Atlantis
Active Member
Is the link broken? It's not connecting for me.
ED: CORRECTED URL!
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Declarations can be complex documents.
There are many instances of unit owner fees covering costs of commercial and community entities.
Read back to earlier posts. It goes to how a free gallery would be funded.
Is the link broken? It's not connecting for me.
They are always complex documents. How is this elaborating????
The developer pays for the construction of the space then provides a 99 year lease, rent-free (including utilities) to a non-profit using the space to provide the community service. Then, each condo unit owner as part of their monthly common fees then chips in some additional funds for operational costs to keep the cost of the services less expensive.
Perhaps with the smaller size gallery, he has backed off from this approach or the reverse may be true, with the smaller size making all this approach more affordable to developer and unit owner. A free gallery to the public is not cheap to operate.
Final Report from the June TEYCC:
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2014/te/bgrd/backgroundfile-70050.pdf
AoD
Final Report from the June TEYCC:
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2014/te/bgrd/backgroundfile-70050.pdf
AoD
So, two quick takeaways.....
1 - maximum height and storey counts applied - no floor or height increases through committee of adjustments here
2 - a 9,000 square foot art gallery - down rather significantly from the 60,000 square foot gallery originally proposed.
I guess rather than a grand gallery in Toronto, he will send his art to various galleries around the world. People won't have to come here to see it.
Another key loss.
^ what bump up?