TAS
Senior Member
If they can't figure out what to do with it soon, just sell it off and let someone else more willing to develop it go ahead.
It was for sale earlier this year.
If they can't figure out what to do with it soon, just sell it off and let someone else more willing to develop it go ahead.
Is it a matter of tools or political willpower? All they need to do is pass the appropriate legislation through a council vote, no?over 3 years of the pit being abandoned and almost 4 years since they broke ground, I really wish the city had tools to make it financially punishing to do this to a neighbourhood.
It realize it was, perhaps they are as ambivalent or incompetent in selling it as they are in developing it.It was for sale earlier this year.
Out of interest, what is the expiry period for shoring? Is it a 2 year warranty or that sort of thing? I'm just interested to know what standards that's from or would it be part of a Contract?That pit is going to be a hard sell.
The shoring has an expire date even if it’s monitored. It’s more than expired now.
The only way to do this project now is fill the hole and start over. Not cheap so will have to be factored into the sale price of the land
I hope not, both for the owners and the area. If you can't move ahead, stubbornly refusing to take your losses and move on likely just prolongs the problem and makes it worse.Is there really a path forward for this site that doesn't include judicial sale?
Oof. Better than a pit I guess.Last I heard, Open Sky is looking at the feasibility of a 6-storey here, now.
lol
It’s part of the engineeringOut of interest, what is the expiry period for shoring? Is it a 2 year warranty or that sort of thing? I'm just interested to know what standards that's from or would it be part of a Contract?
So do they have to fill in the hole now? Is it going to collapse? I still don't understand.It’s part of the engineering