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  #261  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2023, 7:10 PM
Marcus CLS Marcus CLS is offline
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Originally Posted by originalmuffins View Post
Cobalt on Railfans Discord mentioned security and a pile of fences at the Dream Lebreton site. Looks like they getting ready!!
I went for a walk straight through the open field site. I did not see any security or pile of fencing. I presume any fencing was set up for crowd control on Booth Street for Bluesfest. I counted 5 bore test holes. No activity on the site today.
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  #262  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2023, 7:30 PM
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I went for a walk straight through the open field site. I did not see any security or pile of fencing. I presume any fencing was set up for crowd control on Booth Street for Bluesfest. I counted 5 bore test holes. No activity on the site today.
I guess false alarm. Sucks.
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  #263  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2023, 10:55 PM
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Originally Posted by originalmuffins View Post
I guess false alarm. Sucks.
I'm really excited for our new second tallest that would be right around the 50th tallest in Calgary. Damn.
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  #264  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2023, 4:32 AM
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I'm really excited for our new second tallest that would be right around the 50th tallest in Calgary. Damn.
If only those other tallest that have approvals actually got built instead of sitting there forever. I love these and can't wait for them to go up, but it would be nice to see our actual tallest towers planned go up in the near future....
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  #265  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2023, 8:51 PM
Dzingle Bells Dzingle Bells is offline
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this project won a people's choice AZ award

https://awards.azuremagazine.com/art...ream-lebreton/

and has been shortlisted for a World Architecture Festival award.

https://www.worldbuildingsdirectory....ream-lebreton/
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  #266  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2023, 5:30 PM
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Originally Posted by Dzingle Bells View Post
this project won a people's choice AZ award

https://awards.azuremagazine.com/art...ream-lebreton/

and has been shortlisted for a World Architecture Festival award.

https://www.worldbuildingsdirectory....ream-lebreton/
Please break ground, please break ground! (Can’t wait to see this one started)
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  #267  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2023, 7:39 PM
originalmuffins originalmuffins is offline
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Please break ground, please break ground! (Can’t wait to see this one started)
With you on this. I really really want to see this break ground.
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  #268  
Old Posted Jul 24, 2023, 6:34 PM
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From the CBC article about high-rise projects in Ottawa.

https://www-cbc-ca.cdn.ampproject.or...line-1.6907968

Quote:
Dream Asset Management, one of the companies behind the Zibi project along the Ottawa River, is looking to build a two-tower highrise complex on LeBreton Flats right beside Pimisi O-Train station.

As proposed, the 31- and 36-storey towers are among the more visually striking buildings currently pitched for Ottawa. They would include 607 rental units — with 41 per cent deemed affordable — as well as retail, a community hub and a park.

Council approved the necessary rezoning last year, and the company is now working to finalize approvals. Dream's VP of development, Justin Robitaille, did not have an exact timeline for construction, but said the company is working to bring it "to fruition in the near future."
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  #269  
Old Posted Jul 26, 2023, 6:34 PM
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From the Perkins&Will website. No new info I don't think, but still interesting.

Quote:
Dream LeBreton
Ottawa, Ontario

Client: Dream
Size: 1,200,000 square feet
Completion Date: 2026

Connecting Sustainability and Equity in a Zero-Carbon Vertical Community

LeBreton Flats Library Parcel is the first major housing development in Ottawa built for a post-pandemic world—a world in which the deep connections between sustainability and social equity have never been more apparent. Committed to realizing this vision, Toronto-based developer Dream built a design team led by a joint venture of Perkins&Will and KPMB Architects, supported by Two Row Architect. The project is one of Canada’s largest residential zero-carbon projects.

The Library Parcel project anchors the future development of the LeBreton Flats precinct, a dynamic transit-oriented community near the Ottawa River and next to Ādisōke, Ottawa’s new central library. The development has 600 new rental units—41% of them designated as affordable and offered below market rents. The development’s two towers include generous community amenities, views of Parliament Hill and the Ottawa River, and retail at grade, framing and animating a series of new public spaces at grade. The project’s public realm links the neighbourhood with an LRT station, connecting residents to the wider city and region without needing access to a car.

