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360 Laurier Ave W [Office conversion] | 44m | 12f | U/C
CLV Group Development Inc. is proposing the adaptive reuse of an existing 11-storey commercial/office building located at 360 Laurier Avenue West. The 11-storey building (not including 1 storey mechanical penthouse) will remain on site and undergo a renovation to convert it into a residential building. The mechanical penthouse area is proposed to be enlarged for rooftop amenities bringing the height to 12 storeys. A new mechanical penthouse, improvements to the façade, streetscape and interior of the building are also proposed.
The conversion will consist of 139 residential units, 133 square metres (1,451 square feet) of commercial space in the form of a rental leasing office and a general retail space (. The unit mix will include studios, one (1) bedroom, one plus den (1.5), two (2) bedroom and two (2) plus den units. The objective for this proposal is to utilize as much of the existing building to make the project as sustainable as possible by reducing waste. The majority of the existing precast concrete panels will be maintained, lessening the architectural intervention while still adding subtle touches to add visual interest. As noted above, an additional level will be added which will strictly be used for amenity purposes. No residential units will be located on level 12. Amenities will be provided on the ground floor and rooftop level in the form of interior and exterior spaces. The proposal will utilize the existing underground parking structure containing 59 vehicular parking spaces of which 13 will be used for visitor parking. The development will yield a total of 78 bicycle parking spaces. Architect: Linebox Studio Development application: https://devapps.ottawa.ca/en/applica...3-0055/details Streetview: https://www.google.ca/maps/@45.41792...8192?entry=ttu Location: https://i.imgur.com/4mZKMGE.png Siteplan: https://i.imgur.com/ulQ3ktS.png https://i.imgur.com/0lEGFbB.png Renderings: https://i.imgur.com/BhaIIdx.png https://i.imgur.com/I0Pwo4l.png https://i.imgur.com/xEPIFLy.png |
So it begins.
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Bring it on! More of this please
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In the planning rationale and Urban Design Brief document its says the following regarding the windows:
"Providing access to fresh air was an important feature for this project. The previous non-operable windows will be replaced with new energy efficient, operable windows. Additional openings will be created by punching out the precast panels where possible and infilling them with operable windows. Each window will require a guard. To avoid any obstructing visuals, the required guards will be made out of glass with minimal metal details." Since when do you need a guard in front of a window? its not like these are balcony! Whats the purpose of this? |
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If the window can open more than 100mm, it becomes an 'opening' that requires a guard, especially if it has a sill that is significantly less than typical guard height.
I picture this being like that scene in Sex in the City where the brash woman is smoking near the fully opened large window and accidentally falls out. This would certainly be a unique configuration for Ottawa, and a potential unfortunate garbage/bug catcher. On the other hand, if a window is floor-to-ceiling, it is required to be rated for load at a particular height so you don't actually run at the window and go right thru, which also happens. Usually its just a mid-height mullion, with tempered glass on the bottom section. https://youtu.be/G-NZPXMoWqc Quote:
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couple of things on this one
1. The building has a name - the Narono Building. It was designed by Ottawa's prolific brutalist architect George E Bemi (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_E._Bemi) Urbsite called this Bemi's first fully formed brutalist office building (http://urbsite.blogspot.com/2014/07/...ary-is-it.html) 2. This building has asbestos: https://www.tpsgc-pwgsc.gc.ca/biens-...tosinv-eng.pdf 3. Linebox also did the TREBLA -> SLAYTE conversion, for Interrent (which is partially owned and managed by CLV). Expect this project to be very similar to that project. Link here: https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...d.php?t=241475 4. This building sold for 24.5 in 2019: https://renx.ca/true-north-buys-anot...ffice-building And then it was resold for 17.5 this May: https://obj.ca/true-north-reit-selling-narono/ |
Has anything been posted about this office building conversion at 360 Laurier:
https://assets.obj.ca/2023/07/360-La...pe-scene-2.jpg https://obj.ca/clv-group-to-convert-...-issue-emerges |
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Skyline: What’s old is new in two recent developments
Centretown Buzz August 10, 2023 --SNIP-- https://centretownbuzz.com/wp-conten...001-Edited.jpg To sturdy precast concrete… After completing the Slayte on Albert Street, the CLV Group has filed plans for an even more ambitious office-to-residential conversion in an uncompromisingly Brutalist block at 360 Laurier Avenue West near Kent. The 12-storey building was designed in 1968 by G.E. Bemi and Associates, architects for Norano Holdings, and is among that architect’s most hard edged and best preserved concrete-clad office towers. The conversion details? In its relatively compact footprint there would be 143 residential units, with a small amount of retail at grade. Amenity space is to be provided indoors on the ground floor plus rear yard, and on a newly built rooftop terrace. The development is intended to have 59 car-parking spaces in the existing underground garage, 13 of them for visitors, with secure parking for 78 bicycles in storage rooms. Developers CLV are bravely working with an architectural style that is, at the very least, not universally admired. From the urban design brief by LineBox Studio: “The building envelope will remain largely untouched…The design will retain most of the precast concrete panels.” They are rather impressive, deeply coffered, subtly incised with grooves, certainly the Norano Building’s chief feature. “…And they will be cleaned or repaired where necessary.” For fresh air the fixed windows are to be replaced with operating windows. One change will see enhanced glazing on the ground floor to make the public areas in this yet-to-be-renamed apartment building more transparent and inviting from street level. This is a welcome alteration. Brutalism has its fans but inviting it is not. https://centretownbuzz.com/2023/08/s...-developments/ |
