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  #41  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2024, 10:29 PM
originalmuffins originalmuffins is offline
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i hope it goes through the appeal and gets approved. this would go well beside brigil's greyhound development to liven up catherine st
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  #42  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2024, 10:39 PM
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I wonder which idiot neighbour spent $400 to cockblock a 24 story tower in Centretown.
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  #43  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2024, 11:11 PM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
I wonder which idiot neighbour spent $400 to cockblock a 24 story tower in Centretown.
One can hope there case is so abysmal that they get the same result as these nimbys in Toronto.

https://x.com/ConsumerSOS/status/1760094417866588495?s=20
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  #44  
Old Posted Feb 23, 2024, 2:46 AM
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Originally Posted by Williamoforange View Post
One can hope there case is so abysmal that they get the same result as these nimbys in Toronto.

https://x.com/ConsumerSOS/status/1760094417866588495?s=20
That's the developer that owns Bayshore now.

Take note, Qualicum NIMBY army!!!
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  #45  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 2:55 PM
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Updated proposal (Dec 2024)

It looks like Windmill's dumbdownification process is now complete on this project. Nice job, Ottawa

Some details:

296 units having the following breakdown:
19 - Bachelor
130 - 1BR
17 - 1BR+den
126 - 2BR
2 - 2BR+den
2 - 3BR

78 vehicle and 276 bicycle parking spaces in 3 underground levels.


Development application:
https://devapps.ottawa.ca/en/applications/D07-12-24-0127/details















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  #46  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 3:11 PM
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WOW... it looks just like all the other garbage under construction in this city...
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  #47  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 3:39 PM
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Wow how disappointing... I liked the alternating white squares on the original proposal and then liked the all-glass of the second version, now I like.... nothing from this one.

Boring, grey, unappealing, mostly spandrel , minimal glass. Looks like Story-Of or the one on Scott St.. and sucks even more since it'll be so visible from the 417

It's like one step forward, 2 steps back in this City.
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  #48  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 4:04 PM
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the facade that is facing the 417 is total garbage! Absolute horror!!
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  #49  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 4:22 PM
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The first slide on Design Evolution should be titled “Ottawafication Process”
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  #50  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2024, 5:41 PM
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Eek, they really turned their back on Catherine street. The garage and probably garbage collection side. I don't think Catherine street will become a pleasant place to walk then.

The siding for the tower in the original design was much better than this. I still don't quite like the midrise block portion over the church roof. I think it would be better without that bump out and just have the bottom of the L-shape be around the same height so that church stands out more. If you're going to tear down most of the church except it's bell tower and two facades, what's the point of keep it at all?
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  #51  
Old Posted Dec 20, 2024, 6:06 AM
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I'm all for more density no matter how bad the design - to an extent. Despite all the poor designs here in Ottawa there are only two buildings I straight up wish hadn't been built: 1960 Scott and Trinity Rideau + Chapel.

If this one goes ahead as currently proposed, I could see it being the third on my "exclusive" list.
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  #52  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2025, 1:43 AM
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Windmill eyes mid-2025 start date for pair of major rental development projects

David Sali, OBJ
February 10, 2025


The Ottawa firm that launched the Zibi waterfront development is poised to break ground on two new rental apartment complexes at sites currently occupied by non-profit organizations. Windmill Development Group says it hopes to start construction later this year on a 24-storey highrise at 384 Arlington Ave., just west of Bronson Avenue, as well as two buildings at 2475 Regina St., just north of Richmond Road on the west side of the Kichi Zibi Mikan Parkway. The new developments would add a total of more than 850 units to the capital’s stock of rental housing, with 566 units planned for Regina Street and 296 apartments slated to be built on Arlington Avenue.

