haltcatchfire
Senior Member
One major challenge with office conversions is modifying the building envelope to provide balconies for every unit.
Is that part of the building code?One major challenge with office conversions is modifying the building envelope to provide balconies for every unit.
Is that part of the building code?
Is that part of the building code?
Does amenity space have to be outdoors? Or, could converting an entire floor into a resident's lounge (or something of that ilk) suffice?
Amenity Space
557 (1) The provisions of this section do not apply to parcels designated Multi-Residential – At Grade Housing District.
(2) A patio may be located in a setback area between a street oriented multi-residential building and a property line shared with a street.
(3) Amenity space may be provided as common amenity space, private amenity space or a combination of both.
(4) The required minimum amenity space is 5.0 square metres per unit.
(5) When the private amenity space provided is 5.0 square metres or less per unit, that specific area will be included to satisfy the amenity space requirement.
(6) When the private amenity space exceeds 5.0 square metres per unit, only 5.0 square metres per unit must be included to satisfy the amenity space requirement.
(7) Where a patio is located within 4.0 metres of a lane or another parcel, it must be screened.
(8) Private amenity space must:
(a) be in the form of a balcony, deck or patio; and
(b) have no minimum dimensions of less than 2.0 metres.
(9) Common amenity space:
(a) may be provided as common amenity space – indoors and as common amenity space – outdoors;
(b) must be accessible from all the units;
(c) must have a contiguous area of not less than 50.0 square metres, with no dimension less than 6.0 metres;
(d) must not be located in a required setback area; and
(e) when provided as part of a Multi-Residential Development – Minor, must be located at grade.
(10) Common amenity space – indoors must not be provided as part of the required amenity space for a Multi-Residential Development – Minor.
(11) Common amenity space – indoors may only be provided to satisfy the amenity space requirement as part of a development with 100 or more units.
(12) A maximum of 10.0 per cent of the required amenity space may be provided as common amenity space – indoors.
(13) Common amenity space – outdoors:
(a) must provide a balcony, deck or patio and at least one of the following as permanent features:
(i) a barbeque; or
(ii) seating; and
(b) must be used in the calculation of the required landscaped area.
My conversion idea -- free for the taking, developers! -- is a stacked live-work configuration. Redevelop an office building with floor plates with the elevator core surrounded with smallish office spaces, with residential units behind them. You rent the office plus the residential unit; the office is a public-facing space for an individual accountant, physiotherapist, designer, consultant, etc. to meet clients, and then they live in the space "behind", which is actually the space with the windows. That helps with the amenity space, since you can use some of the indoor portion for communal boardrooms, etc. like a coworking space; cheap to provide and maintain. You might even be able to set it up in a tax-advantaged way, where there are two rents for each unit, and the office space rent is much higher since it's a write-off.
Bingo. I sure as heck wouldn't want to live in the downtown core even if I was still in my mid twenties and there was an abundance of residential supply - maybe on Stephen Ave, but certainly not anywhere on 4th, 5th, 6th or 9th Avenues.I really think they need to address the fact that no one wants to live on a one-way freeway road which makes up the majority of our downtown streets (4th, 5th, 6th, 9th Ave). The ROWs are way too large for vehicles, have behemoth parking lanes, no tree line assignments and shitty/small sidewalks and public realm. If you want to make streets that are calm enough that people would actually want to live on, convert these Avenues (at least two or three of them) back to two-way streets, or reduce the drive and parking lane widths and keep them one-way for the most of the blocks with the exception of where flyovers come in, etc. No wonder these feel so windy and uninviting there aren't even trees.
Here is what I think:
Which in the renovation of this building the city allowed the road to be widened for vehicle parking, making the public realm even worse:
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