The Hamilton Spectator

Another highrise on core’s western edge

Developer plans to build 23 storeys in Hess Village area; project to include 282 residentia­l units

- TEVIAH MORO TEVIAH MORO IS A REPORTER AT THE SPECTATOR. TMORO@THESPEC.COM

A neighbourh­ood on the western edge of downtown Hamilton already bustling with highrise constructi­on is to become even denser.

Coletara Developmen­t plans to build 23 storeys at the corner of Main and Queen streets backing onto Hess Village. The 282-unit project includes 854 square metres of retail space and 152 parking spaces.

“The positive impact is that it’s building the density right in the heart of the core, very close to a future LRT station,” Jason Thorne, general manager of planning and economic developmen­t, told The Spectator.

The plan for ground-floor commercial space also offers the potential for nearby restaurant­s and shops, Thorne added.

The city aims to increase density along the future Main-King-Queenston LRT route and downtown with Hamilton’s population forecast to eclipse 800,000 by 2051.

Staff are also reforming residentia­l zoning to allow for “gentle density” in neighbourh­oods where single-detached homes predominat­e in an effort to avoid sprawl, despite a provincial­ly imposed urban expansion into farmland.

The Oracle Condos, which received approval at planning committee this week, involves demolishin­g two low-rise, non-designated heritage buildings on Main Street West but retaining a heritage address on George Street for commercial use.

Coun. Cameron Kroetsch said 23 storeys make sense for the Hess Village area, as does additional residentia­l density downtown generally.

“The only way for our downtown to thrive, I think, is to have more housing period,” the new Ward 2 councillor said.

But with large constructi­on projects in the core, safety for pedestrian­s is a concern, he said. “We have some regulation­s but we don’t have robust regulation­s.”

For instance, some projects don’t have adequate hoarding around sites to protect against falling debris, and when sidewalks are blocked off, developers don’t compensate the loss of space for pedestrian­s, Kroetsch said.

“When we close a sidewalk (core), it has a huge impact on people’s ability to get around, and many of the streets downtown are extremely unsafe.”

Kroetsch acknowledg­es a review of city policies won’t happen overnight, but he’s asking Coletara to “hold themselves to the highest possible safety standard” to ensure pedestrian­s are safe.

This project is Coletara’s second in the area.

Just north on Queen at King, the developer has a 24-storey project at the former All Saints Anglican Church site.

Across King, Vrancor has several developmen­ts in the works, including a 25-storey tower.

Meanwhile, across Main, on the southwest corner with Queen, Belmont Equity plans to build 23 storeys on a vacant lot.

 ?? JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR ?? Coletara Developmen­t plans to build a 23-storey project, right, on Main Street West. The vacant brick building, above, at the corner of Main and Queen will be demolished.
JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Coletara Developmen­t plans to build a 23-storey project, right, on Main Street West. The vacant brick building, above, at the corner of Main and Queen will be demolished.
 ?? COLETARA DEVELOPMEN­T ??
COLETARA DEVELOPMEN­T

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