Toronto U of T: Academic Wood Tower | 77m | 14s | U of T | Patkau

100 Devonshire & 112 College St.: Community Consultations

The City is holding a Community Consultation meeting where you can learn more about the 100 Devonshire Place and 112 College Street applications.

Details on the consultation:
Date: Thursday, March 21, 2019
Time: 6 – 8 p.m.
Place: Medical Sciences Building, Room 4171, 1 King’s College Circle
 
Very good TVO article about this project (and other Timber builds):

Timber! Why an age-old building material is making a 21st-century comeback in Ontario

And, interesting tidbit from that article about Building Code exemptions:

Provincial rules don’t allow for the construction of wood-frame buildings of more than six storeys — the new U of T academic building was granted a building-code exemption as part of the Ontario government’s $3.15 million Mass Timber Program, which it launched last spring to jump-start the industry.

The program’s other demonstration projects include a 12-storey building at George Brown College on Toronto’s waterfront, a condo development in downtown North Bay, and an eight-storey office building in Toronto.


I wonder if the proponents of the new Bayside proposal have also availed themselves of/negotiated such an exemption.
 
And, interesting tidbit from that article about Building Code exemptions:

Provincial rules don’t allow for the construction of wood-frame buildings of more than six storeys — the new U of T academic building was granted a building-code exemption as part of the Ontario government’s $3.15 million Mass Timber Program, which it launched last spring to jump-start the industry.

The program’s other demonstration projects include a 12-storey building at George Brown College on Toronto’s waterfront, a condo development in downtown North Bay, and an eight-storey office building in Toronto.


I wonder if the proponents of the new Bayside proposal have also availed themselves of/negotiated such an exemption.
I'm guessing the 8-storey office building is 77 Wade?
 
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Beautiful:cool:
 
Recommended for approval at Community Council:


I spoke last night with a Waterfront Toronto rep at a public consultation, and asked her what the status is of the OBC amendments necessary to get some of these tall timber projects underway (given that the height limits don't permit this and some of the other CLT proposals). She said there are a few different avenues being pursued simultaneously.

First, there is a process underway to increase the maximum allowable OBC height to a height associated with "somewhere around 12 storeys", but she was unsure of how long that process is likely to take.

Second, there are site-specific exemptions that can be (and are currently being) negotiated directly between the individual project proponents the city and province -- essentially, staff would make approval contingent upon a wood material engineering-specific review. It looks like that may be encapsulated in 3 a and c of this report:

3. Before introducing the necessary Bills to City Council for enactment, City Council require the Owner to:

a. Provide the results of fire hydrant flow testing and a comparison of calculated domestic and fire demand with available flow and pressure from the water system based on results of hydrant tests;


b. Provide a revised Functional Servicing Report to clearly indicate that the proposed development will have no negative impact on downstream sanitary sewer capacity and that no downstream sanitary analysis is required, to the satisfaction of Chief Engineer and Executive Director, Engineering and Construction Services; and


c. Pay for and construct any improvements to the municipal infrastructure identified in the revised Functional Servicing Report, to be submitted for review and acceptance by the Chief Engineer and Executive Director, Engineering and Construction Services, should it be determined that improvements to such infrastructure are required to support this development.
 
^ they can apply for something called an "alternative solution" under the building code. It requires much more extensive documentation to demonstrate why the construction method (in this case tall wood) is indeed safe and suitable, and is therefor quite expensive, but it can be done.
 

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