Edmonton Journal

Condo plan features apple orchard

Calgary project’s twin towers will f lank an acre of fruit trees

- DYLAN ROBERTSON

CA LGA RY — Fresh apples will be ripening between two downtown condominiu­m towers as a developer aims to give Calgary a more fruitful and dynamic city centre.

The Orchard on Twelfth is a two-tower project at the southeast corner of 12th Avenue and 5th Street S.E., just northeast of Stampede Park. Lamb Developmen­t Corp. of Toronto is planning two 31-storey buildings, with a one-acre orchard of apple trees nestled between them on a 61,000-square-foot land parcel.

“Not only is this a public and private amenity for the city, but also a true green feature, not a stupid green roof that really in the end doesn’t do much,” company head Brad Lamb said. “It’s a phenomenal thing to have in a city, and it’s going to produce tens of thousands of apples which are going to be eaten.”

The company commission­ed an Ipsos-Reid survey last month which polled 1,000 Americans and 1,000 Canadians, asking them to guess the location from a digital rendering of the project with its apple orchard. Most Canadians thought the image was in Vancouver or Toronto, placing Calgary seventh out of 13 possibilit­ies. Americans thought of Portland or New York and placed Calgary 12th.

The same poll found that 93 per cent of North Americans — especially younger adults — want greener downtowns, and would welcome projects that delivered food.

“I always try to deliver, if I can, a public amenity that the city will enjoy and the residents will enjoy,” Lamb said, comparing the Orchard on Twelfth with another property his corporatio­n is developing, 6th and Tenth, which will include a fountain park. “Our cities aren’t green enough, visually and for taking in C02,” Lamb said.

Richard Cho, senior market analyst with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., said the projects are part of an ongoing build up in new Calgary condominiu­ms.

“We had lower inventory and now we see that being made up for,” Cho said. He noted that in last year’s January-to-June period, constructi­on started for only 1,004 apartments. In the same months this year, the city netted some 4,010 unit starts, and Cho said more are anticipate­d.

Alberta isn’t known for its apple orchards, but Lamb said an agricultur­al firm has chosen tree species that can grow edible fruit in the area. A third party will be paid to prune the trees and harvest the fruit for sale or donation.

But for Lamb, the buildings themselves are more interestin­g.

“They’re rectangula­r, simple in design, but they’re super clean and super modern,” he said. “We’re delivering beautiful architectu­re and affordable apartments; these two buildings are spectacula­r in their own right.”

Units will range from $249,900 for one-bedroom apartments to over $1 million for larger units.

Lamb says those prices are competitiv­e with Beltline properties.

The project will cost $130 million, with $170 million in expected revenue, he said.

An older house on the block will be demolished, while buildings on the fifth of the block not owned by Lamb Developmen­t will remain in place.

Lamb says his company is currently waiting for a permit, but he expects ground to be broken within the year as no zoning exception is needed.

He expects the first phase to open in about three and a half years, followed by the second about five years from now.

 ?? CNW GROUP/LAMB DEVELOPMEN­T CORP. ?? The Orchard on Twelfth condo project in Calgary will feature an apple orchard between two 31-storey towers.
CNW GROUP/LAMB DEVELOPMEN­T CORP. The Orchard on Twelfth condo project in Calgary will feature an apple orchard between two 31-storey towers.

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