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  #13321  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2016, 9:11 PM
officedweller officedweller is offline
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Grosvenor Building plaza construction from the Georgia Straight:


http://www.straight.com/news/662336/cher...n-vancouver-plaza-luxury-retail-building

and from Granville St. twitter:


https://twitter.com/GranvilleStreet

Last edited by officedweller; Mar 22, 2016 at 9:41 PM.
     
     
  #13322  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2016, 9:47 PM
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have they announced a tenant for this?
     
     
  #13323  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2016, 9:56 PM
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Don't think so.
     
     
  #13324  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 12:38 AM
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East Cordova & Main





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  #13325  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 2:33 AM
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Originally Posted by Bankview View Post
East Cordova & Main

Thanks for the pics. Looks like 150 E. Cordova. 61 condos, Christopher Bozyk Architects, developer is PortLiving.



source: buzzbuzzhome
     
     
  #13326  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 2:19 AM
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Granville Street Trees

Walking along the neglected Granville St "entertainment zone" strip this afternoon I noticed almost all of the street trees appear to have died.

This is most noticeable in the 5 block section from Robson to Drake, although a few are also dead on the north side of Dunsmuir. A quick estimate of 5/block, this could easily be 50+ trees.

Not exactly a good portrayal of being the #greenestcity. Perhaps this was due to the extremely dry summer? I hope they have a chance to replant some sturdy new ones sometime this spring.
     
     
  #13327  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 2:52 AM
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Originally Posted by bigbadbrent View Post
Walking along the neglected Granville St "entertainment zone" strip this afternoon I noticed almost all of the street trees appear to have died.

This is most noticeable in the 5 block section from Robson to Drake, although a few are also dead on the north side of Dunsmuir. A quick estimate of 5/block, this could easily be 50+ trees.

Not exactly a good portrayal of being the #greenestcity. Perhaps this was due to the extremely dry summer? I hope they have a chance to replant some sturdy new ones sometime this spring.
that could be, but also probably poisoned by the hundreds of cigarette butts from the piece of crap smokers who just throw them on the ground around plants/trees/gutters/and every other public space in the city. Granville street in the summer is disgusting. i spent a lot of time on Granville this past summer and it was just disgusting. every tree had a thick layer of cigarette butts around it and those things are filled with poison for living things. it would be nice if people used the one of the numerous places to throw them out on the lamp posts on Granville.
     
     
  #13328  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 3:29 AM
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They could be late budding.

Also, if they replaced dead ones in the past with different stock, they may bud at different times if they are variants of the same species (i.e. the flowering pear trees on Seymour flower as slightly different times).
     
     
  #13329  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:09 AM
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I think the city risked the future success of the Granville Street trees from the very beginning when they inexplicably planted shockingly young and undeveloped trees (skinny little saplings really) precisely in an area where they needed to be strong and robust in order to withstand the maximum abuse they were inevitably going to experience. Back in 2010, I remember multiple occasions when drunken party-goers were leaning on them so heavily that their branches were literally touching the ground. It seemed obvious back then that many of the trees were not going to develop well, assuming they get didn't get snapped in half.
     
     
  #13330  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:21 PM
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Originally Posted by VancouverOfTheFuture View Post
that could be, but also probably poisoned by the hundreds of cigarette butts from the piece of crap smokers who just throw them on the ground around plants/trees/gutters/and every other public space in the city. Granville street in the summer is disgusting. i spent a lot of time on Granville this past summer and it was just disgusting. every tree had a thick layer of cigarette butts around it and those things are filled with poison for living things. it would be nice if people used the one of the numerous places to throw them out on the lamp posts on Granville.
Can't agree more. Sometimes I feel that Granville Street is an extension of East Hastings, where there are loads of disgusting stuff on the ground, and that trees fail to fluorish.
     
     
  #13331  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:27 PM
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NIMBYs at work once again. Fighting against a mere 21-storey rental building to be built downtown? Only in Vancouver geeesh! No wonder more and more developers move to the suburbs to build. The ones that can afford to stay in Vancouver will only build ultra-expensive condos on a few selected lots. Get used to unaffordable housing for decades to come. It's the people of Vancouver to be blamed anyhow.



Controversial West End tower up for review by Vancouver development permit board
http://www.straight.com/news/662541/cont...eview-vancouver-development-permit-board
by Carlito Pablo on March 21st, 2016 at 3:16 PM

The skyscraper will replace a three-storey apartment building and a rooming house.

It divided the West End community, and triggered a legal battle with the City of Vancouver.

When completed, Westbank Projects Corp.’s high-rise will dwarf all buildings within eight blocks of its location at 1754–1772 Pendrell Street, except for one, the Imperial Tower on Bidwell Street.

