An injection of new retail and childcare space could be coming to High Park Station on the Bloor-Danforth subway, as a 2016 proposal for 12 High Park Avenue continues to work its way through the City of Toronto's planning and approvals process. Just over a year after the initial submission, an application for Site Plan Approval provides an updated look at the TACT Architecture-designed proposal, set to front onto the subway station's existing at-grade bus platform.
As outlined in our previous article about the proposal, the Orest Kelebay-owned site currently contains an underutilized 13-spot parking garage for the Kelebay-owned rental apartments and two house-form apartment buildings at 12 and 14 High Park Avenue, all immediately south of the station. These apartment properties would be replaced by a new three-storey, 9,483 ft² day nursery fronted by an 822 ft² retail space, which would include a patio fronting onto High Park Avenue.
12 High Park has been proposed with a total floor area of 5,866 m² (63,143 ft²), divided between 4,635 m² of residential, 815 m² of childcare space, and 416 m² of retail space. Ranging in size from 188 ft² to 307 ft², these 15 micro retail units would line the south side of High Park station's bus platform—which is currently an unrelieved brick wall—creating a more inviting atmosphere for commuters waiting for the Lambton 30 buses.
Rising to a 14.45-metre height, the revised proposal features a somewhat evolved exterior expression consisting of horizontal siding and masonry cladding. A ground-level landscaping plan by landscape architects Corban and Goode includes new pavers, street trees, and a garden fronting onto High Park Avenue.
Make sure to check out our associated dataBase file, linked below, for more information. Want to share your thoughts on the proposal? Feel free to leave a comment in the space below this page, or join in on the ongoing conversation in our associated Forum thread.