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  #1041  
Old Posted Feb 29, 2016, 8:52 AM
Pinion Pinion is offline
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The new Kia dealership on 1st and Fell is almost complete, has cars in the showroom etc, so the one on Marine and Bewicke has been shut down to allow the construction of this in front of The Shore:



P.S. urbancanadian, just FYI Seylynn Village has its own thread here: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=205195
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  #1042  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2016, 8:02 PM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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Foundation on the new Seaspan building



https://twitter.com/DIALOGvancouver
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  #1043  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2016, 3:17 AM
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Just saw this in the suburban thread. West Vancouverites would heavily pish posh the idea of being called suburbanites, so heavily that their monocles might pop out I dare say

Quote:
Originally Posted by urbancanadian View Post
The Peak at Mulgrave Park, in the British Properties:


http://www.vancouvernewcondos.com/pr...sh-properties/

Prices start at $2.5M. Expect to see more compact developments like this, relative to the past, as the next phase of sprawl continues in West Van. It's been a while since I looked into it, but IIRC the district plans more midrises compared to mega-mansions in order to protect more of the natural mountain-side landscape.
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  #1044  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2016, 4:33 AM
yorktonite yorktonite is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pinion View Post
The new Kia dealership on 1st and Fell is almost complete, has cars in the showroom etc, so the one on Marine and Bewicke has been shut down to allow the construction of this in front of The Shore:

Damn, this is quite disappointing. It looks like they did a copy/paste from another one of those Marine Drive buildings.
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  #1045  
Old Posted Mar 10, 2016, 1:19 AM
jollyburger jollyburger is offline
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Hoarding is up at Grosvenor Ambleside so maybe we'll see some action in a few months.
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  #1046  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2016, 9:23 PM
carlos_danger carlos_danger is offline
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The south half of the Keith Road Bridge is nearing completion. Here's the update from the project website - timeline is late March/early April:

Quote:
We will be opening the south lanes of the new bridge to vehicles, bikes, and pedestrians, so that we can close the old bridge and demolish it. Once the south sidewalk is open, the sidewalk on the north side of Keith Road will be closed for the duration of construction (access for local residents only). Access to the trails under the bridge will also remain closed until the end of construction.
Power lines will also be buried as part of the project:

Quote:
March 9, 2016 — Beautification funding from BC Hydro announced
We have been awarded up to $317,000 from BC Hydro to ‘underground’ the power lines, which will beautify the bridge crossing, significantly improve views into Seylynn and Bridgman parks, increase the lines' reliability, and reduce power outages caused by damage from windstorms and other hazards.
This info is from the DNV project website. No pics of my own but there are some construction photos in that link.
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  #1048  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2016, 10:39 PM
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Alex Wren is wrenegade, he posted those photos in the Lower Lonsdale thread.
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  #1049  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 12:44 AM
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The fanciest sewage treatment facility in the region finally gets funding



Quote:
It’s a big-spending budget and a sizable chunk of it will be spent on some high-priority projects for the North Shore.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau delivered the 2016 federal budget in Parliament Tuesday afternoon, projecting a $29.4-billion deficit for the fiscal year ahead.

Among the local highlights is $212 million towards the $700-million Lions Gate Wastewater Treatment Plant.

“It feels amazing. We really needed that money,” said City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto, also chairman of the Metro Vancouver utilities committee. “It would have been a huge financial hit on the local taxpayers, so the support of the federal government is nothing short of amazing.”

So far, the regional government has already spent approximately $20 million on engineering, public consultation and preliminary designs for the new sewage plant, which the previous federal government mandated be online by the end of 2020. If the province comes through with its share “in the next couple months,” that deadline will still be achievable, Mussatto said.

- See more at: http://www.nsnews.com/news/federal-b...lant-1.2214475
More photos and info here: http://www.metrovancouver.org/servic...s/default.aspx
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  #1050  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 2:04 AM
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Pretty spiffy!

Noticed Park Royal North's new glazing is quite dark. Especially compared to the South's.


Mine


Mine
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  #1051  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 4:31 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joat View Post
Pretty spiffy!

Noticed Park Royal North's new glazing is quite dark. Especially compared to the South's.
As discussed in another thread, seems like the factory producing seafoam spandrels have recently switched to gray spandrels. Reasons unknown.
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  #1052  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 7:21 PM
officedweller officedweller is offline
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Salesman doing his job - pushing gray rather than green?
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  #1053  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2016, 7:32 PM
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That's a nice-looking water treatment plant. I guess that means that the shoreline will always remain industrial, as having a huge plant in the middle of residential area would be quite strange and unwanted?

I am happy that the government is making big investment in the less-sexy-yet-crucial basic infrastructure that nobody thinks of as long as it is working fine. Growing cities need such investments to continue to function and grow.
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  #1054  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2016, 12:38 AM
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Yeah North Van is not rezoning any industrial. Seaspan and Kinder Morgan are right there and thriving.

Even the industrial area in Lower Lonsdale (100-200 blocks east 1st and 2nd) that isn't doing too well and would be a developer goldmine isn't being rezoned.
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  #1055  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2016, 8:55 AM
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Stumbled across this article about Lions Gate Village (Capilano and Marine)

https://www.biv.com/article/2016/3/d...neighbourhood/

Quote:
Developers target Lions Gate north neighbourhood
Major project aimed at revitalizing North Shore’s dowdy Lower Capilano community


Approaching Lions Gate Bridge’s north end, drivers face a stark choice: they can head west into the commercial hub of Park Royal Shopping Centre or turn east into the mid-20th-century wasteland of aging motels that welcomes visitors to North Vancouver.