Honouring the cultural and natural histories of the site

The project site is situated at the confluence of the three rivers we now call Gatineau, Ottawa, and Rideau, and has been home to and visited by Indigenous people for thousands of years. It has been a point of connection and trade throughout history, including between the host Algonquin Nation, Haudenosaunee, and Huronne-Wendat Peoples and later as the founding site of Ottawa, Canada’s capital. In collaboration with Indigenous architects, Two Row Architect and consultants Innovation 7, the design thinking and the programming for the site has been developed to carry forward and honour its pre-settlement history and the site’s identity as a place of connection and community. Sustainability and stewardship are core traditional values in Indigenous communities. The historical alignment of Wellington Street is recovered and made visible, establishing a physical connection to Ādisōke and the emerging public space system, but also a conceptual connection to the Parliament Precinct which has been lost over time as Wellington Street has been realigned. The landscape features a gathering place between the two towers to be used as a central social public space which pays tribute to Indigenous ideas of connectivity.

Building an affordable and inclusive community

At the heart of the project is a belief that to build a community we need to build spaces that are supportive, inclusive, and give dignity to all. Within the project, 41% of units are offered below market rent. These affordable units are distributed throughout the vertical community, undifferentiated from market housing. Approximately 10% of the unit have 3-bedrooms. Shared spaces such as gardens, a fitness centre, and a childcare facility are spread across the towers to promote and develop a sense of community among residents. These diverse choices create multiple opportunities for people to interact, forming real time social networks and nurturing a comprehensive community by design.

31% of the residential units and all the amenity spaces are designed as universally accessible. In combination, these strategies contribute to creating a truly diverse, dignifying, and inclusive community.

Expressing Identity

The exterior design of the building aims to respond to the historic landscape and pay homage to the Algonquin people and the typology of the land. The podium is evocative of the escarpment featuring organic forms and cladding of the tower alludes to the Gatineau Hills in autumn. Designed in collaboration with renowned Canadian artist Margaret Priest, the towers are designed as a beacon of hope and optimism about our collective future. The use of bold colour speaks to the seasonal colouration of the Laurentian Forest and the vibrant red brick homes in the surrounding community. Distinguished by its materiality and the integration of Indigenous principles, the development displays an outward set of ideals about our histories, this place, and our peoples.

Living Design

The project prioritizes the social, emotional, and physical health of the residents, while minimizing negative impacts on the environment. By employing passive design strategies that minimize energy consumption, including a high-performance building envelope and orientation to modulate solar exposure, as well as the One Planet Living framework, the project is on target to be one of Canada’s largest Net Zero operation carbon and LEED Gold communities. The integration of native trees and plantings remove carbon dioxide from the environment, reduce runoff and water use, and produce fruit and other culturally significant uses. Non-toxic, regionally-sourced materials and biophilic design principles distinguish the overall approach to sustainability. The form of the building is shaped to increase solar exposure to the public realm and to create a series of landscape terraces which are programmed as space for community agriculture and gathering.

Creating scales of community

Community is formed through a sense of belonging, at a scale where one can get to know their neighbours. The design prioritizes new ways of thinking about dwelling in our time. Numerous spaces of interaction are developed and create multiple places for people to cross paths and meet. The spaces create the opportunity for the formation of real time social networks and the nurturing of new and existing friendships. To this end, individual household units aggregate to form “blocks” within the project which are supported and defined by indoor and outdoor amenity spaces. Outdoor spaces are created through a series of terraces where growing food, gathering, and dining occur. Internally, amenity spaces are centrally located, providing easy access to all residences on the floor but also through the building. Indoor children’s spaces, homework rooms, co-working lounges, community kitchens, and fitness areas seek to support the diverse needs of residents. While the project seeks to actively support the residents who live within the building and immediately surrounding the development, it also aspires to build a much broader community, projecting outward a set of ideals about our histories, this place, our peoples and how we might live together.
A diagram sowing sustainability features.



And renderings. Again, nothing new.

Looking at this one, you have to wonder what can be built on the City's land between Dream LeBreton and Adisoke. It's not a lot of space. I wish (and I thought at one point) the City would have thrown in their parcel in with the NCC to create one big project.

In any case, I hope the City puts all of its holdings around the library up for competition in the near future. I'd like this entire area redeveloped by 2030.







Interior rendering accurately depicts the views.



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  #270  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2023, 2:23 AM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
I'm really excited for our new second tallest that would be right around the 50th tallest in Calgary. Damn.
Somebody who didn't know better would think you were being facetious.
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  #271  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2023, 12:29 PM
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No movement as of yesterday...

