Waterloo Region Record

Downtown developmen­t includes grocery store, 60 apartments

- CATHERINE THOMPSON cthompson@therecord.com Twitter: @ThompsonRe­cord

KITCHENER — A proposed developmen­t that would bring a grocery store to downtown Kitchener came a step closer to reality Tuesday.

The city’s committee of adjustment approved several minor variances Tuesday for the project at 387 King St. E., between Cedar Street and Madison Avenue.

The $19-million project would build an eight-storey building with 60 one- and two-bedroom apartments and street-level retail, and a two-storey building with a grocery store topped by offices. Most of the site is vacant, but three houses would need to be demolished. Constructi­on is expected to start next May and wrap up in December 2020, though the developer hopes to open the grocery store before the residentia­l tower is finished.

The grocery store would be about 12,300 square feet, the size of a boutique grocery store. (Zehrs stores, for example, average 25,000-40,000 sq. ft.)

The project is being developed by Ken Chau, who owns B & T Food Market, just down the street at 470 King St. E.

A downtown grocery store has been on the wish list of downtown residents for years. The downtown has a drugstore and a beer store, and a liquor store is set to open soon, but the nearest full-service grocery store, Central Fresh, is in midtown. J & P Grocery opened in spring 2017 on Goudies Lane, but is only 4,000 sq. ft. Another Asian grocery, New City Supermarke­t, is also nearby at 236 King E.

The committee approved several variances Tuesday, including one to reduce the number of parking spots. The developmen­t will have 105 parking spots rather than the 152 required, and six of the spots will be smaller ones for compact cars.

City planners recommende­d approval because the developmen­t is close to transit and the LRT, and because some spots can be used by shoppers during the day and residents at night. As well, the developmen­t includes several incentives for alternativ­e travel: 84 bike parking spots, a bike repair station and two carpool parking spots.

Planners said the developmen­t “will create a significan­t entry feature at the gateway to the downtown area.”

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