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  #621  
Old Posted Aug 10, 2020, 9:30 PM
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Originally Posted by SteelTown View Post
Looks like they are mapping out the land to start the big dig, I believe it'll have one or two levels of underground parking.

No underground parking. The ground is contaminated and if left alone, it will be fine. Huge cost to remediate the ground. I believe the MOE has signed off on this. It will be a floating foundation.
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  #622  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 12:31 AM
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some great renders at McCallum Sather twitter feed and link to article with more photos / renders

https://building.ca/mcmaster-innovat...s-master-plan/

https://twitter.com/mcCallumSather/s...67781519106050





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  #623  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 3:35 PM
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Hm, so they're intending on demo'ing the building that fronts Aberdeen Avenue? That means that open space is gonna be huuuge! Not the easiest task to program and avoid dead zones with such a large open area alongside a busy arterial. Other than that, looks intriguing for sure.
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  #624  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 4:36 PM
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Hm, so they're intending on demo'ing the building that fronts Aberdeen Avenue? That means that open space is gonna be huuuge! Not the easiest task to program and avoid dead zones with such a large open area alongside a busy arterial. Other than that, looks intriguing for sure.
I believe that last rendering is of the north frontage along the Frid Street Extension, not onto Aberdeen.
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  #625  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 4:49 PM
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This is the Frid Street side. 606 Aberdeen will be refurbished similar to the Atrium building on Longwood.
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  #626  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 5:07 PM
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I question the rendering - all that metal and wood looks pristine in the pic of the roof - are they going to re-face the interior? Obv. some parts are like the brick over the cinderblock but is the roof going to be entirely cleaned up? it looks cool in the render for sure.

I do love this citys effort to combine the old with the new, as opposed to just tearing it down and replacing it with a cube of some sort.
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  #627  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2020, 6:10 PM
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This is fantastic. I've been wondering when they would get around to doing something with those old factory buildings... never expected something like this out of them though.

Today's Spec story has more images and details:

350,000 square feet

Building 606 (the one facing Aberdeen) is set to be a reinforced concrete-framed structure with four floors. The space will be “vast” and “flooded with natural light,” read the release. The concrete columns and perimeter beams will be exposed, with an array of windows and brick masonry in the bays.

The Glass Warehouse will extend to the north of Building 606. It will consist of four main bays, each positioned in a north-south axis. Each bay will be framed with steel columns supporting “impressive” roof trusses that span the width of each one.




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  #628  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2020, 6:14 PM
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McCallum Sather's webpages on this (includes a larger version of the cutaway render the Spec had)
https://mccallumsather.com/glass-war...-building-606/
https://mccallumsather.com/projects/...-building-606/



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  #629  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2020, 8:21 PM
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This is a huge, huge project. I really hope it happens - 350,000 square feet is a huge amount of employment space. Just the commercial tax base value alone will be huge for the city.
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  #630  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2020, 4:48 PM
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Smarttown? Hamilton eyes No. 1 rank as world’s top ‘Intelligent Community’

Jon Wells
By Jon Wells
Spectator Reporter
https://www.thespec.com/news/hamilto...community.html

Hamilton is super good looking, sure. Old news.

But most “intelligent” city on the planet, or at least top seven?

It’s a fact, is what people are saying — and facts are stubborn things, as U.S. founding father John Adams once said (but you knew that already, smart people.)

Hamilton was recently named one of the top seven global “intelligent communities” by the Intelligent Community Forum (ICF), and this week a judge is gathering information to determine if the city long known as Steeltown — Smarttown? — deserves No. 1.

He would have visited Hamilton in person, if not for COVID-19. Instead the judging process, including interviews, has moved online.

Cities are judged on six “intelligent community indicators”: connectivity, knowledge workforce, innovation, digital inclusion, community education and engagement, and sustainability.

Hamilton also placed in the ICF top seven in 2018, and top 21 in 2016. It did not enter the competition in 2017 or 2019.

Past winners have included heavyweights like Melbourne, Stockholm, and New York City. (Oh, and Toronto six years ago, perhaps before the ranking process was perfected.)

Lou Zacharilla, a co-founder of the ICF and one of the judges, told The Spectator he’s impressed with what Hamilton has done the past five years.

“They have accomplished a lot of things they said they set out to do, in starting to diversify their economy.”

Others in the top seven are Adelaide and Sunshine Coast in Australia, Tallin in Estonia, Markham, and two Ohio cities: Hudson and Westerville. About 340 cities submitted applications.

When asked why Ontario and Ohio have four of the seven spots, Zacharilla said a common thread is cities managing post-industrial economies that need to look beyond their borders for investment.

“Cities in Ohio and Ontario, and in places like Taiwan, for example, need to look outward, they need the global economy and work harder at it. Hamilton gets that, and I think they are looking at a future that is bright and prosperous.”

Mayor Fred Eisenberger said a No. 1 ranking would enhance the city’s profile, and they have already used Hamilton’s past performance in the forum as a marketing tool.

As one example of the ripple effect, he cited the $400-million investment announced by Bell Canada in January to expand its high-speed internet network in Hamilton.

