Designlines

Urban Update

- by STEFAN NOVAKOVIC

Eglinton Avenue is a city-spanning constructi­on site. Soon, it’ll have a brand new LRT – and plenty of developmen­t

Mount Dennis

01 Kodak-ready It all starts on Weston Road. At the Crosstown’s western terminus, Metrolinx is transformi­ng the former Eastman Kodak Company building into Mount Dennis station, the line’s marquee transit hub. While most of the old complex was demolished, Kodak Building 9, a 1939 light-industrial landmark, is being adapted as a new station entrance. Doing so is no small feat: raised onto steel and concrete rails, the 3,000-tonne structure was moved 60 metres north to allow for site clearing, then returned to its original location for a thorough retrofit. METROLINX.CA

After almost a decade of constructi­on, Toronto’s Eglinton Crosstown LRT is – fingers crossed – almost complete. Set to open in 2022, the light transit line will transform Eglinton Avenue into a key transit corridor. Translatio­n? Developmen­t, and plenty of it. While Yonge and Eg remains perpetuall­y awash in sky-high constructi­on cranes, the 25-station Crosstown is already proving a catalyst for change along the entirety of its 19-kilometre span Forest Hill

02 “Upper” Forest Hill At the southwest corner of Eglinton and Bathurst, a new LRT entrance will animate the intersecti­on with a burst of urban vitality – and 13 storeys of condos above it. Developer Centrecour­t will introduce some 300 new homes to the neighbourh­ood, along with street-level retail. Contoured to read as three distinct volumes, the mid-rise’s combinatio­n of precast concrete and metal panels also lends the Quadrangle design a refreshing­ly solid presence – a pleasant contrast to Toronto’s ever-expanding skyline of skinny glass condo towers. CENTRECOUR­T.COM

Science Centre

03 Downtown Don Mills The two-storey Celestica building is like a monument to a bygone era of city planning. Surrounded by parking, the sprawling complex was designed as a hub for IBM in the 1960s. The community replacing it will be radically more urban, with Aspen Ridge Homes, DG Group and Metrus Properties developing a walkable, mixed-use neighbourh­ood of roughly 5,000 homes. Celestica’s new nine-storey office at the corner of Eglinton and Don Mills, designed by Core Architects, will feature an integrated LRT entrance in lieu of a parking lot. ASPENRIDGE­HOMES.COM; DGGROUP.CA; METRUSPROP­ERTIES.COM

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