Mississauga is finally getting its downtown! Spirits were high Tuesday morning inside the recently-built Holt Renfrew wing of the Square One Shopping Centre in the Mississauga City Centre area. An LED screen with the letters 'We're Thinking Big' sat behind the stage, emblematic of both the energy in the room and attendees' expectations. Anticipated for many years, the mall's owner Oxford Properties, along with Alberta pension fund AIMCo called a press conference to announce The Square One District, a multi-decade project that will develop the sea of parking and open lots surrounding the 1972-built mall. The developer, who has recently built Toronto's EY Tower, New York's Hudson Yards, and has plans for a $3.5 billion mixed-use complex adjacent to Toronto’s Rogers Centre, is going all-in on Downtown Mississauga with a 37-tower mixed-use development set to define the area for decades to come.
It’s hard to believe, but only 4 years after the plan originally surfaced, East Harbour’s status as Canada’s largest proposed development has already been overtaken. With a record previously set at 12 million ft² by the aforementioned project, The Square One District will see 18 million ft² of space built on 130 acres of currently under-utilized land. For scale, this project is akin to building The Well six times over. A true mixed-use centre, the project will house the first new office buildings to be constructed in Mississauga’s City Centre in ‘a generation’, 18,000 residential units, and thousands of square feet of new retail and entertainment spaces; all anchored by the existing Square One complex.
Bound by Highway 403 to the north, Burnhamthorpe Road to the south, Confederation Parkway to the west and City Centre Drive to the east, the project is master-planned by Hariri Pontarini Architects, a firm that’s no stranger to this kind of work; currently working on similar projects like the Galleria Mall Redevelopment and the Choice REIT project at Dundas West Station.
At the centre of The Square One District is a space called ‘The Strand’, located along Rathburn Road just west of Hurontario Street, the strand is envisioned as the anchor of pedestrian activity within the city. The space would feature street level retail, walkable parks, public art, and a transit hub that would connect to the future Hurontario LRT and local MiWay bus service. The LRT itself is set to begin construction this year, with Prabmeet Sarkaria, Associate Minister of Small Business and Red Tape Reduction, name dropping the infrastructure project as a primary reason for why the development is happening now.
The most unexpected element of the announcement was its immediacy. Often with these large scale projects (especially in a Toronto context), renderings and site plans are available years before they have made it through the planning process. In this case, Oxford has already received approval for phase one of the project, a pair of IBI Architects-designed residential towers anchoring the northwest corner of the Square One District at the southeast corner of Rathburn Road and Confederation Parkway. Being brought to market in partnership with The Daniels Corporation, the towers will rise 36 and 48-storeys, rising from a shared podium. Known as The Condominiums and Rental Residences at Square One District, the buildings will house a collective 977 units; with 575 condominiums located in the 48-storey tower and 402 purpose-built rentals located in the 36-storey building. The building would feature 8,400 ft² of ancillary retail at grade. Speaking further to the immediacy, this specific pair of towers will begin sales as early as April 2020, and will break ground for construction this Summer. Tentative occupancy for the first phase is set for 2024.
Speaking with Niall Haggart, Executive Vice President of The Daniels Corporation, he referenced a set of exclusive amenities that would link the residents to the Square One Shopping Complex itself, in a similar vein to the way residents of Festival Tower received exclusive access to the TIFF Bell Lightbox.
5,000 additional residential units are scheduled to launch in the next five to seven years. Notably, the entire district will see over half of its residential units configured with a purpose-built rental tenure, hoping to ease the extremely tight 1.5% rental vacancy rate.
Also increasingly immediate is the marketing of the project’s first office tower to prospective tenants, a process which is set to begin as soon as Q2 2020.
Perhaps the person most delighted about the project at the event was Mississauga mayor Bonnie Crombie, who remarked that the Square One District project would help the city shed its suburb status to become a true world-class city. The mayor touted that the city is well on track to see a population of 900,000 by 2041, at which point it would be home to over 550,000 jobs. “Mississauga is actually a net-importer of jobs as of right now, meaning that more people come to work in Mississauga than leave to find employment elsewhere” Crombie added. The office space included would help see the growth of the Downtown workforce, which currently hovers around 24,000.
The Square One District will be the final lynchpin in the creation of Mississauga’s downtown, which has been under-construction over the past several decades as high rise condominium towers have continually been added to the Toronto suburb’s skyline. With construction and sales well under way for mega projects like Roger’s M City and Camrost-Felcorp’s Exchange District, the time was ripe for Oxford to step in and complete the urbanization process.
Although not announced at the press conference, Oxford took steps last week to advance a subsequent phase of the project located towards the southern end of the district at the southwest corner of City Centre Drive and Kariya Gate. The building, which is currently known as Block 22, would be located directly south of the mall’s Hudson’s Bay wing and directly east of the 72-storey tower at Exchange District. Submitted for Rezoning as a pair of Hariri Pontarini-designed condominium towers rising 55 and 65-storeys, the towers would house 1216 residential units. Although not specified in documents supplied by the City of Mississauga, the units will likely be mixed between condominiums and purpose-built rentals, given Oxford’s aggressive purpose-built rental target for The Square One District. Just like the first phase, Block 22 will include an extensive retail component, spanning over 20,000 ft² on in the first floor of the seven-storey podium.
You can learn more from our Database file for the project, linked below. If you'd like to, you can join in on the conversation in the associated Project Forum threads, or leave a comment in the space provided on this page.
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Related Companies: | Arcadis, Hariri Pontarini Architects, PreCon Real Estate, Rebar Enterprises Inc, The Daniels Corporation, The Fence People, Unilux HVAC Industries Inc., Urban Strategies Inc. |