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  #61  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2015, 3:42 PM
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Never really liked the location. Even though its somewhat central, its surrounded by the river and canal and very hard to get to or from.
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  #62  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2015, 4:32 PM
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Never really liked the location. Even though its somewhat central, its surrounded by the river and canal and very hard to get to or from.
Somewhat central? It's hard to imagine a more central development of this size in Ottawa. It is also 3-5 minutes from both directions on the 417.
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  #63  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2015, 5:21 PM
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Somewhat central? It's hard to imagine a more central development of this size in Ottawa. It is also 3-5 minutes from both directions on the 417.
"Somewhat" central as its south of the 417...this is not downtown or lower town. Limited access to surrounding areas such as the Glebe.

Also close to the 417 but very awkward access to on and off ramps...one of the worst interchange lay-outs I have ever seen.
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  #64  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2015, 12:37 PM
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"Somewhat" central as its south of the 417...this is not downtown or lower town. Limited access to surrounding areas such as the Glebe.

Also close to the 417 but very awkward access to on and off ramps...one of the worst interchange lay-outs I have ever seen.
Yeah agree for the condos maybe barely central, but for a single family house in a new development it's about as central as it gets.
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  #65  
Old Posted Oct 2, 2015, 6:16 PM
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We had pre-registered and received an email for pre-launch for yesterday and today. Received the floorplans and some sense of pricing. Singles will start in the high $700s for one collection(with backyard garage and no yard) and $1 million plus for the two remainding collections. Designs for higher priced singles are nice. As for the townhouses, they are 12 and 14 feet wide, sorry but not for me. Hopefully the Rockliffe redevelopment will be better.
curious to know re your comment on 12 and 14 feet ..do you mean very tight living spaces ? ..I was thinking that the design would allow for that kind of space
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  #66  
Old Posted Oct 2, 2015, 7:30 PM
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  #67  
Old Posted Oct 2, 2015, 9:07 PM
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Tight spaces

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curious to know re your comment on 12 and 14 feet ..do you mean very tight living spaces ? ..I was thinking that the design would allow for that kind of space


well condos which are 14 feet wide wouldn't be so bad but for a townhouse, when factoring the space taken by staircases, there is not much square footage left per floor
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  #68  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2015, 12:44 PM
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well condos which are 14 feet wide wouldn't be so bad but for a townhouse, when factoring the space taken by staircases, there is not much square footage left per floor

good catch
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  #69  
Old Posted Oct 11, 2015, 12:17 PM
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eQ Homes, Regional Group launch Greystone Village on Main Street Oblate lands

Sheila Brady, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: October 2, 2015 | Last Updated: October 2, 2015 4:37 PM EDT


It was a balmy fall evening recently for dedicated urbanites with deep pockets to sip champagne and be the first to check out Greystone Village, a contemporary, deeply green community set to grow along the banks of the Rideau River in Old Ottawa East.

By the last sip of bubbly, yellow dots reserved posh corner condos overlooking the river, slick townhomes boasting rear garages and single homes facing Brantwood Park and the water.

This was a private gathering, setting the stage for last weekend’s VIP launch of Greystone, which the project’s marketing folks like to label “a visionary riverfront community.”

And that VIP launch in turn was golden.

The first phase virtually sold out in two days, with builder eQ Homes now releasing a second phase this weekend, says marketing manager Tobin Kardish.

There was a lineup early last Saturday, with 20 of 24 townhomes sold, 13 of 20 single-family homes picked up by growing families and 31 of the 96 condos reserved by older boomers living in surrounding neighbourhoods.

“I can’t believe how well we were received by the community,” says Kardish. “We are releasing a second phase and there will be lots of choice.”

There is a lot of vision in the design of Greystone, and an equal measure of cooperation between developer The Regional Group (eQ’s parent company), community groups and planners, who whisked the prime piece of real estate that sits between Main Street and the Rideau River through complicated city hall approvals in a record 15 months.

Success was based on lots of talking and hundreds of meetings with community groups and the city.

