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  #1  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2020, 3:33 AM
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rocketphish rocketphish is offline
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1420 Richmond Rd | 2 x 37m | 2 x 12f | Proposed

Groupe Heafey is proposing two (2) high-rise apartment buildings on the subject property municipally known as 365 Forest Street, 1420 Richmond Road and 2583-2589 Bond Street, with a common below-grade parking garage. The north tower (‘Tower A’) is proposed at 12-storeys, and the south tower (‘Tower B’) is 11-storeys.

The towers will accommodate a total of 391 residential units, with 180 units in Tower A and 211 in Tower B. The proposed development will have a total of 322 one-bedroom units and 69 two-bedroom units. The ground floor of Tower A will include a two-storey commercial unit at the north-east corner, with the balance of the ground floor identified for residential units, service rooms, and bicycle storage. Both buildings have outdoor terraces on the 11th floor. A gym is proposed as an indoor amenity space in Tower B.

Architect: Lapalme Rheault Architecte

Development application:
https://app01.ottawa.ca/postingplans...appId=__BSI601


Location and siteplan:







Renderings:














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  #2  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2020, 12:57 PM
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Awesome! Great to see some new investment in this area. It has so much to offer.
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  #3  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2020, 1:06 PM
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Happy to see a non- Lahey or Hobin building.
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  #4  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2020, 1:14 PM
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Now I understand why it's a decent project. It's from Gatineau's Groupe Heafey.
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  #5  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2020, 4:56 PM
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Quote:
Gatineau developer proposes pair of apartment highrises near Lincoln Fields Shopping Centre

OBJ: July 7, 2020

A Gatineau developer is proposing to construct two highrise apartment buildings near the soon-to-be-rebuilt Lincoln Fields Shopping Centre.

In a recently filed development application, Heafey Group says it wants to build an 11-storey and a 12-storey tower at 1420 Richmond Rd., 365 Forest St. and 2583-2589 Bond St. in Britannia Village. The Richmond Road site is currently home to an automobile service shop while the property at 2583 Bond St. is occupied by a former tire shop.

According to the site plan, the two towers would feature a total of 391 rental apartment units, with 180 suites in the 12-storey highrise and 211 units in the 11-storey building. The taller highrise will also include a two-storey commercial space and a five-level underground parking garage with space for 477 vehicles.

The proposal requires council approval because the proposed building heights of 37.4 and 34.3 metres exceed current zoning limits.

The site is located a couple hundred metres west of the Lincoln Fields Shopping Centre, which is being completely redeveloped as part of owner RioCan’s plan to reimagine many of its aging retail plazas across Canada.
https://obj.ca/article/gatineau-deve...hopping-centre
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  #6  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2020, 1:30 PM
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The article mentions a development at 1740-1750 St. Laurent, but I was unable to find an app for it. Near the intersection of Industrial and St-Laurent, a project at that location could be a hard sell unless rental prices were far lower than the average.

Quote:
Full steam ahead for Groupe Heafey, in Ottawa and Florida

Leo Valiquette, Aug. 20, 2020
Renx


A pandemic hasn’t stopped Gatineau’s Groupe Heafey from forging ahead with $400 million in new development in the Ottawa market alone.

The company recently filed a development application with the city for 11-storey and 12-storey towers at 1420 Richmond Rd., 365 Forest St. and 2583-2589 Bond St. in Britannia Village – a prime location for the continued expansion of Ottawa’s light rail transit system.

VP of operations Carmine Zayoun confirmed Groupe Heafey will also be breaking ground in spring 2021 on 300 rental units on St. Laurent Boulevard. A separate plan is in the works with the city for another mixed-use development at 1740-1750 St. Laurent for 700-800 rental units with commercial space.

Latitude Homes, a partnership between Zayoun and Groupe Heafey, is developing about 400 low-rise townhome and condo products, primarily in the Stittsville area. Meanwhile, several hundred new rental units are also under development in Gatineau.

In short, the pandemic hasn’t derailed development opportunities along the city’s new LRT line, nor a persistent demand for housing in Ottawa. It has, however, led forward-looking developers to reconsider the kind of products they bring to market. How people live, work and play has changed and their housing options should reflect that trend.

Lifestyle vs. finish

For Groupe Heafey, the focus now is on providing customers with a “choice of lifestyle rather than finish,” Zayoun said. “We don’t want finish to be the choice, we want lifestyle to be.”

For example, islands in condo and apartment units will easily convert into a professional workspace. With townhome products, buyers can choose between having a basement fitted up as either a home office, a kids’ playroom or a home gym.

These options impact flooring choice, sound proofing, the need for structural reinforcement and how the room is wired.

“There are a lot of unknowns right now, but as a builder you have to go with the market and go with the times,” Zayoun said.