Windmill president Jeremy Reeds told OBJ this week the company aims to include a “significant” amount of affordable housing at each site and hopes to qualify for funding from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. designed to help finance such projects. Ottawa city council has given both proposals the green light. Reeds said the firm has applied for building permits in the hope of putting shovels in the ground within the next six months. The new developments use a template Windmill has employed in the past – redeveloping aging community landmarks such as churches and incorporating new, eco-friendly residential components. “In Ottawa, it’s very easy for us to be recognized as that player in that space,” Reeds said. The Regina Street project ultimately calls for three buildings near Lincoln Fields on a two-acre property that’s currently home to Parkway House, a non-profit organization that houses 12 adults with physical disabilities who require 24-7 care. The plan includes two highrises of 28 and 16 storeys, as well as a seven-storey building that will feature a new home for Parkway House on the ground floor and six storeys of rental apartment units on the floors above.

The seven- and 16-storey buildings, which will be located on the eastern edge of the site, will be constructed first, Reeds said. The tallest tower will be built later where Parkway House now stands.

In keeping with the city’s push for more “15-minute neighbourhoods” near transit nodes, there will be enough parking spaces for about half of the units. The site is located about 400 metres from the Lincoln Fields LRT station that’s now under construction as part of the expanded Confederation Line. The development would include a mix of studio apartments as well as one-, two- and three-bedroom suites. While the first two buildings are planned as rental projects, Reeds said Windmill hasn’t decided whether the 28-storey tower will be a rental building or a condominium. “Ottawa is a smaller market, so there’s definitely a sweet spot of how many units in a condo building you want,” he explained.

Meanwhile, Windmill is also targeting a mid-2025 launch for its planned 24-storey highrise on the corner of Arlington Avenue and Bell Street, just north of the Queensway.

The half-acre parcel of land is currently home to the Ottawa Korean Community Church, which is building a new facility for its congregation at a different site. Windmill struck a deal to purchase the property in 2021, with proceeds from the sale helping to finance construction of the new church. While the existing church – which was built in 1910 as a Protestant church and was sold to the Korean church group in the 1980s – is listed on the City of Ottawa’s heritage register, it has not been designated for preservation under the Ontario Heritage Act.

Its facade will be retained and incorporated into the new highrise in an effort to “preserve and highlight the history and sense of community” the building once brought to its neighbourhood, Windmill said in an urban design brief filed with its development application. The project is slated to include 296 rental suites. Most units are expected to be one- and two-bedroom units along with 19 studio apartments and a pair of three-bedroom units.

Like the Regina Street project, Windmill’s plan for Arlington Avenue calls for far fewer parking spaces than apartment units, with 67 parking spaces set aside for residents. The proposal also features about 22,000 square feet of amenity space, including a rooftop terrace, a “public outdoor area” and an “urban farm.” The Regina Street project sparked concerns from nearby residents who were worried about traffic congestion and the towers obstructing views of the Ottawa River. However, Reeds said the community’s reaction to the Arlington Avenue proposal has generally been positive. The proposal is reminiscent of another project in Windmill’s pipeline – a planned nine-storey mixed-use building that would be attached to the former All Saints Anglican Church on Chapel Street in Sandy Hill.

Reeds said Windmill is “waiting for the right time to launch” the new building, which would feature about 100 condominium units and be a first in Ottawa for a building of its height: rather than using concrete beams, it will be built from cross-laminated timber, a specially engineered wood that proponents say has a range of environmental benefits. Founded in 2003, Windmill is best known in Ottawa for helping get the ambitious Zibi mixed-use waterfront development near Chaudiere Falls off the ground.

The company has built several other projects in the capital, including the Stone Abbey condo and townhome project on the site of the heritage Southminster United Church near Lansdowne Park.

Reeds said the past few years have seen an “unprecedented” jump in construction costs due to factors such as supply chain bottlenecks, rising interest rates and soaring inflation. He’s hoping the Bank of Canada’s recent series of rate cuts will help put the brakes on rising costs and make development projects more financially viable.

