The Hamilton Spectator

City’s ‘most distinctiv­e’ siding to be stripped

13-storey condo planned for site of Hamilton Store Fixtures on King

- TEVIAH MORO Teviah Moro is a Hamilton-based reporter at The Spectator. Reach him via email: tmoro@thespec.com

A historic downtown Hamilton building hidden under brown cladding that’s lamented as an eyesore will make way for a modern condo.

“I’m sure all of Hamilton is familiar with this site. It’s the city’s most distinctiv­e decorative siding.”

That’s how Coun. John-Paul Danko introduced 206-208 King St. W. to the city’s planning committee Tuesday.

“True that,” agreed Coun. Jason Farr.

The 13-storey condo that rises at the site of the former Hamilton Store Fixtures at the corner of Caroline Street North won’t sport its ironically celebrated brown cladding. But developer King Stuart Developmen­ts Inc. plans to use bricks on the first four floors of the 123-unit building in homage to the one it replaces.

Of 37 vehicle parking spots, 36 will be in a 12-bay “stacker system” with movable platforms. There will be 123 bike spaces.

Farr said the building ’s vehicle spaces might not be enough but noted developer Vrancor is providing a 500-spot parking facility as part of its nearby projects that residents could use.

But there are “really zero onstreet” parking options, he said.

Franz Kloibhofer, a planning consultant for King Stuart, noted the project is targeting students or young profession­als who won’t own cars.

The design calls for a fifthfloor terrace and two rooftop patios. The ground floor will be commercial space.

A review found the Hamilton Store Fixtures building was not structural­ly sound and couldn’t be restored to its original condition, which led to a recommenda­tion that it be demolished, a staff report noted.

The building has also “been so disguised by the metal cladding” that its “original design and character are no longer apparent,” the report stated.

But original beams, joints, masonry, floorboard­s and tiles “should be salvaged and incorporat­ed” into the future residentia­l building’s common areas to commemorat­e its commercial history.

Before Hamilton Store Fixtures — which sold kitchen appliances, equipment and supplies — set up there about 50 years ago, the U-shaped building was home to a radio station, former Spectator columnist Paul Wilson reported in 2018.

And before then, Regal Shirt Company operated there in the 1920s and ’30s before it became McGregor Shirt in the ’40s.

In May 2018, a vicious wind storm ripped off a large chunk of the building’s brown siding.

On Tuesday, the city’s planning committee backed zoning changes to allow the project to go ahead. That decision still needs a final approval at council next week.

 ?? RENDERING CITY OF HAMILTON AGENDA ?? Architectu­ral renderings for proposed building at 206-208 King Street West. A 13-storey condominiu­m tower is planned.
RENDERING CITY OF HAMILTON AGENDA Architectu­ral renderings for proposed building at 206-208 King Street West. A 13-storey condominiu­m tower is planned.

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