon Tower in Lower Manhattan.
If it was small windows but they were all over the building, that'd be fine. I just don't understand how there's so much blank wall when this is supposed to be a residential building, not a jail.
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  #19  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2018, 2:22 AM
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Good grief, the more I think about it, the more I hate that thing. God, it's fugly. What have they got against windows? Seriously, the Remand Center has more glass.
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  #20  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2018, 5:32 PM
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It is absolutely hideous and will likely look worse in real life. wtf.
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