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  #141  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2024, 3:32 PM
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Originally Posted by giallo View Post
I like the redesign!

I'm looking forward to this one. It'll bring a nice visual presence to the area, and add much needed housing around Main St Station.
The design will change again, assuming that Council endorse the rezoning report, which says that the amenity space is inadequate, and the changed design (above) isn't sufficient. The recommendation is that the DP should meet the standard requirements for amenity space for residential buildings.
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  #142  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2024, 4:22 PM
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Originally Posted by giallo View Post
I like the redesign!

I'm looking forward to this one. It'll bring a nice visual presence to the area, and add much needed housing around Main St Station.
It's actually closer to Mt. Pleasant station, but you could walk to either.

It looks interesting. The common space every 3 floors is weird though.
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  #143  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2024, 5:17 PM
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Originally Posted by Changing City View Post
The design will change again, assuming that Council endorse the rezoning report, which says that the amenity space is inadequate, and the changed design (above) isn't sufficient. The recommendation is that the DP should meet the standard requirements for amenity space for residential buildings.
Ya the "we will build sufficient amenity space in phase 2" will be an interesting conversation for the applicant.

Will also love to see this in conjunction with not providing balconies for the majority (all?) of units.
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  #144  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2024, 8:33 PM
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Originally Posted by WarrenC12 View Post
It's actually closer to Mt. Pleasant station, but you could walk to either.

It looks interesting. The common space every 3 floors is weird though.
Ah yeah. I meant Mount Pleasant Station. I keep on thinking of calling it Main and Broadway Station.
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  #145  
Old Posted Jan 6, 2024, 1:38 AM
officedweller officedweller is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Changing City View Post
The design will change again, assuming that Council endorse the rezoning report, which says that the amenity space is inadequate, and the changed design (above) isn't sufficient. The recommendation is that the DP should meet the standard requirements for amenity space for residential buildings.
I assume that those balconies abutt the elevator core,
and would those doors emerge from the emergency stair landings?
(which would raise issues).

PS - the north side of the building has the views, but not the sun. Probably better to have amenity spaces on the south or west sides.
Maybe rotate the tower so the core and balconies face west?
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  #146  
Old Posted Jan 6, 2024, 2:04 AM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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Planning document for the Sept 2023 revisions

https://rezoning.vancouver.ca/applic...l-drawings.pdf

re: balconies in tall wood buildings from the architects

Quote:
• Balcony assemblies in mass timber buildings present several challenges with respect to
structural and building enclosure detailing, significant risk of moisture damage,
combustibility of wood overhangs, increased thermal bridging, and significant costs and
constructability concerns.
CD-1 Rezoning: 2015 Main Street and 190 East 4th Avenue – RTS 16071 11
• Balconies in tall buildings are required to be of non-combustible materials, which is
difficult to achieve in mass timber buildings, or for projections of more than 610 mm to be
equipped with sprinklers, which significantly increases complexity and costs.
• The provision of projecting or recessed balconies is technically challenging and not
financially viable. The net zero carbon strategy has been enabled by developing a
cost-effective solution that would not be possible with the addition of balconies.
Quote:
As noted earlier, conditions have been included in Appendix B to require design development to
be undertaken to include private balconies for all units. These conditions allow for alternatives to
private balconies (such as private Juliet balconies, communal balconies, common outdoor
rooftop amenity areas, or a combination of these) to be explored for studio and one-bedroom
units if dictated by project viability and construction techniques, and as long as the building
meets the mass timber definition in the Zoning and Development By-law.
Staff have assessed the extent of changes that would be required to satisfy these conditions
and determined the changes could be incorporated into a future development permit package
for review at that time. No additional floor area would result from adding balconies to the
building.
https://council.vancouver.ca/20231212/documents/rr2.pdf
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  #147  
Old Posted Jan 6, 2024, 2:06 AM
madog222 madog222 is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by officedweller View Post
I assume that those balconies abutt the elevator core,
and would those doors emerge from the emergency stair landings?
(which would raise issues).

PS - the north side of the building has the views, but not the sun. Probably better to have amenity spaces on the south or west sides.
Maybe rotate the tower so the core and balconies face west?
The tower can't be rotated while keeping the existing office building. Though I think the balconies should be fine on the north side, as they are only every third floor there should be plenty of indirect light and provide shade

Yes the balconies are from the stairway landing.


https://council.vancouver.ca/20231212/documents/rr2.pdf
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  #148  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2024, 2:46 AM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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Rezoning for 2219 Cambie is live now

Quote:
The City of Vancouver has received an application to rezone the subject site from C-3A (Commercial) District to CD-1 (Comprehensive Development) District. The proposal is to allow for the development of a 10-storey mixed-use office building and includes:

