URBAN TORONTO:
"An application submitted to the City of Toronto seeks rezoning to permit a 35-storey residential tower at 4 Beamish Drive, just west of where Etobicoke's "Six Points" interchange of Bloor and Dundas streets and Kipling Avenue is now in the final throes of replacement by a new local street pattern. Proposed by developer Triage Corp..."
"An application submitted to the City of Toronto seeks rezoning to permit a 35-storey residential tower at 4 Beamish Drive, just west of where Etobicoke's "Six Points" interchange of Bloor and Dundas streets and Kipling Avenue is now in the final throes of replacement by a new local street pattern. Proposed by developer Triage Corp..."
URBAN TORONTO:
"A rezoning application submitted to the City of Toronto by Amdev Property in December, 2019 that sought allowance for the development of a 35-storey residential tower in Etobicoke's Six Points neighbourhood, has been updated to include a larger land assembly and a second tower..."
"A rezoning application submitted to the City of Toronto by Amdev Property in December, 2019 that sought allowance for the development of a 35-storey residential tower in Etobicoke's Six Points neighbourhood, has been updated to include a larger land assembly and a second tower..."
THE GLOBE AND MAIL:
"The Etobicoke Centre plan covers an area of about 169 hectares. A street nexus called the Six points and two subway stations define the site. The area is bounded by railway lines and hydro corridors and Dundas Street, Bloor Street West and Kipling Avenue funnel traffic through. For two decades, the city has been trying to unravel the tangled roadways and redevelop the area, with plans for public space and amenities to go alongside the private development. "This is going to be incredible actually, this neighbourhood with the new civic centre [breaking ground in 2022], the library, childcare centre," said Emilia Floro, Urban Design Program Manager for Etobicoke and York at Toronto's City Planning office. "Now we're really starting to see this evolution as a real true dense urban centre."
"The Etobicoke Centre plan covers an area of about 169 hectares. A street nexus called the Six points and two subway stations define the site. The area is bounded by railway lines and hydro corridors and Dundas Street, Bloor Street West and Kipling Avenue funnel traffic through. For two decades, the city has been trying to unravel the tangled roadways and redevelop the area, with plans for public space and amenities to go alongside the private development. "This is going to be incredible actually, this neighbourhood with the new civic centre [breaking ground in 2022], the library, childcare centre," said Emilia Floro, Urban Design Program Manager for Etobicoke and York at Toronto's City Planning office. "Now we're really starting to see this evolution as a real true dense urban centre."