Greystone is unique in the city. Within the next decade, 26 acres of largely open space owned by the Oblate brothers for more than 155 years will evolve into a community of 916 contemporary condos that come with a storage room for kayaks, slim towns boasting rear garages, and modest to customized single homes with clear views of the Rideau.



Each home and condo will meet high energy-efficiency guidelines and the community will be modeled on new urbanism, a concept popularized in the ’80s in the United States that narrows streets, tucks garages to rear lanes, promotes front porches and encourages lively streets where pedestrians and bicycles dominate over cars.

Prices are not for the financially timid, starting at $293,000 for a micro condo, stretching up to $1.5 million and beyond for a customized single.

Road construction starts shortly, with work on the townhomes and singles beginning next July and the first residents arriving in 2017. Condo residents are scheduled to arrive in the summer of 2018.

There will also be a major grocery store, shops, and condos set on each side of the Grande Allée leading up to a large park and Edifice Deschâtelets, an imposing grey stone residence and school built by the Oblates 155 years ago. Regional is still wrestling with future plans for the residence, suggesting it might offer housing for seniors.

“We are creating a new urban heart,” says David Kardish, vice-president of land development for The Regional Group. “Greystone is going to transform the whole area.”



It will likely take a decade to build, says Denis Laporte, newly named chairman of eQ Homes and a veteran of the Ottawa housing industry. “This is huge and exciting, with half a billion dollar in sales over 10 years.”

Initially, the emphasis will be on offering a blend of townhomes and singles, partly because there is a surplus of condos on the market, says Laporte. There may be plans to turn future condos into rental offerings.

Ottawa architect Barry Hobin and his team won noisy applause from the Old Ottawa East Community Association in 2014, when they showed off the plans designed by members of his firm. Architects and The Regional Group also met regularly with city planners to sort through issues, earning recent praise from Michael Mizzi, Ottawa’s acting general manager for the planning and growth management department.

“I would say they are an ‘A’ in their willingness and openness to work with the city and community on ideas,” says Mizzi, adding Greystone offers a very thoughtful and sensitive site plan that brings in a mix of housing types. “The relationship to the river is good and it is good to the surrounding community. There are initiatives, including rear lanes. People are always more important than cars.

“It is still not built, but their grade for the community is very good. This is an excellent comprehensive plan.”



The Hobin team reached back more than two decades, choosing and then refining the best of its contemporary designs for a younger buyer with modern sensibilities. “A younger demographic wants to live in a contemporary home in a city that is also growing up,” he says.

“They are not crazy modern designs. There is lots of open space, lots of glass and detailing on the exteriors.” And for the traditionalist, there are pared-down Craftsman-inspired singles facing the river.

“This is all very exciting,” says Stephen Pope, a commercial architect and chair of the planning committee for the Old Ottawa East Community Association. The association represents owners living in mostly modest homes on streets surrounding Greystone. “Regional reached out and we have been involved in the discussions and have had input into the design plan.”

Pope is looking forward to reconstruction of Main Street, which runs along the western edge of the property, new shops, parks and hopefully a new community centre to service residents in Old Ottawa East.

The design process stretches back 10 years and an original neighbourhood design plan, but Pope says all of the talk is worth the wait. “These things are going to last hundreds of years and if it takes five or six years, then that’s the way to go.”

Presenting Greystone

Delivering the lively, multi-layered story of Greystone Village takes glossy brochures, 13 touch-screen televisions and a helicopter and hot air balloon.

Add white honed marble, hand-scraped maple floors, detailed cabinetry and intricate scaled models of the smart singles, townhomes and condos to the mix and you have Ottawa’s most elaborate presentation centre on Main Street in Old Ottawa East.

It took six months to build and reflects the village’s contemporary vibe, which was designed by Ottawa architect Barry Hobin and his team. The presentation centre will likely be open for the next decade or as long as it takes to sell out the 26-acre community. It has to be solid.

“A lot of money and electronics has gone into one of the city’s most impressive sales centres. It really is state-of-the-art marketing,” says Denis Laporte, newly named chairman of eQ Homes, the building arm of The Regional Group, which is the driving force behind the new neighbourhood by the Rideau River. Laporte designed the presentation centre.