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Update from InterRent's Q3 report. It refers to "full demolition"...? [Edit: I guess that just means demolishing whatever they need to in order to proceed with the conversion]
360 LAURIER 360 Laurier Ave W is an office conversion project located in downtown Ottawa, with 139 residential units and 1,736 sq ft of retail space across 11 storeys. The adaptive reuse project is currently in the site plan control process with minor variances approved by the City of Ottawa in October 2023. Full site plan approval is expected in Q4 2023, with preliminary investigative demolition currently underway. Full demolition is expected in Q1 2024 with reconstruction starting in Q2. The design team is nearing completion of design development and is working through construction drawings for tendering. |
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According to CLV Group, the interior demolition of this office to residential conversion project is now 99% complete
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City and builders getting better at office conversions with each project, 360 Laurier architect says
Mia Jensen, OBJ August 16, 2024 2:28 PM ET https://obj.ca/city-builders-better-...ier-architect/ |
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InterRent eyes 2025 completion for Laurier Avenue office-to-residential conversion project
David Sali, OBJ February 25, 2025 A major project to convert a former government office building on Laurier Avenue into a rental apartment complex is on pace to be completed later this year, the company in charge of managing and leasing the property says. InterRent REIT says construction of 139 rental apartment units and 1,736 square feet of ground-floor commercial space in the Narono Building at 360 Laurier Ave. W. is “well underway.” In its 2024 annual report released this week, the Ottawa-based real estate investment trust says demolition of the 57-year-old building’s interior is 95 per cent complete. InterRent says “the majority of the work at the site has been tendered and awarded,” with completion of the project targeted for the third quarter of 2025. InterRent, CLV Group – the REIT’s sister company which specializes in real estate development – and two institutional investors purchased the 11-storey, 107,000-square-foot office building from True North Commercial REIT for $17.5 million in 2023. The Correctional Service of Canada previously occupied more than 100,000 square feet of space in the building, but the federal government did not renew its lease and the agency moved out early in 2023. It’s the second major office-to-residential conversion project for CLV Group, which also redeveloped another former government office, the 11-storey Trebla Building at 473 Albert St., into a 158-unit apartment complex. InterRent, which also manages that property, known as The Slayte, said the final 17 units at the Albert Street apartment complex were brought to market last year. As the housing crisis mounts, CLV and InterRent have become major players in a growing move to turn excess office real estate in downtown Ottawa into residential apartments. Other developers, including KTS Properties and District Realty, are also planning to convert aging office properties in the core into residential projects. Still, office-to-residential conversions aren’t for the faint of heart. The process of gutting a building’s interior, redesigning it and installing all the plumbing and electrical infrastructure required for residential use is complex and expensive, and many buildings don’t fit the size and shape requirements to be repurposed as apartment complexes. CLV Group president Oz Drewniak told OBJ two years ago the Narono Building is “as close to ideal” a candidate for a residential conversion as the company has found in Ottawa, explaining that it’s the right shape and its floorplate is compact enough to allow natural light to fill the units. “If it’s too deep from the core to the wall, you have super-deep units and it’s hard to design those units,” Drewniak said. “This is kind of like a slab-style building where it’s rectangular in nature. It’s not perfectly ideal, but it’s close.” InterRent owns and manages more than 13,000 rental suites, with most of its properties concentrated in the Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver areas. The REIT has two other projects in its development pipeline in the National Capital Region – a 177-suite mixed-use complex with more than 11,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial space at the corner of Richmond Road and Churchill Avenue in Westboro, and a massive multi-tower proposal at 900 Albert St. near LeBreton Flats that would include more than 1,200 apartments and nearly 600,000 square feet of retail space. Planning on those projects is still “progressing,” the REIT said in its latest report, but neither proposal has a targeted completion date. https://obj.ca/interrent-eyes-2025-c...venue-project/ |
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