Glen
Senior Member
I posted about this nearly two weeks ago.
First off are you sure that it is Dukes that is going to be rebuilding. From the link in my post it is not clear..........
Regarding the tax situation, Adam Vaughan has been trying to get the site qualified for a tax increment equivalent grant (TIEG). No word on that but he faces an uphill battle as retail space is excluded from the program. The CIP plan is to provide a Tax Increment Equivalent Grant, a refund of up to 60% of taxes. Even though retail does not qualify. What those how care about Toronto should worry about is that what fire did to Queen West, taxes will do to Kensington Market, The Beach, Ossington and many more. After the capping protection is gone these areas will be economically unfeasible.
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2009/ex/bgrd/backgroundfile-22235.pdf
From the planning dept...
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2009/ex/bgrd/backgroundfile-21527.pdf
First off are you sure that it is Dukes that is going to be rebuilding. From the link in my post it is not clear..........
There were no significant objections raised at the Jan. 27 public meeting convened to consider the proposal to rebuild 611-625 Queen Street West, destroyed by fire two years ago next week. As a result, as soon as developer Hamid Bahrami submits final architectural drawings and details that meet Heritage Services' exterior standards, he is free to proceed.
The destroyed buildings once housed Queen West retail icon Duke's Cycle, which had been in that location for 94 years, as well as Suspect Video's second location and apartments in the buildings' second and third storeys.
His plan is to replace the destroyed heritage designated commercial strip, the only commercial strip in Toronto to be so designated, with what planning department officer Nicole Ivanov describes as a three-storey mixed-use building with storage in the basement, retail on the first floor, and four residential units above, and no parking.
Though there's no definite date set for completion, Ivanov says work should begin shortly.
"People usually get started right away when the appeal period is over," she says
Regarding the tax situation, Adam Vaughan has been trying to get the site qualified for a tax increment equivalent grant (TIEG). No word on that but he faces an uphill battle as retail space is excluded from the program. The CIP plan is to provide a Tax Increment Equivalent Grant, a refund of up to 60% of taxes. Even though retail does not qualify. What those how care about Toronto should worry about is that what fire did to Queen West, taxes will do to Kensington Market, The Beach, Ossington and many more. After the capping protection is gone these areas will be economically unfeasible.
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2009/ex/bgrd/backgroundfile-22235.pdf
Through the process of working with the six property owners of these buildings in the aftermath of the fire, I have discovered that any new buildings constructed on the fire site would pay property taxes at the full CVA rate, and would be ineligible for capping protection. The reality of the significant tax increases facing these property owners threatens the viability of redeveloping these properties with street-related commercial uses. The longer the fire site remains vacant, the more severe the social and economic impacts facing Queen West and the broader neighbourhood become. This is why it is in the City’s interest to facilitate a timely and appropriate replacement of the lost fabric of this street.
From the planning dept...
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2009/ex/bgrd/backgroundfile-21527.pdf