I know this one gets a lot of hate, but it does the job, and is a big improvement over what was there before. The telephone poles look ghetto, but at least they bury some of them.
My main critique isn't about the looks of this building.
My issue is that it's that it's wildly land inefficient, and unlike nearly every affordable housing projects in the country outside of Calgary - has a greater than 1 stall / unit parking ratio. These factors work together of course, but to give everyone their demands, we end up with a bloated, forgettable site where over half of it is surface parking. There's ~60 stalls here supporting the fire station and residents. That's enormous given the size of building and expected use.
As an affordable housing location, this site is so good apparently we are assuming residents will need to own at least one vehicle with that parking ratio. On lower income segments vehicle ownership is financially impossible, even for the next income segments up it's a large portion of income. What's our affordability goals that support this site as opposed to a better location?
This site's access to parks, transit and grocery stores are cited as reasons this location is "good" - really? Brentwood LRT park-and-ride (or any number of nearby stations) isn't better? It's also city-owned and closer to all three of those things and has far superior transit.
Logic should hold up in reverse too - if this is so good, why do we need the parking at all - fit another 100+ units on the parking lot.
The ultimate final design that decommissions the existing fire station for a park space is also underwhelming - a park on windswept arterial with a unneeded slip lane eating into the site. There's many better parks and green spaces within 400m of here. We gave up the corner, and with it the only real opportunity to one day better connect the development in a walkable way to University District and shops, jobs and retail nearby.
So it's a miss for me - design and style are fine as a building, but the some choices on location and site design seem contradictory to the stated objectives of doing this thing in the first place.