ChazYEG
Senior Member
Stantec being involved is something to celebrate, though.Old meets new: Tower in historic warehouse on Edmonton's 104th Street gets nod from city council
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Stantec being involved is something to celebrate, though.Old meets new: Tower in historic warehouse on Edmonton's 104th Street gets nod from city council
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The article suggests that Stantec is a co-developer in partnership with Limak and not simply an architectural/engineering consultant -- if true, the development has gained the substance that it needs. Limak likely was able to bring the hotel operator to the table which peaked Stantec's interest. A boutique hotel will do very well here, as will retail and eatery hospitality considering the proximity to the ICE district. The development stands to plug in some of the holes that the ICE District missed when catering ground floor space to banks. The whole will also help with the leasing up of space within the ICE District and put pressure for "more" in the area. I really like the evident results here. And as an added thought -- the building's design really does play off of the Stantec tower design (as noted by @itom987) -- a good thing -- kind of wedding the building more closely to the ICE District -- all positive.
How do you figure? Stantec is rarely involved in multi-family developments in Edmonton, and the ones that they have been involved with haven't gone ahead (Milner Building as an example). I have nothing against Stantec, but they're not a big player in this market in Edmonton. Dialog is the big player, along with a few others like Jim Der, Hodgson Schilf, Brian Gardner, etc. I see no reason to assume that Stantec is acting as a co-developer or that they're putting their own capital behind the project. Certainly not from ready some tea leaves in a CBC article. That's not how this works. That's not how any of this works.Stantec being involved is something to celebrate, though.
So in 5 years, will they then have to replace the building they took down exactly, brick by brick?How do you figure? Stantec is rarely involved in multi-family developments in Edmonton, and the ones that they have been involved with haven't gone ahead (Milner Building as an example). I have nothing against Stantec, but they're not a big player in this market in Edmonton. Dialog is the big player, along with a few others like Jim Der, Hodgson Schilf, Brian Gardner, etc. I see no reason to assume that Stantec is acting as a co-developer or that they're putting their own capital behind the project. Certainly not from ready some tea leaves in a CBC article. That's not how this works. That's not how any of this works.
Glad that council put a 5 year sunset on this. Limak has little or no capability to actually build a project like this. Tick tock.
Sorry, I only read the two posts after yours. I read a couple of news articles earlier and they were vague on Stantec's role but they seemed to imply they were more involved.Are people not reading my post above before commenting? Haha
Not to be self-centred but I already shared that Stantec was only involved as a consultant. In terms of developer, Limak is flying solo on this.
So in 5 years, will they then have to replace the building they took down exactly, brick by brick?
Exactly! If there are doubts about whether it would proceed as proposed or not, I think it might not be unreasonable to ask the developer to set aside the funds to rebuild the building if necessary.Don't issue any demolition permits without a slew of conditions and guarantees from the owner that they are proceeding with the entire development.
That is good to know. In the picture I saw the west facade looks accurate, however, the south one not so much. Perhaps the picture will be updated.Also worth mentioning is that the facades won't be "rebuilt" per se. This development came up at a recent meeting of the Historic Resource Review Panel and David Johnston, City Heritage Planner, explained that if it ever goes ahead the west and south faces will be retained in-situ, like the Pendennis Building's was. They don't want to keep encouraging less-than-accurate rebuilds.
The south facade will have some modifications - bottom windows will be expanded as there will be access to building/CRUs there I believe.That is good to know. In the picture I saw the west facade looks accurate, however, the south one not so much. Perhaps the picture will be updated.
With Kelly Ramsay, the Alberta Hotel, and now Pendennis it shows we do have the ability to do a good job in preserving the facades, if there is the will to do so.