Ottawa Citizen

New design for Somerset House to be presented

If he feels it’s too expensive to meet the city’s renovation requiremen­ts

- JON WILLING jwilling@postmedia.com twitter.com/JonathanWi­lling

Another design applicatio­n to transform the once-grand Somerset House is hitting the political agenda, with the building owner inching closer to seeking complete demolition if he believes a renovation would cost too much money.

Tony Shahrasebi said he’ll file an applicatio­n to demolish the entire building at Somerset and Bank streets and build a multi-storey replacemen­t if the city’s requiremen­ts for a renovation are beyond what he’s willing to pay.

“We are talking to the city engineerin­g department and they have to figure out what they want us to do,” Shahrasebi said Wednesday.

According to him, the city could order building fixes that could cost another $2 million. If that’s the case, Shahrasebi would rather raze the entire building and start fresh.

“The obstacle here is the structure and we’re trying to work it out,” he said.

It all depends how he wants to redevelop the building, the city says. Richard Ashe, the city’s manager of permit approvals, said staff have held pre-consultati­ons with Shahrasebi’s architect and engineer before a building permit applicatio­n comes forward.

“In these types of things we try to have some dialogue upfront,” Ashe said. “It’s really preliminar­y in the sense we don’t know what it is they want to propose.”

Ashe said it’s not easy redevelopi­ng a heritage building with a contempora­ry addition. “It’s tricky. It’s not straightfo­rward.”

There’s also the matter of pleasing the city’s politician­s and heritage watchdogs, who warmed up to the 2013 redevelopm­ent proposal.

Shahrasebi has hired Chmiel Architects to continue the design work. The city received the latest applicatio­n on March 1 and the informatio­n has been circulated to the Centretown community associatio­n, Heritage Ottawa and the local councillor for comment.

The built heritage subcommitt­ee is expected to review the applicatio­n before sending a recommenda­tion to the planning committee and council.

Somerset House was built in two phases, starting in 1900.

There was a partial collapse of the building during a renovation in 2007, and it has remained offlimits since then.

Shahrasebi brought the Citizen inside the building to see the condition last September before contractor­s, as approved by council, removed part of a wall along Somerset Street. There’s potential for a turnaround, but it could take years of work. There’s also a question of who would be the main tenant. A drugstore showed initial interest and more recently a brewery was sniffing around, Shahrasebi said.

The building has become the city’s chief example of demolition by neglect, but he maintains he has been trying to fix it up.

Shahrasebi still has no intention of selling the property.

“We need to get this moving,” he said.

We are talking to the city engineerin­g department and they have to figure out what they want us to do.

 ?? ERROL McGIHON ?? Somerset House has remained off-limits since a partial collapse of the building during a renovation 10 years ago.
ERROL McGIHON Somerset House has remained off-limits since a partial collapse of the building during a renovation 10 years ago.

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