Commercial retail space on the ground floor;
Office space on the upper levels;
A floor space ratio (FSR) of 7.48;
A building height of 38.8 m (127 ft.); and
116 vehicle parking spaces and 58 bicycle spaces.
https://www.shapeyourcity.ca/2219-2285-cambie-st
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  #149  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2024, 3:00 AM
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4902-4946 Joyce St and 3510 Wellington Ave

Quote:
The City of Vancouver has received an application to rezone the subject site from RM-4N (Residential) District to CD-1 (Comprehensive Development) District. The proposal is to allow for the development of a 12-storey mixed-use building with a four-storey podium and includes:

9 replacement rental units and 104 strata-titled units;
Commercial space on the ground floor;
A floor space ratio (FSR) of 5.00;
A building height of 39.6 m (130 ft.) with additional height for mechanical appurtenances; and
107 vehicle parking spaces and 229 bicycle spaces.
https://www.shapeyourcity.ca/4902-49...wellington-ave

Around 185 metres from Joyce Station
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  #150  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2024, 5:42 AM
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Thanks!
True, I guess the office block will stick around for a while.

Quote:
Originally Posted by madog222 View Post
The tower can't be rotated while keeping the existing office building. Though I think the balconies should be fine on the north side, as they are only every third floor there should be plenty of indirect light and provide shade

Yes the balconies are from the stairway landing.


https://council.vancouver.ca/20231212/documents/rr2.pdf
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  #151  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2024, 7:52 PM
zahav zahav is offline
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At the same DP meeting on Jan 15th, the proposal for 990 Beatty St. is also on the agenda. This is the big vacant lot bounded by Nelson, Beatty, Expo, and The Max building. It's been vacant forever and most recently, Concord has been using for storage of its construction equipment on The Arc and One Pacific. Here is the description again:

The department of Non-Market Housing Development and Operations within the City of Vancouver has applied to develop this site with a 28-storey mixed-use. This proposal includes:

https://www.shapeyourcity.ca/990-beatty-st?tool=qanda
283 social housing units, a fire hall and daycare.
A Floor Space Ratio of 7.54
An approximate floor area of 21,732 m² (233,924 sq.ft.)
An approximate height of 85.4 m (280 ft.)
Two levels of underground parking, accessed off Expo Boulevard

I love the Fire Hall being a part of it, otherwise the building is meh, just like 1090 Expo. But I am not that mad, these will provide a massive injection of affordable housing and density. I have such a detest of surface parking and empty lots in downtown, it is so satisfying to see two huge prime lots finally get developed. Throw in 848 Seymour, and that's 3 prominent sites that have stayed undeveloped that will soon have significant towers. So many proposals of the last few years involved tearing down existing buildings, some of which are of significant size (The Empire Landmark is the biggest example of one that actually happened, but project proposals like 1450 West Georgia, and all of the Alberni St. proposals, involve taking down some fairly tall buildings). I know that is a reality for a city like ours now, and tearing down buildings that are still useful is going to happen, but I just have a weird annoyance when buildings are demolished for development, while empty lots still exist. I know the properties are unrelated, and there's no direct relationship between developing one project through demolition and leaving vacant lots elsewhere, it just rubs me the wrong way. Hence why I am happy to see projects such as the Coal Harbour Elementary, 848 Seymour, 1090 Expo, 990 Beatty, 601 Beach Crescent, and probably more I'm forgetting. These aren't all the best project from a quality or design standpoint, but I just love seeing the parking lots or vacant lots disappear, which all of these projects will do. I'd much rather see all of the remaining parcels get developed before tearing down some significant buildings (1450 Georgia tearing down the Georgian Towers is to me the most jarring, that is a tall and substantial building, and I can think of so many other that should come down before it). Examples of proposed and already completed projects that have reasonable demolition of existing buildings (and what was demolished):

Burrard Place (parking lots and a dealership building)
Vancouver House (small old buildings)
Grosvenor (Il Giardino and some one-story old crap)
The Stack (a glorified parkade with some office)
The Butterfly (a big parking lot, several SF houses, and a small apartment block)
Curv (two very small apartment buildings)
The hotel beside the Exchange (an old single story commercial space)
601 W. Hastings (a glass rotunda lol, one of the best replacements)
Deloitte Summitt (a car rental)
1317 Richards / 508 Drake Street (a rundown 2 storey office with Ismaili mosque, and surface lot)
1515 Alberni (a small retail space and open areas)
Park by Anthem (a former Chevron)
The Block by Amacon (a tiny restaurant demolished, and a heritage building retained and integrated into the development)
1210 Seymour (a tired single story block of random commercial)
Jubillee House (a tired single story block of random commercial)

