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  #101  
Old Posted Sep 11, 2023, 10:53 PM
vtecyo vtecyo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Truenorth00 View Post
...
Ever been to the Pentagon or MoD in the UK? Not much different on the outside.
I was reacting to where the fence ends in front of the "high security" staircase on the left side of the image.



That doesn't look too "high security" to me...

Google streetview:
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  #102  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2024, 2:34 PM
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Impatience grows as spare federal buildings stuck in bureaucracy
Could take several years before potential change to housing

Arthur White-Crummey · CBC News
Posted: Jan 16, 2024 4:00 AM EST | Last Updated: 5 hours ago




The sluggish process for selling spare federal buildings is trying the patience of politicians and developers hoping to transform them into desperately needed housing in Ottawa.

In May, Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) released a list of 10 properties in Ottawa-Gatineau it's looking to unload. Eight months later, none of them have hit the market.

"I don't think it's fast enough," said Yasir Naqvi, the Liberal MP for Ottawa Centre. "I think it needs to be faster. We do have a real housing crisis in our city and we have a real need to revitalize our downtown core."

PSPC said all 10 properties remain in the "due diligence" phase of the disposal process. That means completing studies and reports on environmental, heritage and legal requirements, as well as building appraisals.

Developers see major potential in the buildings: some candidates for office-to-housing conversions, while demolishing others could clear out prime parcels for mixed-use development.

"I don't know what the hold up is, but there's certainly an opportunity there and there'd be some willing participants, I'm sure," said real estate broker Michael Church, managing director of Avison Young Ottawa.

"We're all kind of waiting," he added. "Hopefully it happens sooner rather than later, because there's some problems that we can help solve."

<more>

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...town-1.7084049
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  #103  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2024, 4:40 PM
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The Cegep de l'Outaouais will be renting Asticou, so it will be a while before it goes on the market. The Downtown Task Force made proposals for L'Esplanade and Jackson, so that might delay their sale. Still can't wrap my head around Brooke Claxton.
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  #104  
Old Posted Jan 19, 2024, 10:22 PM
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From Leiper's Newsletter:

Quote:
Graham Spry to be used as overnight warming respite centre

As I write I'm still waiting for an official announcement, but many of you will have heard this morning on CBC that the City and federal government have negotiated the use of the Graham Spry building at 250 Lanark as a temporary overnight warming respite centre. It is expected to begin operations this Saturday night. Our shelter system is under pressure and this is a very welcome announcement as the nights get colder.

The centre won’t have services but will provide a place for people to sleep and shower. Use of the warming centre will be through referrals from the City from its physical distancing centres rather than a general shelter use and no daytime use is contemplated. There will be staff on site and security. The need to use it will be assessed on an ongoing basis.

Centre Jules Leger has been consulted and I’ve spoken with both our MP Yasir Naqvi and our MPP Joel Harden who are both very supportive and all three of us are committed to ensuring this use is successful.

I encourage anyone with questions to reach out to me by email – I’ll be engaged with correspondence over the weekend.
https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...=254757&page=6
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  #105  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2024, 5:57 PM
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Selling federal office buildings should move twice as fast, says official
Even at double the speed, it could take half a decade to offload

Arthur White-Crummey · CBC News
Posted: Apr 24, 2024 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 10 hours ago


The man in charge of tens of millions of square feet of federal office space is aiming to double the government's lumbering pace for off-loading buildings.

Mark Quinlan, assistant deputy minister of real property services at Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC), said the department has a "special group" in place to speed up property disposals.

"Historically, the government is not very good at disposing of surplus properties," he told a city building summit organized by the Ottawa Board of Trade Tuesday.

Policies require PSPC to consult with provinces, municipalities, other departments and Indigenous partners before putting a property up for sale.

"That process takes a lot of time and it was never the priority for most departments," he said. "On average it takes nine years to dispose of a government building. We want to split that, minimally, in half."

Quinlan acknowledged that four to five years might still seem long, but he said the government is looking at ways to make exceptions to its policies and "direct" sales on an accelerated basis.