The height of the 21-storey skyscraper was one of the points of contention regarding the rental development.

One resident wondered why another part of town, Kitsilano, doesn’t get towers. But another argued that it will allow more people to live in the neighbourhood.

In September 2015, councillors belonging to the ruling Vision Vancouver party of Mayor Gregor Robertson approved the rezoning application filed by Westbank. This will allow the developer to triple the floor space it can build.

A month later, six West End residents sought a judicial review to stop the development. They lost.

On February 16 this year, B.C. Supreme Court Judge Kenneth Affleck ruled that the City of Vancouver has the authority to approve a zoning change.

Westbank will mark another milestone Monday (March 21) when the project goes for review by the development permit board.

The 21-storey building will stand on three lots, replacing a three-storey apartment and a rooming house.

Follow Carlito Pablo on Twitter @carlitopablo.
     
     
  #13332  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:31 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bigbadbrent View Post
Walking along the neglected Granville St "entertainment zone" strip this afternoon I noticed almost all of the street trees appear to have died.

This is most noticeable in the 5 block section from Robson to Drake, although a few are also dead on the north side of Dunsmuir. A quick estimate of 5/block, this could easily be 50+ trees.

Not exactly a good portrayal of being the #greenestcity. Perhaps this was due to the extremely dry summer? I hope they have a chance to replant some sturdy new ones sometime this spring.
Those trees are an odd breed. They don't drop their leaves in the fall, rather they just die on the vine so to speak. The are late bloomers in the Spring, but the new growth pushes the old leaves off and are replaced with new lush growth. It's an odd choice of tree in my opinion. These trees are also found on Robson near Denman in front of the Safeway, as well as elsewhere. Be patient, they'll be back.
     
     
  #13333  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:34 PM
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Originally Posted by Vin View Post
NIMBYs at work once again. Fighting against a mere 21-storey rental building to be built downtown? Only in Vancouver geeesh! No wonder more and more developers move to the suburbs to build. The ones that can afford to stay in Vancouver will only build ultra-expensive condos on a few selected lots. Get used to unaffordable housing for decades to come. It's the people of Vancouver to be blamed anyhow.
Nope. In most cities.
     
     
  #13334  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 4:46 PM
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Originally Posted by csbvan View Post
Nope. In most cities.
Nope, only in Vancouver, especially the West End. To date, almost every single new skyscraper proposal had been opposed:

Here's oppostion to West End higher density (at parts of Robson & Davie only):
https://westendneighbours.wordpress.com/2014/01/23/west-end-speaks-survey/

Here's to 1401 Comox:
http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2010/08/31...versial-west-end-tower-proposal-on-hold/

Here's to 1754 Pendrell:
Opposed to it since 2008 and counting.
http://vancouversutton.com/blog.html/21-storey-west-end-tower-opposed-by-neighbours-3998759

Frankly speaking, the only reason why no one hears a lot more complaints from Vancouverites outside downtown is only because City bylaws do not even make it possible to have skyscrapers proposed in many backward neighbourhoods. But we still hear them, again for almost all new proposals.

Commercial drive (12-stoery building):
http://www.metronews.ca/news/vancouver/2...-tower-protest-attracts-small-crowd.html
The Independent on Broadway and Kinsway:
http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/blog/nofutureface/6767

Last edited by Vin; Mar 24, 2016 at 5:04 PM.
     
     
  #13335  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 5:10 PM
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Originally Posted by Vin View Post
Nope, only in Vancouver, especially the West End. To date, almost every single new skyscraper proposal had been opposed:

Here's oppostion to West End higher density (at parts of Robson & Davie only):
https://westendneighbours.wordpress.com/2014/01/23/west-end-speaks-survey/

Here's to 1401 Comox:
http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2010/08/31...versial-west-end-tower-proposal-on-hold/

Here's to 1754 Pendrell:
Opposed to it since 2008 and counting.
http://vancouversutton.com/blog.html/21-storey-west-end-tower-opposed-by-neighbours-3998759

Frankly speaking, the only reason why no one hears a lot more complaints from Vancouverites outside downtown is only because City bylaws do not even make it possible to have skyscrapers proposed in many backward neighbourhoods. But we still hear them, again for almost all new proposals.