Laporte, formerly president of eQ Homes, declined to give an exact budget for the stone-and-glass building, but hinted it was over $800,000. Visitors will be able to touch any of the large television screens and get a detailed history of the Oblates who settled the land or see vistas from the ninth-floor penthouse of a condo terrace.

Every agent will carry an iPad and an iPhone and be connected to instant information for buyers.

“We wanted to paint a picture of Greystone and what it is going to become,” says Tobin Kardish, marketing manager for eQ Homes.

The Regional Group turned to Montana Steele, an award-winning Toronto-based marketing firm, to bring alive the many chapters of the Greystone story.

“It is a very interactive presentation centre,” Laporte says. “Gone are the days of running into a sales centre, grabbing a brochure, looking at drawings on the wall and leaving.”

Greystone Village

What is it: A mixed-use green community on 26 acres between Main Street and the Rideau River in Old Ottawa East. The initial release includes townhomes, singles and a nine-storey condo building.
Builder: eQ Homes
Prices: Condos start at $293,000 for 593 square feet to $1.25 million for a 1,772-square-foot penthouse. Underground parking is $35,000. Townhomes start at $575,000 for a 1,454-square-foot two-bedroom, while singles start at $770,000 for a 1,691 square-foot three bedroom going up to $1.28 million for 2,785 square feet.
Sales centre: 175A Main St. Due to construction, Main Street is only open to south-bound traffic.
Hours: Monday to Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; weekends, noon to 5 p.m.
Information: 613-569-3043; eqhomes.ca

http://ottawacitizen.com/life/homes/...t-oblate-lands
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  #70  
Old Posted Nov 8, 2015, 8:25 AM
YOWetal YOWetal is online now
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Greystone

A PR article of course, but seems to have sold well. I was tempted myself, but the singles seem very pricey for the area and lot size.

Does anyone bike on this side of the river. With the new bridge at Rideau Tenis Club will it now be possible to bike all the way to the Ottawa River or is there still a gap around U of O?
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  #71  
Old Posted Nov 8, 2015, 2:03 PM
eltodesukane eltodesukane is offline
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Originally Posted by Boxster View Post
Never really liked the location. Even though its somewhat central, its surrounded by the river and canal and very hard to get to or from.
If only Clegg St. was extended on two bridges to cross the Rideau Canal and the Rideau River.
https://www.google.ca/maps/@45.40646...9z?hl=en&hl=en
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  #72  
Old Posted Nov 8, 2015, 2:49 PM
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If only Clegg St. was extended on two bridges to cross the Rideau Canal and the Rideau River.
https://www.google.ca/maps/@45.40646...9z?hl=en&hl=en
No way you can build a new vehicular bridge in this town anymore.
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  #73  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2015, 9:29 PM
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No way you can build a new vehicular bridge in this town anymore.
The best we may hope for are pedestrian bridges.
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  #74  
Old Posted Nov 10, 2015, 1:33 PM
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The best we may hope for are pedestrian bridges.
The Clegg pedestrian bridge if bulit would really add a lot of appeal to thisndevelopment for me personally. Being walking distance to Lansdowne and the Glebe and yet away from the Glebe traffic has a certain appeal.

Last edited by YOWetal; Nov 10, 2015 at 2:13 PM.
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  #75  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2015, 2:28 AM
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Oblate land development facing final hurdle

Joanne Laucius, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: November 19, 2015 | Last Updated: November 19, 2015 7:19 PM EST



Construction on Terraces, a nine-storey condo building, is to begin in next spring.

The plan to develop one of Ottawa’s largest remaining urban properties is on the cusp of final approval now that the city’s planning staff is arguing in favour of the zoning amendments for the former Oblate lands.

The 26-acre property at 175 Main St. – known as Greystone Village – was once owned by the Oblate religious order. It is the biggest piece of land available in the city after LeBreton Flats and the former CFB Rockcliffe. Eventually, 916 residential units will be built on the land, with some buildings as high as six storeys.

