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  #9121  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2020, 10:39 PM
Jimbo604 Jimbo604 is offline
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1649 East Broadway
Recently city council approved "two additional storeys to accommodate a 12-storey rental building with commercial retail space at grade". This will be the tallest building in quite some distance, ironically, from the busiest Skytrain station in the system. Source: COV Rezoning Centre





This is one of the very few changes to Broadway and Commercial in basically forever. They did build a four storey medical building on the north west corner back in 2010. Other than that and the new Skytrain station & lines nothing else in the surrounding area has changed until now. The Safeway is up for future redevelopment, I'll put that in a separate message.

Google Street View of Commercial and Broadway in 2007

Street view goes back to 2007 and you can see how little has changed here at this tremendously busy cross roads. Compare and contrast with the changes at Cambie St and Marine Dr intersection since 2007:

Google Street View of Cambie and Marine

Photo source: me
     
     
  #9122  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2020, 10:45 PM
Jimbo604 Jimbo604 is offline
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Source: COV Rezoning Website

Did anyone watch the Urban Design Panel last Wednesday? One of the two items under consideration was 1780 E Broadway: (Agenda).

"Description: To develop the site with three residential towers, ranging in height from 26 to 31 storeys
with retail at grade that includes a large format grocery store. Additionally, the proposal
includes a childcare facility and a public plaza running parallel to the SkyTrain station. The
proposal has a total of 236 strata units and 452 rental units. The total (FSR) floor area is
approximately 59,297 sq. m (638,273 sq. ft.). This application is being considered under the
Grandview-Woodland Community Plan."

Zoning: C-3A to CD-1

Application Status: Rezoning Application

Review: First

Architect: Perkins + Will Architects"
     
     
  #9123  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2020, 10:50 PM
Jimbo604 Jimbo604 is offline
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Photo source: me

Anyone know what is up with the Onni project a couple sites east of Red Truck Brewing? There hasn't been any activity there in some time.


Source: COV Website

Between Red Truck and the Onni site is 339 E 1st Avenue but that is currently a empty site / dog park. COV Rezoning Application


Across the street is this application at 304 E 1st Ave for residential tower.

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  #9124  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2020, 10:55 PM
Jimbo604 Jimbo604 is offline
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2nd and Main


E 6th and Main


Broadway and Main. Closed and fenced up for Skytrain station construction I assume..?



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  #9125  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2020, 11:20 PM
Feathered Friend Feathered Friend is offline
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Really appreciate your updates in this, and the OV thread Jimbo

As for your questions:

339 E 1st - The design has been changed from that rezoning concept. The development application incorporates mass timber construction, and white terracotta cladding. It was supported at the UDP last year as per
https://cityduo.wordpress.com/2019/04/26...lding-wins-the-hearts-of-vancouvers-udp/

1780 E Broadway (The Safeway site) - This one has its own thread, and yes I can confirm someone from the forum attended the the UDP this week, more on that later though
https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/showthread.php?t=229993
     
     
  #9126  
Old Posted Nov 1, 2020, 12:52 AM
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RE The Broadway/Commercial area, there is a page on Facebook where the city is looking for input on the future of the area.

A lot of the commentators are livid about the towers. Towers do not belong in this area. One guy said he will leave the area if the towers get built (lol have fun moving). Others were pissed that they are extending the skytrain cause its only going to bring more development and how dare they develop the area anymore. And so on.

Also the popolo sign is vandalized, the houses behind fences are vadalized and the proposal sign for the development just near Nanaimo is vandalized with anti development stuff.
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  #9127  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 3:41 AM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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I guess they'll have to redo their theory on Starbucks after all their recent closures.

Quote:
Cressey Development Group is launching only one condo project this year, and everything about it is aimed at a millennial buyer — from the urban location, to the customized use of space, to the hip lobby meeting area, to the in-demand interior designer.

Pre-sales began this month for the 161-unit, 13-storey Format, located on Vancouver’s east side, on the busy Kingsway arterial, at King Edward Avenue.

For years, the property was the site of a big-box Rona store, but it’s also within walking distance of shops that give a neighbourhood a characteristic vibrancy.

Urban planner Andy Yan has said that you can gauge the emergence of a neighbourhood by the presence of hipster mom and pop coffee shops. They are the first to arrive, and it’s only after the neighbourhood has achieved some scale of density that the Starbucks of the world move in.

