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York Region Administrative Centre Annex (Newmarket, 8s, WZMH)

canarob

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York Region is forging ahead with a $212.8-million administrative centre annex project adjacent to its Newmarket headquarters.

The building will be an estimated 422,000 square feet and will accommodate about 1,500 workspaces. It will also connect to the existing regional building via a footbridge. Newmarket council received an update from regional staff on the annex during a site plan review committee meeting earlier this week.

http://www.yorkregion.com/news-story/4402887-region-forges-ahead-with-expanded-headquarters/

More renderings:

http://www.wzmh.com/projects/york-region-central-services-centre-csc/
 
There is a gigantic parking lot beside the current wobbly shaped building that is staying put. There is also a gigantic parking lot in the park that this is being built in. That's staying put, too. The municipality kicked out the community gardens and relocated them to mulock drive, which is located on newly packed down clay. The suburban hive mind that created this plan is terrifying in relation to our future as a city region.
 
York Region headquarters comes with hefty price tag

By Noor Javed News reporter
Tues., Nov. 8, 2016

After years of planning, York Region is moving ahead with plans for a new $212-million headquarters — a price tag some residents are calling “enormous.”

The eight-storey, 422,000-square-foot building will connect with the current regional government headquarters in Newmarket. When it opens in 2020, the building will offer a range of services, including Ontario Works, housing services and provincial courts, according to Dino Basso, the commissioner of corporate services.

“The main building, which we call the annex, is a public facing community health and services building,” said Basso. “It is consolidating a number of programs that are currently being delivered in other locations in the area,” he said.

Last month, council awarded a $172,084,354, construction contract to EllisDon Corporation, one of the last steps in a planning process that began a decade ago.

According to a business case presented to council in 2013, staff said the building was needed for the expansion of the provincial courts, a need to “centralize” services and give the administration room to grow. The current building, constructed in 1994, houses more than 1,000 staff, more than it was meant for. Staff also found that by getting out of current leases of buildings where the services are being offered, the region could save between $26 million and $60 million over a 30-year period.

But the numbers don’t add up, say some York region residents.

“The costs of this are enormous,” said Maddie di Muccio, a former Newmarket councillor and the president of the York Region Taxpayers Coalition. “Spending $212 million in hopes of saving $20 million in rents over 20 years doesn’t make a lot of sense,” she said.

Durham Region opened up a new administrative centre in 2005, and spent about half as much — $67.7-million — for a 334,000-square-foot building. They spent an additional $14.5-million to build a parking structure nearby.

Other residents say it’s unclear how the building will serve the needs of the majority of residents who live in the southern part of York Region.

“I think it is counterproductive to have the regional offices so far away from the majority of the residents of the region,” said Markham resident Marilyn Ginsburg, adding that it would take a resident in southern York Region about 30 minutes to drive to the annex.

In a staff report last year, the region acknowledged this issue and said it was leasing a building in Richmond Hill to provide some of the same services the new building will offer. Another building in Vaughan was built to provide health care. The region also said it would look for options for additional service centres in Markham.

“We need facilities in all parts of York Region to meet service delivery needs of our growing population,” the report said.

Basso said that “nobody can deny that these are large numbers,” but “we are a growing community . . . that needs roads, sewers, and community health services . . . and that’s what we believe we are doing in this case.”

Basso said the building is an “investment in the future, and investing in something that we will own as opposed to something that we will only be renting.” The project will be funded from reserves, he said.

Construction is scheduled to last about three years. It is expected to start in early 2017.
 
Honestly looks like a suburban office tower (which it technically is), and doesn't really fit into the rest of the Douglas Cardinal complex.

But I hope the atrium ends up great!
 

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