Elsewhere in the city
Commercial drive (12-stoery building):
http://www.metronews.ca/news/vancouver/2...-tower-protest-attracts-small-crowd.html
The Independent on Broadway and Kinsway:
http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/blog/nofutureface/6767
Meanwhile in San Fran, voters have actually been able to VOTE DOWN proposals (on a side note, why was it voted down? Strict height restrictions, yeah, other cities have those too). Voters killing a proposal by referendum. "Only in Vancouver" Yeah, no NIMBYs elsewhere.
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/8-Washington-condo-project-loses-big-in-S-F-4958982.php
     
     
  #13336  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 5:31 PM
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Originally Posted by csbvan View Post
Meanwhile in San Fran, voters have actually been able to VOTE DOWN proposals (on a side note, why was it voted down? Strict height restrictions, yeah, other cities have those too). Voters killing a proposal by referendum. "Only in Vancouver" Yeah, no NIMBYs elsewhere.
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/8-Washington-condo-project-loses-big-in-S-F-4958982.php
Quote:
Originally Posted by csbvan View Post
Nope. In most cities.
One city in the West coast does not represent "most cities", come on. We all know San Fran and Vancouver are very similar in many ways, including having strict height limits, Nimby-central, history of hippie/drug culture, etc. FYI, Summer Love popularized the hippie movement. Over there, the high tech sector slowly moved to the Silicon Valley.
     
     
  #13337  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 5:40 PM
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Originally Posted by Prometheus View Post
I think the city risked the future success of the Granville Street trees from the very beginning when they inexplicably planted shockingly young and undeveloped trees (skinny little saplings really) precisely in an area where they needed to be strong and robust in order to withstand the maximum abuse they were inevitably going to experience. Back in 2010, I remember multiple occasions when drunken party-goers were leaning on them so heavily that their branches were literally touching the ground. It seemed obvious back then that many of the trees were not going to develop well, assuming they get didn't get snapped in half.
Is it possible that the city expects the landowners next to the trees to ensure they are sufficiently watered? I've seen some cities like that, and wonder if it is the same for Vancouver.
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  #13338  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 6:18 PM
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Originally Posted by Vin View Post
One city in the West coast does not represent "most cities", come on. We all know San Fran and Vancouver are very similar in many ways, including having strict height limits, Nimby-central, history of hippie/drug culture, etc. FYI, Summer Love popularized the hippie movement. Over there, the high tech sector slowly moved to the Silicon Valley.
sf is a massive outlier and should never be used in any comparative context, unless it's to something like greenwich village or beverly hills or other zero growth areas.

first off, sf and vancouver have very little in common, as far as i can tell. they don't look or feel similar, there's no similar history. vancouver doesn't have american demographics, no brown or black people like we have, with the impacts they've had on our history of development (redlining, redevelopment, etc). on the buildings side, most of our neighborhoods are much denser than those in vancouver, yet our height limits here are draconian compared with those of vancouver. a neighborhood like the west end or yaletown is inconceivable in sf. but so is a detached single family home neighborhood like strathcona right next to chinatown, or really anywhere but way up in hills or at the southern border of the city. in terms of urbanity and built form and just the feel of the place, sf has a lot more in common with brooklyn than it does with vancouver.

the development process here is also nothing like that in vancouver - our city hall works differently (we have very powerful district supervisors and a strong mayor, all heavily involved in development), independent of the board and mayor we have a planning commission that votes on projects that come out of the planning department, the planning department has nothing like the autonomy yours does, we have as of right construction. random citizens have standing to file lawsuits on any number of issues that don't exist in vancouver (far too numerous to list), we have inclusionary zoning minimums (that change based on neighborhood but stand at 12% bmr city wide), and a great deal of zoning is done at the ballot box, where individual groups will unilaterally attempt to downzone areas. if you build near the waterfront, for instance, it's now city law that your project must be approved at the ballot box. it's common for a project to take 4-5 years from application to groundbreaking. broadly speaking, our nimbys are probably among the most empowered of any large city on earth, no exaggeration. by contrast, your nimbys up there are pests but ultimately they seem to lose more than they win.

vancouver's system, by and large, from where i'm standing in the center of one of the world's great examples of poor governance, is pretty damned good.

also, since you mentioned it, the drug/hippie culture here was decades ago and nothing of it remains. and tech started in silicon valley and has gradually made its way up here, starting around 1998. sf's economy has always been more focused on banking, financial services (visa is from here), corporate offices, and professional services (accountancy, law, etc). tech is relatively new, though it comprises now maybe 15% of our jobs.
     
     
  #13339  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 6:27 PM
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So the westbank proposal got approval from the city but now they just need to pass a "review from the development board". What does this board look at? I'm assuming not the density/height since that already got approved by the city in the rezoning?

I just have to add. It's always hilarious when I hear say it's a "skyscraper" to refer to a building that will be be nothing more than infill
     
     
  #13340  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 6:56 PM
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Re - Pendrell rental tower...

Quote:
Westbank Projects Corp.’s high-rise will dwarf all buildings within eight blocks of its location
Why write something that is a complete fabrication?
     
     
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