AlbertC
Superstar
CentreCourt have acquired 5251 Dundas St W, the SW corner at Aukland Rd. It's steps away from Kipling station and looks poised to be a future highrise condo site.
The MiWay bus terminal was relocated to beside the hydro r.o.w. instead of under it. That said, I don't know how close hydro like high-rise development, or if they can push something away from beyond their corridor anyway.Huh??
This thing is literally as close as you can get to a major hydro corridor, to which Hydro One detests anything being built around. I would love to see the explanation/rationale if a high-rise was allowed to be built on this site, but yet a bus terminal had to relocated further then initially planned due to Hydro One being vehemently opposed to having one built close to its corridor.
Proposed mixed use development of a 52 storey building.
Huh??
This thing is literally as close as you can get to a major hydro corridor, to which Hydro One detests anything being built around. I would love to see the explanation/rationale if a high-rise was allowed to be built on this site, but yet a bus terminal had to relocated further then initially planned due to Hydro One being vehemently opposed to having one built close to its corridor.
The MiWay bus terminal was relocated to beside the hydro r.o.w. instead of under it. That said, I don't know how close hydro like high-rise development, or if they can push something away from beyond their corridor anyway.
42
That will make it the highest so far applied for in the area… and I wonder if this is going to be proposed with a smaller than normal floorplate so as to stay further from the hydro corridor, and therefore pushing what would otherwise be lost density (similar to the 40-storey Station Place across the street) up higher. CentreCourt have experience with reduced floorplates at Grid Condos. That building has 620m² floorplates compared to Toronto's typical 750m². I could also see that the side facing the hydro corridor here might be without balconies…
Very interesting finds @Northern Light. So at a base, this is what Hydro One requires:On hydro:
For doing things within the corridor: See the below: (no buildings)
Hydro One
Hydro One is Canada’s largest electricity transmission and distribution service provider. We transmit and distribute electricity across Ontario, home to 38 per cent of Canada’s populationwww.hydroone.com
For adjacency to typical wiring (not the transmission towers) See this:
https://www.hydroone.com/residentialservices_/Documents/Building-Near-Powerlines.pdf (4.8M setback required)
For high-voltage, there's actually a lot of info (don't have the time to extract it at the moment) in the planning docs for the Queesway Hospital Expansion which abuts said type of corridor.
Very interesting finds @Northern Light. So at a base, this is what Hydro One requires:
An unhindered, minimum 6-metre wide access path to facilities on the corridor must be provided for maintenance vehicles. A 15-metre clear working radius around transmission structures is required in order to maintain access for vehicles carrying out routine maintenance. A 3-metre radius around each tower footing must be left unpaved for access to the footing.
My investigation skills in city documents arent as good as yours so I cant pull up all those docs, the most I found for the Trillium Sherway Expansion were these:
https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2020/ey/bgrd/backgroundfile-147600.pdf (May 2020 Zoning By-law Amendment Application – Preliminary Report)
https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2021/ey/bgrd/backgroundfile-170239.pdf (140, 150, 160, 170, 190 and 220 Sherway Drive – Zoning By-law Amendment Application and Holding (H) Symbol – Final Report)
I find it hard to believe Hydro One would allow this to fly, I dont think there's precedent anywhere for having a high-rise development this close to one of their most critical transmission lines. Heck i'm even surprised they havent said anything about the proposals on Jopling Ave.
I thought Kentucky Coffees are native to Ontario,
if not the Toronto area? Primarily in the far south close to Lake Erie and Windsor.