“That work is underway and it’s a direct outcome of the work we did (promoting the city through the ICF).”

Hamilton’s 2020 bid emphasizes collaboration in the community between partners including the city, McMaster University, Mohawk College, Hamilton Health Sciences and Hamilton Community Foundation.

Cyrus Tehrani, the city’s chief digital officer, said connectivity in communities is increasingly seen as a “human right,” and also the “fourth utility” after water, gas and hydro.

There is no cost to the city to submit a bid, but it does entail staff time, and in 2018 city officials travelled to London when the forum hosted an event to announce the winner.

This year the winner is revealed in October in Ohio, but it may be done remotely.

Zacharilla, who grew up in Western New York, said he has been to Hamilton for real, at a smart cities conference, and many years ago as a teenager when he visited a friend whose father worked in Hamilton as a machinist.

“Your city has certainly grown up in the digital age,” he said.

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  #631  
Old Posted Nov 12, 2020, 7:25 PM
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CCRM and MIP Partner to Build and Operate Biomanufacturing Campus

November 12, 2020

CCRM AND MIP ANNOUNCE THEY HAVE EXECUTED A LETTER OF INTENT TO PARTNER IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND OPERATION OF A BIOMANUFACTURING CAMPUS AT MCMASTER INNOVATION PARK

CCRM TO LEVERAGE MIP-MCMASTER UNIVERSITY ECOSYSTEM, SOUTHERN ONTARIO LIFE SCIENCES INNOVATION CORRIDOR

MIP TO LEVERAGE CCRM AS A NEXUS OF MANUFACTURING CAPABILITY AND COMMERCIALIZATION WITHIN THE GLOBAL REGENERATIVE MEDICINE ECOSYSTEM, INCLUDING CELL & GENE THERAPIES

HAMILTON and TORONTO, ON, November 12, 2020 /CNW/ - CCRM, a leader in developing and commercializing regenerative medicine-based technologies and cell and gene therapies, and McMaster Innovation Park (MIP), Canada’s Premier Innovation Park announced, they have signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) to partner in the development of a biomanufacturing campus at MIP focused on regenerative medicine-based technologies and cell and gene therapies. The LOI advances a months-long relationship between CCRM and MIP, and formalizes their intent to co-develop a business case around the construction and operation of what is envisioned to be Canada’s largest and most advanced Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization (CDMO). The envisioned facility will enable CCRM to scale its operations and provide critical space, services and support to cell and gene therapy focused ventures from across Canada and the world.

The agreement, which is focused on an initial CDMO facility to produce cells and viral vectors for Phase III clinical trials and commercial-scale manufacturing, represents the first phase of a long-term initiative to develop a biomanufacturing campus at the innovation park, and thus form the western anchor of the emerging life science corridor spanning from Hamilton to Toronto. The short-term priority is to develop a costed facility design and an investment thesis that the parties will use to secure industry, regulatory and government support, along with the funding necessary for its construction and operation.

“Our partnership with MIP is about more than building a facility,” explained Dr. Michael May, President and CEO, CCRM. “This is about building domestic manufacturing capacity within the region for the next generation of medical advances. Our expectation is that the biomanufacturing campus within MIP, and the CDMO, will result in jobs, economic stimulus for the region and, most importantly, life-saving products for patients. For Canada, our opportunity to be amongst the global leaders in cell and gene therapy is of strategic significance.” CCRM will retain its current Toronto offices, research facilities and manufacturing facilities in the MaRS Centre.

Ty Shattuck, CEO of McMaster Innovation Park, commented, “The introduction of CCRM to MIP’s innovation ecosystem is in the context of MIP’s 2.8 million sq. ft. Life Sciences ‘MegaHub’, announced earlier this year. CCRM will be an anchor within the MIP, and because they will retain their research facilities within MaRS, it will act as an ongoing and active connection between two of the most advanced life science ecosystems within Canada.” He added, “Today, entrepreneurs, leading global companies and investors in the life sciences increasingly see the Toronto-GTA-Hamilton area as a global-calibre life sciences corridor. This region has established itself as a prolific global leader in life sciences innovation. MIP plays an important and growing part in that success, working with exciting organizations like CCRM."

About CCRM
CCRM is a global, public-private partnership headquartered in Canada. It receives funding from the Government of Canada, the Province of Ontario, and leading academic and industry partners. CCRM supports the development of regenerative medicines and associated enabling technologies, with a specific focus on cell and gene therapy. A network of researchers, leading companies, strategic investors and entrepreneurs, CCRM accelerates the translation of scientific discovery into new companies and marketable products for patients, with specialized teams, funding, and infrastructure. CCRM is the commercialization partner of the Ontario Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the University of Toronto’s Medicine by Design. CCRM is hosted by the University of Toronto. Visit us at ccrm.ca.

https://mcmasterinnovationpark.ca/blog/ccrmmip

CCRM_MIP by R L, on Flickr
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  #632  
Old Posted Nov 12, 2020, 10:11 PM
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Great news.

Seems the momentum is finally building.

