APPROVED Mount St. Angela Use: rental Address: 913-929 Burdett Avenue Municipality: Victoria Region: Urban core Storeys: 6 |
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[Fairfield] Mount St. Angela | Seniors residence | 6-storeys | Approved
#61
Posted 08 January 2008 - 04:59 PM
#62
Posted 08 January 2008 - 07:51 PM
Believe it or not, that's what the current "fight" ("Save Mount St. Angela") is against : the 4 storey alternative.Didn't they already stop it? The developer changed the plan to 4-story wood-frame Fairfield specials...
Hard to credit, isn't it?
#63
Posted 09 January 2008 - 07:26 PM
Personally, since something is going to happen there eventiually, I would have preffered the 2 6 storey towers.
#64
Posted 10 January 2008 - 10:18 AM
© Times Colonist (Victoria) 2008Mount St. Angela developer wants to 'leave a legacy'
Kim Westad, Times Colonist
Published: Thursday, January 10, 2008
The developer of a proposed 56-unit condominium project at the historic Mount St. Angela site on Burdett Avenue isn't looking to make any money out of the project.
Rather, Norm Isherwood has the financial means and the desire for any profit go into a trust to run an additional nine rental units designated solely for elderly women in need of housing, project planner Roger Tinney said this week.
"Mr. Isherwood was born and raised in the building and he'd like to leave a legacy," Tinney told a group of about 30 people who gathered to see the final plans for the contentious project before it goes to a public hearing on Jan. 17. "This is very much a personal project for Mr. Isherwood."
[...]
kwestad@tc.canwest.com
#65
Posted 15 January 2008 - 01:53 PM
#66
Posted 16 January 2008 - 01:33 PM
#67
Posted 16 January 2008 - 01:43 PM
THE HUMANITY!!!!!!!!!!!
#68
Posted 16 January 2008 - 01:49 PM
-City of Victoria website, 2009
#69
Posted 16 January 2008 - 01:54 PM
#70
Posted 16 January 2008 - 02:28 PM
#71
Posted 16 January 2008 - 02:44 PM
#72
Posted 16 January 2008 - 03:16 PM
OK call me crazy but I actually LIKE this proposal.
You're crazy. Can't you see it's waaaay out of scale? If I wanted megaprojects like this one, I'd still be living in Sooke.*
*I'm not actually from Sooke, but you get my point
#73
Posted 16 January 2008 - 03:32 PM
-City of Victoria website, 2009
#74
Posted 18 January 2008 - 01:29 AM
This came about because the vote was tied 4-4 and Lowe supported the rezoning but didn't want the houses moved. I'm not explaining it exactly but that's kind of how it went. Chandler and Thornton Joe in particular were wavering and could've gone either way but decided not to support it. Fortin favoured it saying he was excited to see this develop and that it contributed to a mix of housing choices.
#75
Posted 18 January 2008 - 07:19 AM
#76
Posted 18 January 2008 - 10:25 AM
"We live in an earthquake zone you know...has anyone looked into the effects of blasting in this regard?".
I am paraphrasing of course, but this was the jist of it. I am no geologist, but I don't think even if all the blasting over the past 5 years in Victoria, were concentrated in one mega-blast directly over the San Andreas fault would it set off an earthquake. The blasts simply are not powerful enough nor deep enough to have that sort of impact. It was the strangest argument to make against this proposal.Also I kept hearing about the "1000 vehicles/day" rule equating to 80 vehicles/hour passing along McClure. When I divide 1000 by 24 (hours) I get 41.66, or about HALF of what was being bandied about, yet NO ONE seemed to correct this.
If there were a more NIMBY group than the people who spoke against this project last night, I'd hate to meet them.
I think this one is going to die an ugly death.
#77
Posted 18 January 2008 - 11:10 AM
007 returns from the USSR with a new computer chip; one that is invulnerable to the magnetic pulse of a nuclear explosion. The chip is being manufactured by Zorin Industries, headed up by a sociopathic businessman named Max Zorin who is planning to corner the world microchip market by using explosives to cause an earthquake in the San Andreas fault that will wipe out Silicon Valley - and the millions who live and work there! Bond must face not only Zorin himself, but the equally twisted May Day and Scarpine, another one of Zorin's henchmen. Assisted by San Francisco City employee Stacy, Bond goes after the would-be computer magnate in a series of frightening confrontations - including fire in the SF City Hall, a wild chase through the city with Stacy at the wheel of a fire department ladder truck, and finally in a hand-to-hand fight atop San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge.
We can just hope that developers use their powers for good and not evil.
#78
Posted 18 January 2008 - 11:16 AM
It was the strangest argument to make against this proposal.
I presume nobody mentioned the raccoons then?
"We live in an earthquake zone you know...has anyone looked into the effects of blasting in this regard?".
Has anyone looked into the fact that just about every damn building that's ever been built in Victoria has required some blasting?
#79
Posted 18 January 2008 - 11:52 AM
Councillor Madoff, to her credit, got Russell to acknowledge this. Russell fumbled, saying he wasn't familiar with crunching the numbers which compelled someone behind me to whisper that he's only had two years to think about it. With Madoff's prodding, Russell conceded that the compromise he suggested as an alternative to Cielo's proposal must involve density over 0.6:1. So Russell is now on record for advocating a proposal that violates the OCP.
Cielo's Roger Tinney said in his presentation that they altered the proposal to take into account all the reasonable criticism and comments and that if this proposal was still not acceptable then what is?
Much was said about traffic but that made little impact on the Councillors, in particular Geoff Young, who said the so-called disastrous impact caused by the paltry increase in vehicle traffic would fail to impress the residents along Quadra or Shelbourne Streets. Again, residents claimed this project would have a disastrous impact on emergency vehicle access to McClure St.
#80
Posted 18 January 2008 - 12:11 PM
What are you talking about with that 1,000 vehicles per day thing?
Apparently someone from the city turned up one afternoon back in August and counted the number of cars on McClure for an hour. Since that number multiplied by 24 didn't exceed 1,000 (some rule-of-thumb about what is considered acceptable volume for a local road), the city decided that the impact of this development on the bucolic lifestyle of the McClure residents wasn't a problem. At least not sufficient to direct the developer to move the egress to the parking garage to the Burdett side of the property.
I loved the argument one fellow made that said this was a unique property and therefore required a unique planning process to decide the final development proposal. Apparently the procedure used for every other property in town is not good enough for this corner of heaven.
I really have no idea what Lowe intends on achieving by taking the decision process in the new direction. But then I bailed at midnight so perhaps he explained himself after I left?
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