Times Colonist

Langford reaches for the sky

Mayor cuts ribbon on what will be city’s highest buildings at 18 and 24 storeys

- DARRON KLOSTER — with files from Andrew Duffy dkloster@timescolon­ist.com

Langford cut a ribbon Friday on what will be its highest buildings and a project that will change the skyline on the West Shore.

The Scene by Evantra Developmen­ts will have 270 condominiu­m units in two towers — 18 and 24 storeys high — to be built over the next two years.

The concrete towers, at Peatt and Scafe roads, will be built near downtown where wartime houses once stood. The developmen­t clears the way for Langford to become a “modern city,” said Mayor Stew Young.

“It changes the skyline and it changes things for home ownership for many people,” he said. “I’ve always said this, and I’ll say it again, you can’t have a modern city with 1940s tear-down housing in your core.”

The two towers will be connected by a four-storey parking podium with commercial space, a daycare facility, yoga studio and ground-floor retail shops.

“Our developer wanted to create a mix of floor plans so people could be offered attainable housing,” said Michael Sikich, president of The Agency Real Estate Marketing Group.

“This developmen­t offers a unit mix that will appeal to first-time buyers, young families, and downsizers. It’s a good diversific­ation of unit types.”

The Scene will have one-, one-plusden and two-bedroom units. Penthouse suites have three bedrooms.

It features just over 10,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor spaces, including gardens and garden plots and gathering areas for events and social gatherings.

Young said nearly 3,000 inquiries have been made about the condominiu­ms.

He said some units will be going for between $300,000 and $500,000, making home ownership a reality for families currently renting and priced out of the market in the capital region.

“This is the only way out of the affordabil­ity crisis,” said Young. “We’re making buildings higher and housing affordable.”

Young said the only place left in Langford to provide affordable home ownership and “vitality to our core” is through height and density, as outlined in the official community plan.

“At $1.4 million, or whatever it is now, nobody can afford a single-family home anymore.”

Two blocks away, Langford Gateway Developmen­ts is planning to build

22- and 18-storey towers on land bordered by Arncote Avenue, Peatt and Sunderland roads.

The project envisions 269 units and a large daycare centre in the initial two towers, and two more buildings of smaller or equal heights in a future phase with about 200 units and office space.

Young said additional “land assemblies” are underway where developers are buying wartime houses near the core for future high-density developmen­ts.

The Scene will be among the first major developmen­ts using low-carbon concrete in constructi­on, a mandate Langford council approved last year and comes into effect on June 1. Langford is the first city in Canada to adopt the bylaw.

All concrete supplied for public and private constructi­on projects in the city that require more than 50 cubic metres of concrete will have to be produced using carbon dioxide mineraliza­tion technologi­es, or an equivalent that offers concrete with lower embodied carbon dioxide.

That means virtually all projects requiring concrete must use a greener form of the material. A 2,500-squarefoot home with a basement, for example, uses about 60 cubic metres of concrete during constructi­on.

Carbon mineraliza­tion technologi­es inject captured carbon dioxide into concrete during the mixing process, where it becomes permanentl­y embedded, improving the concrete’s strength so less cement is needed in the mix to achieve the same performanc­e.

Carbon is captured during the cement production process. Cement is the key ingredient in concrete and its production is responsibl­e for about seven per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions.

 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Langford Mayor Stew Young cuts the ribbon at the opening of The Scene’s presentati­on centre on Peatt Road on Friday. Below, Young looks at a model of The Scene’s two towers — 18 and 24 storeys high.
PHOTOS BY DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Langford Mayor Stew Young cuts the ribbon at the opening of The Scene’s presentati­on centre on Peatt Road on Friday. Below, Young looks at a model of The Scene’s two towers — 18 and 24 storeys high.

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