When the project is complete, it will double the population of the neighbourhood, not including the Lees Avenue apartment buildings. However, there has been praise for the level of community consultation that has gone into the project.

The city adopted a community design plan in 2011 that included a conceptual plan for development that would be acceptable to the surrounding community. When the Regional Group bought the property in 2013, its plan included more townhouses and detached houses. It was different from the conceptual plan, but still met all the principles, according to Regional’s Josh Kardish.

Stephen Pope, chair of the planning committee of the Old Ottawa East Community Association, says Regional is proposing housing types and a scale that is consistent with the surrounding community.

Still, the project aims to add almost 1,000 homes to a mature neighbourhood. Some residents are worried about parking and whether there will be any spillover onto surrounding neighbourhoods. A lot of the existing trees will also be removed, which has raised some concerns.

“The reality is that the place will go from a well-treed bucolic environment to an urban environment,” said Pope.

The city has already accepted the draft plan of subdivision. If the planning committee approves the zoning amendments next Tuesday, followed by city council, Regional will have cleared the last major hurdle. It will likely take 10 to 12 years to complete the entire project. Each block of land will have go through the site plan process before construction can begin. Construction on the first of two nine-story apartment buildings is to start next spring.

Coun. David Chernushenko hasn’t had any negative feedback. “Of course, there will always be devils in the details — park spaces, community facilities — but that is not what is up for discussion at this time.”

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...r-oblate-lands
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  #76  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2016, 2:10 PM
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Public space on Oblates land shapes up
Water feature, skating rink, community stage all part of design concept

By Michelle Nash
Ottawa East News, Mar 04, 2016




The final design for park space on the former Oblates land is one step closer to reality.

Regional Group first began consultations about the park space in February 2015. After a year of working with the community, the plans are almost set and a meeting on the latest design for the new public space in the Greystone Village development was held at the Greystone Village Presentation Centre on Feb. 29.

The meeting, hosted by the Old Ottawa East Community Association, offered residents a chance to look at the concept for the community green space and comment on the design.

Eddie Gillis, who heads the community association’s committee for the park space, said he joined the association in the first place to help work on the project.

“There was such a collaboration with all the groups involved,” Gillis said. “The Regional Group, as a developer, has gone above and beyond the norm to actively listen to the community and incorporate their ideas into the development.”

Gillis said getting a chance to look at the final concept was exciting and he believes the space will become part of a larger, walkable network for Old Ottawa East and surrounding communities.

Planned to be a part of the Grande Allee and Forecourt of the Greystone project, the new public space is planned as the heart of the development, offering a gathering space for the community.

Landscape architects Novatech presented the design, which includes a splash pad water feature, space for the Main Street Farmers Market, walkways, winter skating space, a community stage, picnic and games tables and courts.

Gillis said these were all ideas that emerged from the community.

“Community input has been invaluable in shaping the final design,” he said, adding all parities have worked together to ensure that the concept is what the community wants.

According to Jessica Palacios, an architect working on the project, the overwhelming response from the 20 residents who attended the Feb. 29 meeting was praise.

“We had a great response to the park concept,” Palacios said. “Twenty people signed in for the public meeting, 17 people completed a ballot that evaluated the park, and 16 said they “loved it.”

Palacios added one person was neutral about the design.

Capital Coun. David Chernushenko called the process collaborative and was pleased with the design.

“Residents had many opportunities to provide input, and I think this shows in the very compelling design,” he said.

The community association has worked extensively with the developer on the plan for the Oblates lands, a 10.5-hectare site north of St. Paul’s University on Main Street. Along with the green space, the site includes a network of cycling paths and walkways.

Construction of the first phase of the development is set to begin this spring.

For more information about the project, go to www.greystonevillage.ca.

http://www.ottawacommunitynews.com/n...and-shapes-up/
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  #77  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2016, 5:13 PM
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Ottawa council to consider record $15.8M brownfield grant request

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: March 30, 2016 | Last Updated: March 30, 2016 12:37 PM EDT


An application for $15.8 million in tax and fee breaks would be the largest brownfield grant dished out by the city if council approves the request next month.

