10303 98 Avenue NW | ?m | 6s

What do you think of this project?

  • I neither like nor dislike it

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I dislike it

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I dislike it a lot

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    15
Reference ID:Job No 396115771-002
Description:Construction of (a) new building(s), Demolition
Location:10303 - 98 AVENUE NW
Plan 6417AS Blk 3 Lot 12
9742 - 103 STREET NW
Plan 6417AS Blk 3 Lot 13
9738 - 103 STREET NW
Plan 6417AS Blk 3 Lot 14
Applicant:DUALITA ARCHITECTURE
Status:Intake Review
Create Date:5/15/2021 1:52:37 PM
Neighbourhood:DOWNTOWN
 
The pre-application. These were sourced from the linked document.
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Screen Shot 2021-06-08 at 5.16.29 PM.png
 
I'd vote for the first render in the "Finishes Exploration", it seems the cleanest/most similar to the render @Avenuer posted in post #1 (which I liked the most). I don't mind the N/W podium section with the charcoal brick to delineate but keep it simple.

*edit - Oh my, on further inspection it's not real brick, after all, brick veneer, egad! 🤮
I just moved my imaginary vote to the "I neither like nor dislike" category, wait and see...
 
@Kaizen I believe it will be panelized brick veneer which is quite common in modern construction -- it is not the rumpus room stuff. Similar to the material on the Ice District buildings except different scale. Actually all of the materials here are panelized -- Brick, wood and EIFS (stucco).
 
These finishes complement each other very well (in all the exploration options) and I love the form of this building.

This is looking very promising - though I'm still cautious with my optimism, as I know very little about Mr. Reddekopp. If he can deliver what's envisioned here I will be very impressed and pleased.
 
^^^^ Design Review comes before Development permit (or sometimes concurrently depending on the confidence of the developer). Development Permit is essentially a go-ahead by the Planning Department (confirmation vis-a-vis zoning, use, and other control elements). The Building Permit entails a review of Life Safety elements (among those are sustainabilty, structural integrity, accessability, emergency egress, etc.). The time frame usually depends on where the completion of construction documents stands from the perspective of architects, engineers, and developers -- e.g. if the owner/developer decided not to risk any effort pending the development permit approval (a rare circumstance), then he/she would have to do the complete package from concept drawings and for a project of this scale and depending on the work load of the various offices could take anywhere from 3 to 9 months. Once submitted to the City for review that could take an additional 6 to 9 months. Sometimes, to speed up the overall process the developer can sequence approvals so that they first get a demolition permit, then a foundation permit (if the project is large enough) and then the building permit. In order for the latter to take place effectively, the developer would have to coordinate tightly with a Contractor on a Critical Path Scheme so that everything has a decision point along the Building Permit Construction Schedule. The Developer has to independently obtain Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing permits as well. If the Development team is well experienced, they can have the construction documents nearly ready to go at the time the Development permit is issued, cutting most of that time-frame out of the equation -- and if they then follow the demo:foundation:building permit sequence, they can begin site activity within weeks of the Development Permit being issued. Hope this helps.
 

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