Currently, PSPC has a disposal list of 10 surplus office properties it's looking to unload in the Ottawa-Gatineau area.

None of those properties are currently listed for sale and politicians and developers have criticized the slow pace amid a housing crisis.

The 2024 budget set a 10-year target of cutting PSPC's office portfolio in half. Right now, the department is still developing a long-term real estate plan with a master list of surplus properties.

Disposal is only part of the process, since much of the government's office space is leased. About half of those leases will expire in the next five years.

Quinlan said federal real estate planning is based on three days a week in the office for public servants, with the move to unassigned desks allowing an even more efficient use of space.

In his view, concentrating workers in fewer buildings — with a goal of filling them beyond 80 per cent capacity — will mean a more vibrant downtown, especially if all those surplus buildings become housing.

"The office spaces we're going to stay in will have a much higher rate of use," he said. "So that foot traffic in and around government offices is going to be a lot higher than it ever has been."

Canada Lands Company is taking a close look at those PSPC properties to see which ones could become housing, according to president and CEO Stéphan Déry.

The Crown corporation, which buys, manages and develops federal properties, is planning to bring thousands of homes to the Ottawa area through several ongoing projects from Tunney's Pasture to Confederation Heights.

Déry, who also spoke at the summit, said this month's federal budget gave Canada Lands new powers that should allow it to build more homes faster, including in Ottawa.

That includes leasing out properties to "not-for-profits in order to help them," said Déry, instead of selling them to developers.

"We'll lease the land for nominal value, so basically a dollar, for 50 years, 100 years, so they can start building affordable housing on these lands."

Canada Lands is planning to do precisely that to bring 500 more homes to the Wateridge Village development on a former air force base near the aviation museum.

The corporation will also now have the ability to build on active but underused federal sites — something Déry said will be a major advantage in speeding up work on the Confederation Heights project south of Carleton University.

"Maybe we can start building faster and not wait for the whole thing to be vacated for us to build," he said.

While the federal government has typically sold properties to Canada Lands at market rates, it is now looking to transfer it for $1 whenever possible to support affordable housing.

Déry said Canada Lands is looking to exceed 20 per cent affordable housing in its projects and the $1 policy will make that far more financially viable.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...cial-1.7182722
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  #106  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2024, 7:56 PM
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Nearly half of the federal government’s office space could be converted to housing, expert firm says

Rachelle Younglai, Erin Anderssen, Chen Wang
The Globe and Mail
June 3, 2024 | Published 10 hours ago | Updated 56 minutes ago


Up to 45 per cent of the office buildings owned and leased by the federal government, which has vowed to transform much of its commercial space into residential dwellings, could be turned into apartments, said a top architectural firm with expertise in such conversions.

Gensler, which has analyzed hundreds of buildings in more than 150 North American cities and worked with Canadian jurisdictions, including the federal government, said a significant share of the federal office portfolio has characteristics that make it suitable for conversion.

A lot of the space the federal government owns and leases is in buildings constructed in the 1960s and 1970s and those generally have smaller floor plates – the breadth of the building – and access to natural light, two critical features that help make an office-to-residential conversion possible.

Steven Paynter, Gensler’s global leader of building transformation and adaptive reuse, said housing is the best option for the federal buildings because there isn’t commercial demand for many of the properties the government currently owns and leases.

“It’s really the only way forward,” said Mr. Paynter, who provided the 45-per-cent estimate to The Globe and Mail. “They’re just the least desirable of all office space.”

Although Gensler has done work for Ottawa, Mr. Paynter declined to provide details. He said the 45-per-cent estimate is based on previous analyses Gensler has completed on office buildings around the world.

Faced with growing frustration over high housing costs and lack of availability, Ottawa has announced plans to put homes on every possible piece of federal land. This includes exploring how to create more housing with its office buildings, which it plans to reduce by half over the next 10 years to cut maintenance costs on underused buildings.

The federal government owns about half of its office portfolio and leases the rest. But regardless of whether the building is Crown-owned, the landlord may have to consider a conversion because of the lack of demand.

