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Development

Maddox – Continental Street

From: Changing City

maddox 1The part of Downtown South between Burrard and Granville was recently lagging behind the area to the east along Seymour and Richards, where condo projects were developed steadily. Now it’s catching up fast – here’s the first of a couple of projects in the area.

Cressey started marketing Maddox, their IBI/HB designed 34 storey tower under 3 years ago. Now it’s pretty much finished, with a pattern of three colours of terra-cotta panels.

It replaced a ‘meanwhile’ park that was built to ‘provide a community green space’ that coincidentally also avoided a lot of taxes, while the housing market recovered from the 2008 downturn. Before that there was a Travelodge on Howe Street, demolished some years earlier.

The street address is a new one, created to recognise that the Granville loops at this end of the Granville Bridge will one day be removed.

…read more

Source: Changing City

March 28, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Development, Investment

Three Lower Mainland First Nations Buy Crown lands in Burnaby and East Vancouver

The B.C. government has signed an agreement with three Lower Mainland First Nations that includes the sale of Burnaby’s Willingdon Lands and the Liquor Distribution Branch warehouse site in Vancouver.

The agreement with the Musqueam, Tsleil-Waututh and Squamish nations outlines how the proceeds of Crown land sales within the bands’ territories will be shared and how to develop the properties in partnership with the government.

“This agreement is so important for our three communities and we hope it sets a positive example of what can be achieved when we truly work together as one,” Tsleil-Waututh Chief Maureen Thomas said in a news release.

Andrew Wilkinson, the minister of technology, innovation and citizens services, called the agreement “historic” in a written statement.

Under the agreement, the Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh have purchased the Willingdon Lands at Willingdon Avenue and Canada Way, while all three nations have signed a contract to buy the LDB warehouse site on East Broadway. Representatives of the three nations could not be reached for comment on what the lands will be used for.

The sale price for the Willingdon property was $57.9 million, a price that the province says was based on an independent appraisal. The LDB property sale is expected to close by the fall, at which time the price will be publicly available.

Read more at Vancouver Sun.
March 28, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Development

Housing Moves into False Creek Flats

Vancouver city planners vow that Onni’s plan to build 209 condominiums in the largely industrial False Creek Flats will not spark a housing frenzy on what many view as a warehouse and distribution area.

Instead, Onni’s two-building Canvas development, which will launch pre-sales later this month, is the exception, City of Vancouver general manager of planning Brian Jackson stressed to Business in Vancouver.

 “There’s no permission for any further residential other than what Onni has,” Jackson said. Thanks to Metro Vancouver’s two-year-old regional growth strategy, any change in zoning on the flats will require more than just Vancouver city council approval. Converting what is mostly industrial land to other uses would also require regional approval.

 “We’re looking at this as being primarily a jobs area,” said Jackson.

 He added that city staff are preparing land-use and transportation plans for the area, which is bounded by Clark Drive, Great Northern Way, Main Street and Prior Street. They will present that plan to council next year, when council considers approving tearing down the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts to the east.

Read more: http://www.vancourier.com/news/housing-moves-into-false-creek-flats-1.930889

March 28, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
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