The Regional Group wants to transform the former Oblates land at 175 Main St. along the Rideau River into a new mixed-use community called Greystone Village. The property has about 215,000 tonnes of contaminated soil that needs to be trucked to a dump over the next four years. Work has already started.

Developers can get breaks on property taxes and development charges for cleaning up toxic lands, up to 50 per cent of the remediation costs. Council just needs to vote on the application. It’s the city’s way of spurring development on key contaminated lands.

Until now, the largest brownfield grant approved by the city was for a box-store development at 280-300 West Hunt Club Rd. Council signed off on about $4.6 million in tax and fee relief in 2012.

The Regional Group plans to build 916 residential units and retail space over four phases in its Main Street project. The major part of the development is scheduled to start in 2021 when 464 new units will be under construction, plus nearly 3,400 square metres of retail space. The Deschâtelets building, a former seminary built in 1885, will be renovated and could become a seniors residence. The full project could take 10-15 years to complete.

The contamination on the property dates back 100 years. Soil studies revealed offsite fill, plus coal and ash spread across the site from an onsite furnace. Because the contamination runs deep, the cleanup will include treatment of polluted groundwater.

The finance and economic development committee will be asked to approve the brownfield application at a meeting Tuesday before sending a recommendation to council April 13.

An unrelated brownfield application is also up for approval at the committee meeting. It’s a request for $4.5 million to help clean up a property at 2012 Ogilvie Rd., making way for a commercial development.

Brownfield grants are usually rubber-stamped by council without much challenge since a city policy allows developers to access the special program.

Grants already approved by the city would pale in comparison to a subsidy available to the future developer of LeBreton Flats, which is heavily contaminated.

The Flats would be eligible for cleanup assistance from the city and the winning developer, Rendez Vous LeBreton or Devcore Canderel DLS Group, could ask the city for the same kind of breaks on taxes and development charges. The National Capital Commission is deciding which bid team will advance to negotiations.

Rendez Vous has estimated the cost of soil remediation at $170 million. Both bid teams have indicated they would look for help from the city’s brownfield grant program to pay cleanup costs.

jwilling@postmedia.com
twitter.com/JonathanWilling

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...-grant-request
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  #78  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2016, 2:42 PM
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
Ottawa council to consider record $15.8M brownfield grant request

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: March 30, 2016 | Last Updated: March 30, 2016 12:37 PM EDT


Grants already approved by the city would pale in comparison to a subsidy available to the future developer of LeBreton Flats, which is heavily contaminated.

The Flats would be eligible for cleanup assistance from the city and the winning developer, Rendez Vous LeBreton or Devcore Canderel DLS Group, could ask the city for the same kind of breaks on taxes and development charges. The National Capital Commission is deciding which bid team will advance to negotiations.

Rendez Vous has estimated the cost of soil remediation at $170 million. Both bid teams have indicated they would look for help from the city’s brownfield grant program to pay cleanup costs.

jwilling@postmedia.com
twitter.com/JonathanWilling

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...-grant-request
So why would the city take the hit on the development of NCC land? Seems strange.
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  #79  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2016, 4:17 PM
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Construction should start in 2021! WOW

With all the normal delays, expect to move in no sooner than 2026.

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  #80  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2016, 4:26 PM
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Construction should start in 2021! WOW

With all the normal delays, expect to move in no sooner than 2026.

It looks like what was written in the article was a poor intrepretation of the report, which says:

Phase 1A– 155 residential units consisting of singles, towns and apartment dwellings; start in 2016.

Phase 1B – 28 residential units consisting of single, towns; start in 2018.

Phase 2 – 464 residential units consisting of towns, back to back towns and apartment dwellings along with approximately 3,395 square metres of retail space; start in 2021.

Phase 3 –120 residential units consisting of towns and apartment dwellings
and the partial demolition of the existing Deschâtelets building and rehabilitation of remaining into approximately 149 apartment dwellings/seniors housing; start in 2020.
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