Urban Toronto recently ventured down to The Daniels Corporation’s Cinema Tower construction site for a visit. We caught both excavation and concrete pouring in progress.

Here is how the site looked on March 30th. Excavation is still taking place in the back left corner, but we’ll turn our attention to foundation pouring first. See those concrete mixer trucks on either side of the crane up at the surface…

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Craig White


A bucket has just been filled with concrete mix

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Craig White


The bucket is lowered into the excavated pit

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Craig White


A worker waits by the edge of the foundation pit

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Craig White


The foundation pit extends deeper into the bedrock than the lower basement garage levels. The pit will be filled with concrete and reinforcing steel rods, and will act as an anchor at the base of the tower’s central core and its elevator shafts

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Craig White


The bucket is lowered sufficiently close to the worker, who then pulls down on the extending bar which opens the trap closure at the bottom of the bucket

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Craig White


Many buckets will be needed to fill the pit.

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Craig White


The bucket is quickly hoisted back to the surface for a refill. Meanwhile, in the lower right corner, we see a shovel still excavating the east side of the site.

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Craig White


The shovel is operating at the end of a wall of soldier piles, lagging, and braces. Soldier piles are long steel I-beams which are driven into ground at regular intervals. As the excavation of the pit progresses, timber lagging is slotted between the soldier piles to hold back the earth behind them. Braces are added to keep the wall standing until it is naturally braced by the newly built concrete walls and floors of the basement levels.

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Craig White


The shovel removes earth and rock from around a diagonal brace. Excavation around these braces is tricky and time consuming.

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Craig White


Behind the shovel is another type of wall: this caisson wall is made up of interlocking columns of concrete. It is braced by tie-backs, which steel wire ropes anchored to the bedrock in behind. This type of wall where the bracing does not protrude into the pit makes for easier excavation, but it requires an easement under the adjacent property when excavation extends to the property line. Besides securing an agreement with the abutting owner, soil and rock conditions behind the wall must be stable.

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Craig White


We are back a week later, thanks to Red Mars. The excavation of the pit is virtually complete, other than the access ramp itself. Shovels are now put to work to remove it.

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Red Mars


Another three days later, thanks to Jasonzed we see that most of the ramp has been removed. When the excavation is complete the shovels will be hoisted from the pit by the crane.

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Jasonzed


Urban Toronto will return often to the Cinema Tower site during its construction to tell you more about the process of creating a new building.
 
April 15
I support the removal of the above ground parking as it's a waste of space and could be used for more units, retail and etc. Why do you need a car when you are in walking distance of things?
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I don't think they're getting rid of the parking. It sounds like they just don't want it included in the square footage count of the building, either for tax purposes or to be able to use that area savings to tack on a floor or two. Mike will probably have a better explanation.
 
I don't think they're getting rid of the parking. It sounds like they just don't want it included in the square footage count of the building, either for tax purposes or to be able to use that area savings to tack on a floor or two. Mike will probably have a better explanation.

The parking variance is just a technicality, it doesn't reflect any change to the building.
 
April 15
I support the removal of the above ground parking as it's a waste of space and could be used for more units, retail and etc. Why do you need a car when you are in walking distance of things?
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A reduction to the calculated amount of gross floor area would reduce the amount of outdoor residential amenity space required... is how I read this sign.

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A reduction to the calculated amount of gross floor area would reduce the amount of outdoor residential amenity space required... is how I read this sign.

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In fairness I'm not exactly sure why the variance is required but a reduction in the calculated GFA wouldn't reduce the outdoor amenity space requirement since the amount required by the by-law is a function of the number of units in the building rather than a ratio to the GFA. So it either means that they're increasing the number of units in the building or simply decreasing the absolute amount of outdoor amenity space provided.
 
Thanks for that!

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Taken today from the Hyatt
 

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Once the podium on Charlie is passed, the tower portion is going to go up quickly as the tower portion footprint is much smaller.
So my thinking is Charlie has a good lead and tops up first.

Bets on when this thing catches up to Charlie? I'm thinking late October...
 

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