A couple of tear downs were fairly significant, and even though they were overall improvements, the scope of demolition was a lot:
-8X on the Park (a decently-sized 4-storey apartment complex built in the late 80s. So definitely an improvement getting a distinctive high rise over the old building, but I just remember thinking at the time that the existing was fairly large and not that old, especially at a time when buildings from the mid-1980s were considered too "new" to tear down already)
-Bentall 6 (an 11-storey office building) - Similar to above, the B6 tower is a major improvement, and in a perfect spot for a large office. But the scale of the demolition was significant for a city like Vancouver
-1550 Alberni (an 8ish-storey office building) - As with both above, 1550 Alberni (Kengo Kuma) is a massive improvement from the old office block, and is now a design landmark. But the demolition of such a large existing building was noteworthy
-Caredero by Bosa (a 3-storey office building). Although the existing building was only 3 stories, it was more significant and prominent than some of the dank crap like 508 Drake). And because this was demolished before B6 and 1550, I wasn't as used to seeing larger, decent buildings get demolished. So maybe looking back now, the demolition wasn't that significant, but still put it in the category of major improvement, but at a cost of demolishing something of size
Tate (a real mish mash of SF house, old apartment block, single story commercial, 6 storey office) - Same as Cardero, the new tower was a definite improvement, added height and density instead of suburban-style crap. But at the time, the scale of the demo (especially the office) seemed like a lot. Looking back I can't believe what used to be there, but now we're so used to the high-rises we forget quickly. Thank God for Google Street View in post years, otherwise I'd forget!

Lastly, I can only think of one modern-era (ie. the last 20 years) building demolition where the demolished building far surpassed what replaced it:
-Landmark on Robson (Empire Landmark). I know, I know, maybe the existing building was in need of major upgrades, etc. But it was a huge building and (for good or bad) an iconic building in this city. I remember loving to look at my mom's spiral-album style address book when I was a kid in the 80s. It was all photos of Vancouver, each page of the address book had a big high quality pic of somewhere quintessential Vancouver, and some were aerial photos). It was so cool, my first urban enthusiast moment as a very small kid lol, but I loved flipping through that thing. Anyways, my point is that the Empire Landmark was featured prominently in that, it was thought of almost as a landmark. Not up there with Harbour Centre, but definitely significant (plus the rotating restaurant, which might be tacky now but was very chic when it was built). And so in a city with very few tall buildings, the loss of something 42-storeys was very significant; the number of high-rises over 40-floors was still quite small until recently). But the worst, most unforgivable part for me is what replaced it, those two boring high rises with zero personality, and not even as tall as the previous building. The unacceptable replacement vs. loss of an icon was just hard to fathom. If they had torn it down in order to make a super tall gem, I could have let it go and considered it an improvement. But no, it's a stinker, and a loss. If you look at cities like NYC, where everything has been built out for so long, and density was already insanely high, they often demolish large, tall buildings. In the land of skyscrapers like NYC and HKG, only the strong survive, the land use demand is so high it can justify the economics of demolishing a huge, existing tower. But when that wasn't the case here, it just seemed wrong. Luckily it's the only one in this category, IMO. So one bad mistake, but overall a good trend of replacing under-utilized, vacant, and parking lots.
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  #152  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 3:59 AM
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the crane is up for the Joyce/Kingsway 6 story project. (old 7-11 site)
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  #153  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 7:15 AM
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^Also for Frame at Kingsway & Earles
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  #154  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 4:49 PM
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Is there a 7-11 coming back to the bottom of that development?
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  #155  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 4:55 PM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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Is there a 7-11 coming back to the bottom of that development?
No.
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  #156  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 8:46 PM
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Originally Posted by jollyburger View Post
No.
Thank God.
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  #157  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 9:05 PM
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Was just joking but I assume the rents wouldn't work though they seem to be turning some stores into restaurants these days including with liquor sales.

https://menumag.ca/2023/04/19/the-bi...script-on-qsr/
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  #158  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 9:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jollyburger View Post
Was just joking but I assume the rents wouldn't work though they seem to be turning some stores into restaurants these days including with liquor sales.

https://menumag.ca/2023/04/19/the-bi...script-on-qsr/
In comparison to Asia, the lack of friendly convenient (ironically) convenience stores here is a bit disappointing.

There's actually already a 7-11 a few steps away at Smithe and Beatty, and although that distance would be standard in Taiwan, it might be a little close here.
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  #159  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 9:21 PM
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That's a... fairly ambitious rebranding. We'll see if it pays off.
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  #160  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2024, 10:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chowhou View Post
In comparison to Asia, the lack of friendly convenient (ironically) convenience stores here is a bit disappointing.

There's actually already a 7-11 a few steps away at Smithe and Beatty, and although that distance would be standard in Taiwan, it might be a little close here.
The 7-Eleven reference was to Joyce and Kingsway.

Quote:
Originally Posted by hollywoodnorth View Post
the crane is up for the Joyce/Kingsway 6 story project. (old 7-11 site)
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