On Saturday, The Globe published Wasted Space, an analysis of publicly owned federal land across the country and its suitability for housing. Among other findings, The Globe identified 154 larger buildings that were three storeys and taller and that were close to housing located in cities, towns and municipalities with more than 10,000 people – making them potential candidates for housing, either through residential conversions or by developing housing on underused space on the land they sit on.

For instance, many of these buildings are situated on significant parcels of land with large surface parking lots, including the headquarters of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. The Globe analysis also identified an additional 613 low-rise buildings near amenities – what planners refer to as “lazy land” – that could be used to support affordable housing.

The federal government acknowledged in its most recent budget that it doesn’t have an accurate accounting of the land it owns, much less which lots would be possible to use for housing.

In a Globe interview, Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Public Services and Procurement, said converting or redeveloping buildings holds “significant” potential for housing.

”There is room for the federal government to reduce the cost of maintaining those buildings, and also an opportunity for buildings to be used as homes,” said Mr. Duclos, whose department owns hundreds of buildings.

As Canada’s capital city, Ottawa is home to most of the federal government’s underutilized office towers. The city has double-digit office vacancy rates like other North American cities, and though its vacancies are not as high as Toronto or Manhattan, those rates don’t reflect how empty those workspaces have become since the COVID-19 pandemic spawned work-from-home policies.

Public servants have shunned the return to the office and their absence has hollowed out many downtown buildings in Ottawa, sparking concerns from businesses, retailers and the city’s mayor.

According to Mr. Duclos, the buildings on his department’s land were already about 40-per-cent empty before the pandemic – and have only become emptier as public servants began working more days from home.

The federal budget estimates that about half of its six-million square metres of office space is underused or entirely vacant.

Many of the federal office buildings are decades old with dated heating and cooling systems. Some are sitting empty waiting to be disposed of, at a maintenance cost to taxpayers. Many are only being partially used. Others had already been declared surplus before the government announced its plan to lease public land for housing.

“This is not an effective use of resources, particularly at a time when Canada is facing a shortage of homes,” said the budget.

However, many of these office buildings are in ideal locations for residential conversions because they are close to amenities and provide cities the opportunity to bring life back into the core.

Mr. Paynter estimates that converting up to 45 per cent of the federal government’s office buildings could produce about 50,000 housing units, the equivalent of more than 100 condo towers.

He said converting an office building is normally faster than developing a new condo or apartment building, which can take up to six years. And he said developers do not run into the regular “NIMBY” opposition that new condo towers typically attract because the office building is already there.

“People are excited because you’re taking the building that’s there empty and turning it into something that’s not derelict anymore,” he said. “So the public support is much, much higher.”

Also, converting existing office space to housing is a more environmental approach than constructing a new building. “The lowest carbon footprint is the building that already exists that you can retrofit,” said Dawn Parker, a professor in the School of Planning at the University of Waterloo.

As buildings are declared surplus, the government said it will work with a variety of groups – including Indigenous organizations, private contractors and non-profit housing developers – to create housing projects that fit local needs.

However, conversions are complicated. They require dealing with issues such as contamination, residential building codes, bathrooms and access to light.

And they need to be part of a deliberate urban plan. Mary Rowe, president of the Canadian Urban Institute, said while housing is necessary, a city still needs well-designed space for workers. Heritage government buildings might be overdue for renovation or repurposing, but Ms. Rowe suggests that still needs to be tempered against protecting the country’s architectural heritage.

The government, as a large landlord, will have to be mindful of the effect that closing offices will have, Mr. Paynter said. “If they did pull out of a bunch of space there, it could have serious economic impact on the city and the viability of the downtown as well by just hugely reducing the number of people there,” he said.

Still, our current predicament also contains an important lesson, Ms. Rowe said: Going forward, building design should accommodate different uses as needs change. “We have to always be anticipating. What’s the next future use?”

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/cana...gs-apartments/
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  #107  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2024, 1:00 AM
passwordisnt123 passwordisnt123 is offline
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"Nearly half of the federal government’s office space could be converted to housing, expert firm says"

Not anymore it can't
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