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  #272  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2023, 6:51 PM
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Dream Unlimited Corp. Announces Plans to Develop 5,000 Purpose-built Rental Suites Across Canada, After Federal Government Tables New GST Legislation
Quote:
TORONTO, Sept. 25, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- After new legislation related to GST exemptions was tabled in Parliament on Thursday, September 21, 2023, along with anticipated provincial announcements on tax waivers and average interest rates seen this year, Dream Unlimited Corp. (TSX: DRM) (“Dream”) has announced plans to deliver 5,000 new purpose-built rental units in urban centres across Canada. These government announcements establish a newfound ability for the entire development industry ecosystem to partner with all levels of government, not-for-profit and private sector organizations to collectively address the affordability crisis by increasing the amount of market and affordable rental units available to Canadians.

On September 14, 2023, the Prime Minister announced that GST would be removed on the construction of new apartment buildings, to encourage construction of needed housing. That effort was moved forward Thursday when the new legislation was tabled.

“With Thursday’s introduction of new legislation formalizing the removal of GST, Dream is positioned to move forward on 5,000 net new purpose-built rental apartment units in Ottawa, Saskatoon, Calgary and Toronto collectively,” says Michael J. Cooper, President and Chief Responsible Officer, Dream Unlimited. “This legislation is a game changer for the development industry, and more importantly for Canadians. The housing crisis has impacted every urban centre from coast to coast. What this legislation unlocks is our ability to get shovels into the ground quickly at a time when it’s never been more critical to build new homes.”

Each of the sites identified by Dream currently have approvals in place.

In the next 6 months, Dream can advance its shovel ready projects, which includes 1,350 units. In Ottawa, Dream will be advancing 1,010 units of which 43 per cent – equivalent to 438 units – will be dedicated as affordable. Rents for the Ottawa units will range from 59 per cent of median market rent to market rents, contributing to 7 per cent of the city’s targeted annual construction starts of 15,000 units. In addition, Dream will bring 340 units in Saskatoon. By 2025, Dream will be able to advance another 3,700 units across Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, and Saskatoon.

The substantial progress in Ottawa is largely due to a unique partnership between Dream and the Multifaith Housing Initiative of Ottawa (MHI), a Canadian non-profit charitable organization founded in 2002 that is a coalition of 80 faith communities. As a result of the partnership, both organizations are able to deliver an integrated rental community that will include affordable housing, transit connectivity and unprecedented sustainability targets. Located on the Library Parcel of LeBreton Flats, the development is an innovative, net-zero, mixed-income community that includes 608 rental units, 41 per cent of which will be dedicated as affordable. Dream and MHI will also develop integrated programs and support systems, creating a sense of belonging, fostering wellbeing and paving the path for upward mobility for all residents in a sustainable, inclusive community in a transit-oriented development.

“Multifaith Housing Initiative strongly supports the legislation tabled by the federal government on Thursday to eliminate the GST from new purpose-built rentals and encourages all provincial governments to proceed with the exemption of the PST. The elimination of GST/PST will allow projects and innovative partnerships between private and non-profit sector, like the one at LeBreton Flats between Dream and Multifaith Housing Initiative to proceed and produce a much needed 608 units of purpose-built rental of which 41% or 250 units will be affordable ranging from 59% of median market rent to market units, with affordability tenure in excess of 55+ years and will be net zero. These partnerships are essential to scale the delivery of affordable housing and to strengthen capacity in the non-profit sector in our country. We welcome the government’s initiative and continue committed to working with governments and private-sector to deliver safe, clean and affordable housing for Canadians,” says Suzanne Le, Executive Director, Multifaith Housing Initiative.

With the recent GST waiver announcement and cooperation with government partners, Dream and MHI, other developers, investors and not-for-profits can maximize the volume of market rent and affordable housing available to those in need and create enhanced benefits to future residents. The successful partnership between private sector developers, non-profit organizations and governments represents an innovative model that can be replicated and allow for the creation of new affordable units all over Canada. While the GST waiver is a substantial step, all participants and all levels of government will benefit by continuing to join forces to advance this critical mission that will create substantial new housing and create meaningful opportunities for community-building and social impact for Canadians across the country.
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2023/09/25/2748929/0/en/Dream-Unlimited-Corp-Announces-Plans-to-Develop-5-000-Purpose-built-Rental-Suites-Across-Canada-After-Federal-Government-Tables-New-GST-Legislation.html#:~:text=%E2%80%9CWith%20Thursday's%20introduction%20of%20new,Chief%20Responsible%20Officer%2C%20Dream%20Unlimited
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  #273  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2023, 7:05 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
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When can we expect this to break ground?
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  #274  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2023, 7:31 PM
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According to Cobalt on Rail Fans Canada Discord, we're 166 units short of the 1,010 announced in Ottawa. is there another approved Dream project we don't know about, or one that they haven't officially announced themselves as a partner (Windmill or Theia)?
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  #275  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2023, 11:45 PM
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A nice little Reddit thread about the a$$#oles that run Dream.

https://www.reddit.com/r/toronto/com...d_5000_rental/
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Last edited by rocketphish; Sep 27, 2023 at 12:06 AM. Reason: Edited-out the profanity
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  #276  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 12:04 AM
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Developer says it’s planning to build 5,000 rental units across Canada because of Liberals’ GST break

Nojoud Al Mallees
The Canadian Press
Spetember 26, 2023 | Published 12 hours ago


A Toronto-based real estate company says it is planning to build 5,000 new rental units in urban centres across the country as a result of the federal government’s decision to eliminate GST charges on rental developments.