This particular stretch of Kingsway is in the hipster coffee shop stage, with one such coffee shop nearby and a curated general store across the street, the type of place that sells artisan pickles and locally made bars of soap.

Cressey well-known in Vancouver
Cressey is a well-known name in Metro Vancouver, a 50-year-old developer with hundreds of condominium buildings in its portfolio, as well as office and retail developments, and about 4,000 rental apartments throughout the Lower Mainland. For several years it has been active in the neighbourhood.

On June 1, occupancy began for its 115-unit Conrad rental complex, not far from Format, which is comprised of two buildings at 1771 E. 18th Avenue. Because of government rental construction incentives and a strong consumer demand for rental, Cressey has beefed up its rental assets in recent years.

Other developers are following suit.

“We have a number of rental projects on the go right now,” said vice-president of development Jason Turcotte. “We also have condo projects under construction, but (Format) is our only condo launch this year.

“The market is showing quite a lot of activity right now and I’m pleasantly surprised by the number of enquiries we are getting. Not a lot of (condos) would compare directly to it.”

With Format, the developer is offering a unique marketing strategy for its young buyer: the opportunity to add walls or sliding doors, more storage, or even a kitchen island, so they can reconfigure space to suit their needs without paying for features they don’t need or want.

Employ designer Craig Stanghetta
Cressey has also brought in high-profile interior designer Craig Stanghetta and his team, best known for designing several of the city’s most successful and stylish restaurants, including Osteria Savio Volpe, which he co-owns.

He is also part-owner of Flourist Mill and Bakery, which also has a minimalist Scandinavian interior and is within walking distance of Format.

Cressey is emphasizing the collaboration by setting up the presentation centre next door to the Flourist, on nearby Commercial Street.

As well, Turcotte said they didn’t want to build a presentation centre on site because they want to get construction underway.

Turcotte knew Format buyers would want something different from the status quo. The usual granite counters have been replaced with a durable stone; standard engineered wood floors are polished concrete. Buyers can choose between two minimalist palettes, a white oak or a black stained veneer.

“It’s about that whole emerging trendy Vancouver young millennial location, and very much individuals who love experiences,” said Turcotte. “We went through this whole study on marketing to millennials and what floats their boat, and it was the idea of giving them choice, and allowing them to put their stamp on something.”

The plan is for a six-storey podium with retail at grade and one floor of office space. To the north of the site will be ground-oriented stacked townhouses for young families. One-bedrooms start in the mid-$500,000s range.

There won’t be pricey penthouses or a drab amenity room nobody uses, he said. Instead, there will be an entry-level public gathering space where people can work and socially distance. There will be a workshop for crafting, or repairs.

Although the retail situation is currently bleak, Turcotte hopes to eventually attract a cool coffee entrepreneur to the building.

Make maximum use of floor space
In design circles Stanghetta, who owns Ste. Marie Art + Design, is heavily in demand in Vancouver. In the last four years he’s entered the development world, designing condo and rental building interiors for developers in Vancouver as well in the Seattle region and California.

His client list includes Anthem Properties, Amacon, Intracorp, Mosaic Homes, PortLiving, Westbank, Century Group and others.

Turcotte had noticed his work at an Onni Group presentation centre. He’d also toured several Seattle properties and noticed lobbies that were doing double duty as places to socialize, drink coffee or wine, or set up a laptop.

Stanghetta well understood the integration of public spaces, such as including retail coffee shops in the residential experience, instead of siloing each space off.

“There are different developers with different thresholds of risk,” said Stanghetta. “But, I would say 90 per cent of our clients are all aggressively looking for ways to reinterpret and get better use out of spaces and make design part of a deeper narrative and part of the brand.

“Where you can make it work and drive these ideas home is in the amenity space — that can happen in lobbies, common areas, the workshop, a great outdoor space.