A small strip of land that’s home to the landmark Earls restaurant, which introduced B.C. to casual fine dining, is technically part of West Vancouver, but the area has none of the lustre that characterizes Park Royal. The black sheep in West Vancouver’s closet graze here.

Yet an ambitious plan by the District of North Vancouver to remake the area as a neighbourhood centre known as Lions Gate Village is attracting significant investment from the likes of Larco Investments Ltd., owner of Park Royal, Darwin Construction Ltd., and smaller players. Local coffee-shop chatter tells tales of offshore investors offering tens of millions of dollars for rezoned properties in an area that promises to be the linchpin holding the North Shore together.

“The district sees this becoming a complete neighbourhood, with many new towers, a significant amount of commercial space, some more hotel space and about 2,000 units of housing,” said Dan Milburn, acting general manager of the district’s planning, properties and permits division.

The district’s official community plan, adopted in 2011, anticipates an additional 45,000 people in the municipality by 2030. It also encourages economic development within municipal boundaries, setting an ambitious goal of increasing commercial-industrial floor space to approximately eight million square feet by 2030.

Growth will be anchored by a network of eight neighbourhood centres located at strategic points along an “enhanced transit, energy and utility corridor” stretching from Seymour Creek to Ambleside, where Grosvenor Canada Ltd. is pursuing its ambitious redevelopment in the 1300-block of Marine Drive.

The evolution of the Maplewood, Lynn Valley and Seylynn areas shows what’s in store for Lions Gate Village, where plans call for 100,000 square feet of commercial space, as well as 100 to 170 new hotel units in conjunction with some of the 2,000 residential units slated for the area.

The district’s vision for the area includes “local-serving office” space as well as provisions for home-based businesses and live-work units that reflect the strong neighbourhood focus of North Shore residents. The initiatives could support the addition of 10,000 jobs, increasing local employment to 36,000 by 2030.

“It’s going to dramatically change this area and create all the positive things we want,” Milburn said of plans for Lions Gate Village. “[A] complete walkable community, commercial development close to residential, close to parks, close to Vancouver.”

Among the first projects is Larco’s plan for 460 residential units with 5,000 square feet of commercial space and a 100,000-square-foot below-ground self-storage facility.

Pacific Gate Investments Ltd. has approval for four buildings at 2010 Marine Drive, including 37,000 square feet of commercial space, while the Pirani family plans a 160,000-square-foot hotel with 48,000 square feet of shops on the Best Western Capilano Inn site in the 1600-block of Capilano Road.

The redevelopment plans require a close working relationship with West Vancouver, which neighbours the district and has jurisdiction over the Earls site at 303 Marine Drive that Darwin plans to redevelop with a mix of multi-family units for sale and lease.

Darwin declined to provide further details pending submission of its rezoning application.

“There are lots of technical issues around access and servicing,” Milburn said, explaining that district staff meet regularly with their counterparts in West Vancouver to discuss proposals.

The District of West Vancouver will begin updating its own official community plan later this year, but in the meantime staff exchanges provide a basis for a shared understanding of development between the two municipalities, said Jeff McDonald, West Vancouver communications director.

“There are a lot of shared things like pipes and wires and roads between the two municipalities,” McDonald said.

The process promises to lay the foundation for greater co-ordination between the three North Shore municipalities as the region evolves.

“This is the key corridor, running through the three communities,” Milburn said of the belt of land running from Marine Drive to Maplewood. “Its importance is just going to grow and grow and grow.”
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  #1056  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2016, 5:05 PM
Vin Vin is online now
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What is this new town centre going to do to the already congested Lions Gate Bridge/Taylor Way neighbourhood? One can only imagine. Time to put a new twin bridge across the water I think.
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  #1057  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2016, 5:23 PM
Aroundtheworld Aroundtheworld is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vin View Post
What is this new town centre going to do to the already congested Lions Gate Bridge/Taylor Way neighbourhood? One can only imagine. Time to put a new twin bridge across the water I think.
I think a rapid transit tunnel would make more sense. Much better capacity-to-cost ratio.
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  #1058  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2016, 9:47 PM
Vin Vin is online now
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Originally Posted by Aroundtheworld View Post
I think a rapid transit tunnel would make more sense. Much better capacity-to-cost ratio.
Yup that's even better, provided we have the money. But do remember that a large part of the commuters going across Lion's Gate Bridge are not really North Shore residents, but those who travel further to and from Squamish, Whistler, and Horseshoe Bay ferry terminal.
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  #1059  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2016, 10:22 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroundtheworld View Post
I think a rapid transit tunnel would make more sense. Much better capacity-to-cost ratio.
If a double deck is possible on the Lions Gate, then the second deck should be for rail transit. If the Vancouver Streetcar is ever built, it could be extended from Stanley Park across to a Park Royal terminus.

I wonder if West Van would go for that. Streetcar instead of SkyTrain. No doubt the NIMBYs would fight tooth and nail to kill any SkyTrain to West Van, but maybe a streetcar could work.
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  #1060  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2016, 2:58 AM
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mcminsen mcminsen is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mcminsen View Post
Jan.24 '16, my pic

Marine Drive and Pemberton, by the older Save On Foods store.


March 27 '16, my pic
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