The CEO of Dream Unlimited Corp., Michael Cooper, says high interest rates and construction costs had put many projects on pause.

“A lot of projects that we had hoped to be able to start haven’t penciled out,” Cooper said.

But the federal government’s announcement that it would eliminate GST charges off rental developments – and the expectation that provinces would follow suit – has changed the calculation for Dream.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland introduced legislation last week that would provide a 100 per cent GST rebate for new rental developments. The measure has been called for by housing experts, advocates and developers who say more incentives are needed to spur purpose-built rentals.

Cooper says the full rebate is a game-changer because while retailers can pass on the cost of a sales tax to customers, rental developers have to pay the tax themselves.

“When you build an apartment, the person paying the rent doesn’t pay (sales tax),” Cooper said. “It makes a lot of apartments uneconomical.”

The announcement from the real estate company comes with a caveat: provinces would have to waive their sales taxes, too, and average interest rates would have to stay the same.

Dream plans to begin construction of more than 1,000 rental units in Ottawa, with one of the communities being built in partnership with the Multifaith Housing Initiative, a local non-profit affordable housing organization.

The two organizations were able to present the project together to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. to take advantage of cheaper financing and provide more affordable housing units.

In Ottawa, about 40 per cent of the units are expected to be affordable, with those units’ rent prices either 33 per cent or 45 per cent below market value.

Both Dream and Multifaith Housing Initiative say the partnership between a non-profit organization and for-profit real estate company is a novel idea.

“What we’re getting out of it is that ... we’re able to build these units at a much lower cost per square foot than we could do it on our own,” said Suzanne Le, executive director of the Multifaith Housing Initiative.

“It’s a very unique partnership, but it’s also an opportunity for how we look and build to the future.”

While the GST is already changing the calculation for rental developers, Cooper says there are other things the federal government could do to help spur purpose-built rentals. Those include simplifying the CMHC’s approval process, providing other tax incentives and helping with cheaper financing.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has promised to unveil more measures aimed at increasing the housing stock in the country, with all eyes on the upcoming fall budget update.

According the CMHC, the country needs to build about 3.5 million more units than its current pace of building by 2030 to restore affordability.

Cooper says he’s happy to see a more robust discussion happening in the country on housing, but he noted that the crisis is the result of all parties and levels of government not doing enough over the last 40 years.

“We all share the blame. But I’m really happy to see that everybody’s stepping up and dealing with trying to find solutions now.”

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/busi...across-canada/
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  #277  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 12:18 AM
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Love the little moderation on my profane comment 'a$$#oles'

Is there a forum wide policy on profanity? I have always tried to moderate my potty mouth, although I have never been clear on whether it's decorum or policy, and I am too lazy to read the small print
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  #278  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 12:31 AM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
Love the little moderation on my profane comment 'a$$#oles'

Is there a forum wide policy on profanity? I have always tried to moderate my potty mouth, although I have never been clear on whether it's decorum or policy, and I am too lazy to read the small print
Yes, it's at the very bottom of the forum home page, which I'm sure that few people have ever seen:
https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/index.php

Don't worry... nobody gets penalized for the odd use of profanity. But mods may edit it, or even delete the post if it's really flagrant.
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  #279  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 2:22 AM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
A nice little Reddit thread about the a$$#oles that run Dream.

https://www.reddit.com/r/toronto/com...d_5000_rental/
Yeah the 1 or two comments on the owner don't paint a good picture of him

The rest is just a bunch of bog standard comments from idiots bitching about the lack of rent control where 40% are going to at "affordable rates" (which will essentially put them under rent control), or bitching that someone is making a profit on building homes that we sorely need.
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  #280  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 1:12 PM
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Dream has one of the best urbanism records in Canada. Great architecture for the most part (Zibi Gatineau aside). This particular project is 40% truly affordable.

No doubt the people on top have sketchy backgrounds and all, and the company surely has black marks, but I don't really care.
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