snips from the news bit:

Total of 1,484 residential homes will be built on a former commuter parking lot

The development will include 444 condos and a mix of one- to three-bedroom rental homes that will be available to residents of various income levels.

Green said the four-block community that will be created will include a childcare centre, community space, retail space and public park.

In a news release on Tuesday, the city said crews have already begun to remove parking infrastructure to prepare the site for development. Construction is set to begin in the spring, with occupancy expected in early 2029.

  • @[email protected]
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    56 days ago

    I wish “affordable” was better described. What is the target rent for each income bracket? How is that being determined? And as much as I’d love to jump for joy at the idea, that’s still 5 years away from a projected finish line.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 days ago

      I wish “affordable” was better described.

      Really, eh?

      To me, if it can’t be purchased by someone between the lowest end and the median of the income spectrum, then it’s not “affordable”.

    • @StopTouchingYourPhoneOP
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      5 days ago

      Same. “Affordable housing” used to be a straight up mathematical equation based mostly on income afaik. The Provincial government shifted to using the phrase “more affordable,” a nebulous non-definition that could mean anything from “yes, a single parent working a full time job can afford rent” to “it’s less than the million dollar condo down the hall.” As you say, the key is we don’t know atm. Add to that, will the city be capable of maintaining affordability after the Province has nuked rent control? Can we keep these units from being thousands of dollars 2 years after the doors open?

      I posted in part because this project is something to keep an eye on. At the very least, this and the development at 5207 Dundas St. W. will teach us a lot about how our municipalities can get anything done these days. Also, Chow knows what she’s doing, which is strange and refreshing.

      No jumping for joy here either. Just watching and staying hopeful.

      [edit bc I accidentally a word]

  • masterofn001
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    46 days ago

    When does Ford declare the homes not good enough for rich folk and have them torn down?

    • @StopTouchingYourPhoneOP
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      25 days ago

      Right? The constant vigilance municipalities need just to deal with Provincial interference is exhausting, because we know they’ll interfere with anything that might make life better for us and take money out of his bosses hands. And even when we do catch him out, it’s not like we can shame him into doing the right thing. Mr. MZO just lies and keeps following orders. No consequences. Instead, he gets reelected.

      Brilliant that we have a mayor who’s able to get anything done, given what we’re up against.

      • masterofn001
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        35 days ago

        Saw a commercial the other day, from the pcs, about a liberal mayor who raised taxes.

        “Taxes taxes taxes” was the line.

        Maybe because the provincial gov downloaded all the taxes to them.

        But the average voter doesn’t remember that.

        So, now we have a provincial gov that cuts services, makes municipalities pay for it, then interferes with the city, then claims the mayor is the baddie.

        Fuck. This. Shit.

    • Rentlar
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      36 days ago

      “This building project interferes with the beauty of the existing landscape of my commute to Queen’s Park” - Doug Ford, probably.