I can envision Mac buying up properties between the main part of MIP and the former home of the Spec, if and as they become available. Or companies with related interests may do the same.
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  #633  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2020, 7:10 PM
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More on this partnership and what is slated to happen at MIP:


Biotech campus at McMaster Innovation Park billed as job creator, pandemic fighter

https://www.thespec.com/business/202...c-fighter.html

By Jon Wells
Hamilton Spectator
Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020

Seventeen years ago this month, The Spectator quoted a consultant who predicted it would take decades for Hamilton to develop a bioscience technology sector, due to a lack of available land, and because companies weren’t knocking down the city’s door to be “anchor tenants.”

But news out of McMaster Innovation Park suggests it’s anchors aweigh for biotech in the city, with a new star tenant coming to the 14-year-old technology and research hub off Longwood Road.

CCRM, a not-for-profit organization that develops regenerative medicine and cell and gene therapies, is partnering with MIP to build a “biomanufacturing campus.”

Ground will break on the project sometime next year in a brownfield site at the corner of Aberdeen Avenue and Longwood where a Westinghouse plant facility once stood.

Michael Israels, CCRM’s chief financial officer, says the campus will be the first of its kind in the world, creating hundreds of jobs in Hamilton, and also will develop medicines that will strengthen Canada’s ability to combat future pandemics.

MIP CEO Ty Shattuck said the initial building — called a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) — will be 100,000 square feet, leading to construction employment but also ultimately 300 to 500 permanent jobs.

Israels cautioned that it is still early days in the partnership; a news release from CCRM highlighted that a “letter of intent” between the parties to go forward with the vision has been signed.

MIP needs to secure funding from private sources, and CCRM from federal and provincial levels of government. The total development is projected to cost upwards of $250 million.

...

There are about 100 companies currently located at the park. Shattuck said by 2022 tenants are expected to start populating the old Hamilton Spectator building on Frid Street acquired last spring.

Other future tenants at MIP will include McMaster University’s “Global Nexus for Pandemic and Biological Threats,” in a development called the Glass Warehouse, located in a massive former Westinghouse factory at 606 Aberdeen Ave.

He said CCRM represents “a big meaningful chunk” of the park’s future, as MIP grows 2.1 million square feet in size over the next five to 10 years (for a total of 2.8 million square feet), representing $1.1 billion in new development.

“The next steps are building roads, infrastructure and power systems to support it all.”


full story here
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  #634  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2020, 11:17 PM
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^Super!

There were hopes and dreams decades ago that Hamilton might find a nice little biotech niche to operate in - some things just take time, I guess.
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  #635  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2020, 11:46 PM
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^Super!

There were hopes and dreams decades ago that Hamilton might find a nice little biotech niche to operate in - some things just take time, I guess.
lol all of hamiltons jobs are gonna be in a tucked away brownfield area of land noone can see haha..

still, good to see it happening at least
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  #636  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 12:47 AM
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lol all of hamiltons jobs are gonna be in a tucked away brownfield area of land noone can see haha..

still, good to see it happening at least
Trust me, it's best these labs are protected from public view.
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  #637  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 1:46 AM
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Trust me, it's best these labs are protected from public view.
I can only imagine what they will be "engaging" in lol..
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  #638  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 3:00 PM
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lol all of hamiltons jobs are gonna be in a tucked away brownfield area of land noone can see haha..
?

There is employment all around the city, some of it in very prominent locations and others less so (and this will apply to new/expanded locations too). The MIP site itself is visible from several main streets and the 403.
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  #639  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 6:17 PM
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?

There is employment all around the city, some of it in very prominent locations and others less so (and this will apply to new/expanded locations too). The MIP site itself is visible from several main streets and the 403.
Eh debateable - this area is pretty tucked away if you're walking through the city.

I mean compared to say bringing these people to the downtown core where office buildings still stand empty, it's intensifying an area off to the side of the city. Not that that is bad I just wish there were more businesses filtering into the downtown.
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  #640  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 7:46 PM
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Eh debateable - this area is pretty tucked away if you're walking through the city.

I mean compared to say bringing these people to the downtown core where office buildings still stand empty, it's intensifying an area off to the side of the city. Not that that is bad I just wish there were more businesses filtering into the downtown.
Walk farther.

Many of the kinds of R&D activities based here are not well suited to the buildings downtown. They would probably fit the older empty industrial sites in the North End between Barton and Burlington St., but then you're just trading the revamp and remediation of one industrial area for another (and there will come a time when there is an economic case for many of the North End sites to be renovated or redeveloped; we're already seeing that with the creation of that business park off Victoria)

Gowling WLG is moving to MIP, and it could have remained downtown, but there's also value in having the legal folks within walking distance of the researchers.

Downtown's vacancy rate was getting to a respectable level pre-pandemic. This year will inevitably be a setback, but as economic activity resumes the market for that office space may grow, especially if companies see value in having smaller satellite offices that workers can use 1-2 days a week rather than commuting to a large central office complex.

There are lots of unknowns right now about how the economy will look after the pandemic, but Hamilton doesn't have to choose to focus on downtown vs. MIP vs. former North End industrial properties vs. the airport employment district, etc. All can be in play, catering to the kinds of development and companies that suit them best.
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