“And so, we have been able to put that minimal look into those spaces and do it in a way that’s just as exciting as what we would be doing for any cool restaurant or café.”
https://renx.ca/cressey-development-pivot-rentals-condos-vancouver-format/
     
     
  #9128  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 3:55 AM
s211 s211 is offline
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"and a curated general store across the street"

If I hear the word "curated" one more time this year I'm going to go insane. What insanely pretentious marketing BS. It's right up there with artisanal.
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  #9129  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 4:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimbo604 View Post
Broadway and Main. Closed and fenced up for Skytrain station construction I assume..?
That corner will be demolished, but the fencing also prevents homeless people from setting up in the abandoned doorways. There would be 5 or 6 permanent homeless campers in no time.
     
     
  #9130  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 4:40 PM
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Quote:
A development application has been submitted by Skyllen Pacific Real Estate to construct a 175-ft-tall, 18-storey residential tower at 1116 Pendrell Street in downtown Vancouver’s West End.

The proposal, near Thurlow Street and west of St. Paul’s Hospital, replaces a 1937-built, two-storey building with 16 apartment units. The developer acquired the property in February 2018.

The condominium unit mix is 69 studio units, 37 two-bedroom units, and three three-bedroom units, while the rental unit mix is four studios, six one-bedroom units, and six two-bedroom units.
https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/1116-pendrell-street-vancouver
     
     
  #9131  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 5:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vancouver_Highrise View Post
This probably should be on the Downtown thread. As well as the rental building the tower will replace a 1976 condo building with 43 units. Picture here.
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  #9132  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 6:17 PM
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New article on the updated plan for the Heather Lands https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/heather-lands-4949-5255-heather-street-vancouver
     
     
  #9133  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 9:10 PM
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Now that is a beautiful public square design.
     
     
  #9134  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2020, 9:58 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Migrant_Coconut View Post
Now that is a beautiful public square design.
This combined with the Oakridge development and the surrounding developments around Oakridge-41st station; is going to make this section of Vancouver quite beefy. And me likes it .
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  #9135  
Old Posted Nov 5, 2020, 4:12 AM
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Creating and Renewing Non-Profit Housing - Virtual Neighbourhood Workshop Sign Up

Quote:
The City is considering changes to streamline the development process for new non-profit housing in select apartment areas across the city. These changes are intended to help existing non-profit societies and co-ops renew existing buildings and build more housing over time, to ensure the city has enough safe, secure, and affordable homes today and into the future.

These zoning changes for non-profit housing are being considered in RM-3A, RM-4, and RM-4N zoning districts throughout the city. Typically, these areas consist of three storey condominium and rental apartment buildings. These zoning amendments would enable non-profit social and co-op housing up to 6 storeys.

There will be 50 spaces available for each session. To ensure a diversity of perspectives, 25 spaces will be reserved for individuals who own their home and 25 spaces will be reserved for individuals living in rental or co-op housing.

Registration is open to all and is not limited to those who live in the area. We encourage anyone who is interested in non-profit housing in these areas to register and attend.
Marpole (Nov 17, 6pm)
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/creating-and...ousing-marpole-registration-127738771103

Grandview-Woodland (Nov 19, 6pm)
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/creating-and...dview-woodland-registration-127740091051

Kitsilano (Nov 24, 6pm)
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/creating-and...sing-kitsilano-registration-125980508091

Mount Pleasant (Nov 25, 6pm)
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/creating-and...mount-pleasant-registration-127739912517
     
     
  #9136  
Old Posted Nov 5, 2020, 9:54 PM
MistyMountain MistyMountain is offline
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Signed up for Kitsilano
     
     
  #9137  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2020, 1:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by s211 View Post
"and a curated general store across the street"

If I hear the word "curated" one more time this year I'm going to go insane. What insanely pretentious marketing BS. It's right up there with artisanal.
That's Jacksons General. I've never been inside, it looks kinda dumpy from the outside. But it's all hipster stuff for sale and locally sourced things like honey and whatevers.
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  #9138  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2020, 9:56 AM
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1477 West Broadway

From Lawrence Black twitter Nov 3rd:


https://twitter.com/LawrenceBlackTV


https://twitter.com/LawrenceBlackTV
     
     
  #9139  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2020, 5:24 PM
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I always liked that building. Actually a little sad to see it gone.
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  #9140  
Old Posted Nov 7, 2020, 5:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SFUVancouver View Post
I always liked that building. Actually a little sad to see it gone.
yeah i liked the lines of it. shame it some elements couldnt have been kept. the new building looks pretty typical.
     
     
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