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Moshe Safdie is coming to Toronto with 36 storey waterfront building

Like any city, Toronto's had its planning ups and downs. Unlike many others, though, it's done a pretty good job of fixing some of its most egregious mistakes (see Regent Park). And then there's the waterfront, which Torontonians think we've been screwing up since about a generation after Simcoe ruled Upper Canada. But now Moshe Safdie along with Waterfront Toronto are stepping in to take another shot at it.

On December 7, the city announced the sale of a parcel of waterfront land known as Parkside (beside the-soon-to-be-inaugurated Sherbourne Park), to the Great Gulf Group of Companies, the folks behind the condo at 18 Yorkville. Safdie refers to his mixed-use tower-and-podium construction, slated for LEED Gold certification, as "gardens in the sky." The tower will be 36 storeys, with about 10 storeys in the podium, and will run from Queens Quay north to Lake Shore Boulevard.

The design team also includes Quadrangle Architects, known for their Candy Factory and Toy Factory warehouse-to-loft conversions (the Candy Factory on Queen west of Trinity Bellwoods Park, remember, was the one that got the whole trend on its feet). They've worked with Great Gulf before on condo projects called St James (adjacent to St Lawrence Hall) and the Morgan (at 438 Richmond St. W.).

This will be Safdie's first residential project in Toronto, and his first in Canada since his thesis became Habitat '67 for Montreal's Expo. "Rejuvenation of the waterfront is a noble task for Toronto," says Safdie, who also designed the National Gallery in Ottawa, Vancouver's Library Square, and is the author of The City After the Automobile. "And I trust that this building will set the standard for an exciting new kind of urban living."

One that acknowledges Toronto is a city on a lake, for instance. The city expects that ultimately the project will inject about $200 million worth of private investment into the nascent East Bayfront community and will be home to roughly 10,000 people.

Writer: Bert Archer
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