zzkwilliamcanada
Active Member
Ground breaks on large below-market housing project in Haysboro
Another affordable housing market is coming to Calgary, with ground breaking Friday on a nearly 200-unit project in Haysboro.
This and the other lot next to it being proper TOD, right beside Heritage Station, is proper City Building!another ground break ceremony.... the other project beside it called Heritage and Mcleod has nothing happen after ceremony....![]()
Ground breaks on large below-market housing project in Haysboro
Another affordable housing market is coming to Calgary, with ground breaking Friday on a nearly 200-unit project in Haysboro.calgaryherald.com
Probably won’t be 12, but even at 12 it might not be an issue with the park. I’ve noticed Ezra which is 10 floors doesn’t shadow the park very much.I hope that Dobbin is over-asking with 12 stories and anticipating a "compromise" at 8~ stories.
12 stories seems like way too much on the southern border of Riley Park.
So is this one building at 37 storeys (121m) and one building containing 591 units ?
Ezra is 8 storeys and it the right height. I think all the big trees at the south end of the park will cause more shadowing than the buildings will anyway.I think Ezra is 8 floors? And stepped back a bit on the top couple floors where it faces the park.
I am increasingly skeptical of shadowing concerns for most redevelopment, such as 12 v. 8 v. 6 stories on Riley Park. Mostly this is because shadows are way too often treated as a nuisance to be avoided, rather than a more nuanced pro/con conversations. Avoiding shadows increasingly reminds me of the endless parking debates - where there's gut reaction is to "need" a certain amount parking, but the logic starts to fall apart a bit when tested with real world situations that are more nuanced.Ezra is 8 storeys and it the right height. I think all the big trees at the south end of the park will cause more shadowing than the buildings will anyway.
London doesn't have to worry about shadowing because the sun never comes out.I agree that shadow should be a consideration when looking at sites adjacent to parks and open spaces. However, I also feel like shadow is often being weaponized by some members of the public as a way to prevent multi-family development. We are far from being the northernmost large city in the world on the basis that we're a northern, so-called "winter city". In fact, we are at the same latitude as London, meaning almost every large city in the UK is north of us, along with all of Scandinavia, as well as cities like Hamburg, Brussels, Berlin, Amsterdam, Warsaw etc.
While most of those cities have milder winters than we do, they also have moist climates with far less annual sunshine. While with the exception of London), all of those cities have far less skyscrapers than we do, most have a dense mid-rise built form throughout, built right to the property line along narrower streets. These include public waterfronts and world-renowned parks. Yet most of us view these places as among the most vibrant, beautiful cities in the world.
And definitely not branding themselves as "Blue Sky City"London doesn't have to worry about shadowing because the sun never comes out.
I think all of them do.While most of those cities have milder winters than we do