“It’s definitely that fine balance in the market right now,” he explained. “There are (projects) that don’t work, there are things that do work. I would say most of the things that work are just barely working. A lot of that is tied to what interest rates are at. They’re starting to get within striking distance.” In addition, he said, the threat of a tariff war between Canada and the U.S. and the upcoming federal election add more layers of uncertainty to the industry’s outlook. “Not a lot is going (on in) construction right now, so some costs are starting to get a bit more reasonable,” Reeds said. “But it’s (getting) that right timing of the market conditions and risk profile. Ideally, you want things tied up and going before everybody decides they want to get stuff tied up and going, because then costs are just going to start escalating again.

“I feel like the last five years have been constant unknowns. Every time you turn around, there’s something new that’s causing a curveball in the industry.”

https://obj.ca/windmill-eyes-launch-of-major-residential-projects/
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  #53  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2025, 10:10 PM
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Aw man. I missed the most recent update this proposal. Was just perusing some articles on Urbsite.Blogspot.com as one does and reading about the fellow who designed the church on this site.

It went from great to good to good to horrible? The third render at the top of the slides is different from the rest.

They had 3 reasonable designs and went full 1960 Scott. Won't be missing this on the highway. Look up disappointing in the dictionary and this is what you'll see.
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  #54  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2025, 1:11 PM
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Quote from a recent Renx article about the Evergreen, Windmill's church project in sandy Hill.

Quote:
In Ottawa, it is also developing two large-scale rentals on 2475 Regina St. and 384 Arlington St. Reeds said construction on those two projects could be started later this year.
https://renxhomes.ca/9-storey-the-evergreen-condo-connect-ottawa-church-allsaints
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  #55  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2025, 1:20 PM
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Does the Arlington project also encompass the church, I wonder?
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  #56  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2025, 3:06 PM
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Does the Arlington project also encompass the church, I wonder?
Doesn't seem to be a full preservation of the Church like All Saints and Southminster, unfortunately. Just facadism. Better than nothing.
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  #57  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2025, 6:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Quote from a recent Renx article about the Evergreen, Windmill's church project in sandy Hill.



https://renxhomes.ca/9-storey-the-evergreen-condo-connect-ottawa-church-allsaints
The dumbing down of the tower on Arlington is super disappointing. Especially with how many eyes will be on it in a given day. Feels like litmus test for what the average citizen of Ottawa is willing to see as normal architecture. Lots of recent projects have stepped up their game. This would be better buried in the middle of Barrhaven or Kanata.
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  #58  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2025, 6:40 PM
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Originally Posted by ponyboycurtis View Post
The dumbing down of the tower on Arlington is super disappointing. Especially with how many eyes will be on it in a given day. Feels like litmus test for what the average citizen of Ottawa is willing to see as normal architecture. Lots of recent projects have stepped up their game. This would be better buried in the middle of Barrhaven or Kanata.
Agreed. It got worse every time. Hoping Windmill can pull off something that ends up looking decent even with this downgrade.

On a positive note, we're at least keeping most of the Church's facade, and it adds housing.
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  #59  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2025, 6:49 PM
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Agreed. It got worse every time. Hoping Windmill can pull off something that ends up looking decent even with this downgrade.

On a positive note, we're at least keeping most of the Church's facade, and it adds housing.
And uh... more towers along the highway corridor

Who knows.. It's entirely possible the material choice could be on point and make a big difference on an otherwise simplified design.

It's just extremely odd to see how it has degraded over time. Where are the concerned arm folders now? They aren't going to be paying out of pocket. If its being built regardless shouldn't they be clutching their pearls a little harder?
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  #60  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2025, 9:39 PM
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Originally Posted by ponyboycurtis View Post
And uh... more towers along the highway corridor

Who knows.. It's entirely possible the material choice could be on point and make a big difference on an otherwise simplified design.

It's just extremely odd to see how it has degraded over time. Where are the concerned arm folders now? They aren't going to be paying out of pocket. If its being built regardless shouldn't they be clutching their pearls a little harder?
The absence of red brick, at least for the podium, is a puzzler.
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