I've reached out for documents for the items on the agenda. I had honestly stopped looking at the agenda page because I was told there were no applications.
Quick edit: advised I will get them tomorrow (though they should also be posted on that page).
Second edit: measuring the property (assuming they've acquired no other properties beside) it's nearly the exact same size as the DQ property. I'm curious how it will be formatted. With low density residential behind I suspect this will be lower density near the back, and higher facing Main. Or might step back from Main and from Jackson. If they also own 401 Main W this will be a much easier development. Guess we'll see tomorrow.
Third edit: one curiosity I have is the sudden interest in redevelopments along Main St. This is now the fourth proposal we know of along Main at or west of Queen, which is strange because with LRT imminent you'd think you'd see some along King west of Queen. Perhaps land owners are sitting until the properties are most valuable, but with interest rates low, you'd think they'd try to sell them to people now and build in a few years.
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Hamilton Downtown. Huge tabletop skyline fan. Typically viewing the city from the street, not a helicopter. Cycling, transit and active transportation advocate 🚲🚍🚋
This part of Main doesn't surprise me too much for developments. It's in close proximity to both Locke Street and the future LRT on King. Don't be surprised if this latest development gets marketed as 'off Locke' and 'steps from the LRT' or something similar. The LRT really will only be 250m away. It's a great area, and will only get better once Main is eventually two way.
I'm really excited to see the huge empty lot at 428 Main Street West (right across the street) get developed. Once these two on the south side go up, and something on that northside lot, we'll really have something here. Put in a traffic light at Strathcona and two way travel on main - and it will almost be an urban area of it's own.
Really not impressed with this one. I've never been much of a fan of these multicoloured facades. I hope the DRP suggests they go with an exterior that more closely matches the development next door.
Mods we can change the title to 7 floors and 21m tall.
I like it. It's inoffensive and done with simple materials so it will be cheap but not look like garbage. I suspect this will have a similar look and finish to the James N affordable housing building. I wish it had more stone materials or brick, but the fact that it has brick is great. Obviously it's not an architectural gem, and it won't win any awards, but at least it uses solid materials rather than spandrels. I personally like the use of colour, while it's not my favourite implementation, adding more black and grey brick would do nothing to improve the feel of the street whatsoever, this is already the most god awful street, the least we can ask is for it to be cheered up a bit.
Not pleased at the complete lack of commercial again, and also not sure why it's called mixed use when the entire building is residential. I feel like some developers use the term "mixed use" to woo planners and design people and urbanists, but in reality it's a single use building. Unless I'm missing a component that's not residential.
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Hamilton Downtown. Huge tabletop skyline fan. Typically viewing the city from the street, not a helicopter. Cycling, transit and active transportation advocate 🚲🚍🚋
That looks like a large loading bay door for residential only?
Looks to be essentially for storing garbage and other stuff. With affordable units, especially deeply affordable units you're going to produce a lot of waste. Low income résidents living in and out of housing create a lot of random garbage. We used to live next door to a rooming house and the garbage production was probably 5 times that per person of any other those on the street including a student rooming house.
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Hamilton Downtown. Huge tabletop skyline fan. Typically viewing the city from the street, not a helicopter. Cycling, transit and active transportation advocate 🚲🚍🚋
Looks to be essentially for storing garbage and other stuff. With affordable units, especially deeply affordable units you're going to produce a lot of waste. Low income résidents living in and out of housing create a lot of random garbage. We used to live next door to a rooming house and the garbage production was probably 5 times that per person of any other those on the street including a student rooming house.
Largely due to high turnover rates and when the tenants move on they tend to leave garbage (furniture and toys etc) behind
Can anyone explain why a developer would opt to build an affordable housing development over an owner occupied condo building? I am assuming there's some government grants there that make it more profitable?
What are the pros and cons of having a 'deeply' affordable housing development in this neighbourhood in particular?
Can anyone explain why a developer would opt to build an affordable housing development over an owner occupied condo building? I am assuming there's some government grants there that make it more profitable?
What are the pros and cons of having a 'deeply' affordable housing development in this neighbourhood in particular?
Most would probably not opt to do that. There aren't that many Indwells out there, relative to the broader development industry, and there's also a range of affordability options given the wide spectrum of socio-economic needs. So cities have to mandate that some developments include a certain proportion of units that are "affordable"... if the rest of the development makes economic/financial sense for the developer, a compromise is possible.
This part of the city has a very heterogeneous social fabric. So I think it's a fit.
Can anyone explain why a developer would opt to build an affordable housing development over an owner occupied condo building? I am assuming there's some government grants there that make it more profitable?
The government has a ton of grants and rebates for affordable projects that can make them pencil out to be more profitable than market in certain situations as the capital cost is so much lower once you discount all the government rebates and grants.
Side benefit of this development is one less trashy injury lawyer billboard on Main coming into the city.
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Hamilton Downtown. Huge tabletop skyline fan. Typically viewing the city from the street, not a helicopter. Cycling, transit and active transportation advocate 🚲🚍🚋