“The world is changing, we recognize that and we have to reflect it in the product we offer . . . people are going to be spending more time in their homes, it will be their safety net, not just a place they go to at the end of the workday.”

Keeping a vigilant eye on which way the wind is blowing has long been Groupe Heafey’s modus operandi.

Groupe Heafey’s strategic growth

Founded in the late 1970s by notary-turned-real-estate-investor Pierre Heafey, the company today has just over $1 billion in assets. That growth has been a combination of rehabilitating distressed assets with potential and also engaging in new development.

The company has invested in the hospitality sector (five hotels to date); the multires rental, condo and townhome markets; and the commercial/retail sector.

This strategy has taken Groupe Heafey as far west as Alberta, east to New Brunswick, and south to Florida.

In the Sunshine State, the majority of Heafey’s assets were distressed properties which it acquired to turn around, though it does also pursue new development (400 units in Jacksonville, for example, and two new waterfront restaurants underway in Miami).

The company’s investments in Florida include five hotels: four operated in partnership with Hilton Worldwide and one with Choice Hotels.

The team is very hands-on, preferring to directly manage its assets, and sticks to the fundamentals. Groupe Heafey’s decision to invest in any distressed property rests with an objective risk-versus-reward assessment of the costs involved and the local market outlook.

“It’s not complicated,” Zayoun said.

Sticking with the fundamentals

or example, Groupe Heafey recently acquired, with partner Hilton, a property in Fort Lauderdale which has already failed to prosper with two other owners.

However, considering that 80 per cent of the property’s units have ocean views, and Hilton’s brand power can be brought to bear, the Heafey team is confident about a successful outcome.

In those markets where Heafey has the “infrastructure” in place, the company will apply that same risk-versus-reward methodology to pursue new development.

By infrastructure, Zayoun refers to partnerships such as the one with Hilton, depth of local market knowledge, relationships with local contractors and a solid team on the ground to analyze costs.

Which brings us back to Ottawa, and the need to balance the opportunities of a robust housing market and an expanding LRT system with the new realities of the pandemic.

“The world is evolving and this was a wakeup call for a lot of people,” Zayoun said. “People’s habits have changed and they’re not going to change back for a while, even with a vaccine.

“People are going to be more cautious and developers like us have to be conscious of that.”
https://renx.ca/full-steam-ahead-gro...ttawa-florida/
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  #7  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2020, 5:33 PM
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rocketphish rocketphish is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
The article mentions a development at 1740-1750 St. Laurent, but I was unable to find an app for it. Near the intersection of Industrial and St-Laurent, a project at that location could be a hard sell unless rental prices were far lower than the average.


https://renx.ca/full-steam-ahead-gro...ttawa-florida/

It's possibly this proposal, or the next phase of it:

https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...d.php?t=240653
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  #8  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2020, 5:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
It's possibly this proposal, or the next phase of it:

https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...d.php?t=240653
That must be it, or next phase as you said. Don't even remember ever seeing this proposal.
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  #9  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2021, 2:07 AM
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Here are the May 2021 updates in response to the UDRP. Tower B also gained a floor in height and is now at 12 storeys.


Siteplan:




Renderings:































http://webcast.ottawa.ca/plan/All_Im...12-20-0041.PDF
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  #10  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2021, 1:48 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
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Looks pretty good. Nice to see new development around this area (a lot of the existing towers are getting old).

Will bring in even more density and people to Lincoln Fields which is great with the LRT station there soon.

I hope the redevelopment of Lincoln Fields also speeds up, would be great to see a very dense (residential/retail) pocket with park/plaza and limited surface parking.
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  #11  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2022, 3:25 AM
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Updated proposal (October 2022)

The building envelopes have been updated slightly. If you like playing the Before & After game, they've provided that for us here: http://webcast.ottawa.ca/plan/All_Im...12-20-0041.PDF






























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  #12  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2022, 2:12 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
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Looks pretty good. Nice density and replacing surface lots & old tire shops, in proximity to Lincoln Fields & LRT. It's a win for me.
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  #13  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2023, 1:55 AM
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The previously existing buildings on the subject site are now demolished.
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  #14  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2023, 2:48 PM
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This project will be on the agenda for this Wednesday's city council meeting.
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  #15  
Old Posted Apr 25, 2023, 6:02 PM
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  #16  
Old Posted Apr 28, 2023, 5:24 PM
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Project was approved by council on Wednesday April 26th. Hope to see shovels in the ground soon.
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  #17  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2024, 5:31 PM
Marcus CLS Marcus CLS is offline
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Visual observation update: Since the last entry buried utility work was carried out in the road allowance for Forest and Bond street. That work appears to be complete. The past 2 drive byes in Sept. I noticed a pile of rubber tires at the N.W. Corner is finally gone and a pick up truck with trailer was on site with laborer grappling with brush. Possible signs of site prep.?
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