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RESCON urges candidates to pledge action on arterial zoning

RESCON urges candidates to pledge action on arterial zoning

VAUGHAN, ONT. — The Residential ion Council of Ontario (RESCON) has released a statement urging Toronto’s mayoral candidates to embrace three policy measures to boost the supply of housing in the city.

RESCON recently convened a Special Housing Action Committee to come up with proposals for consideration by Toronto mayoral candidates, states a release.

RESCON is proposing that:

  • as-of-right zoning be allowed along arterial roadways. Present bylaws allow three storeys on arterial roadways. To build higher, a builder must get a zoning bylaw amendment which takes, on average, 34 months per application. Every building across the same arterial roadway must obtain an amendment. RESCON proposes the city amend its three-storey limit to eight storeys on minor arterials and to 15 storeys on major arterials.
  • more above-grade parking be permitted for new developments. Pushing developers to build below-grade parking as opposed to above-grade is not conducive to reducing GHG emissions as digging down has a greater impact on the environment, says RESCON. Above-grade parking is less complex and time-consuming. The change would speed up construction of highrise housing projects.
  • Amendments be made to tall building guidelines regarding floor plates. Current guidelines limit building floor plates to 750m²/8,000 ft² which hampers optimization of new construction. There is no technical reason for the guidelines. RESCON is proposing that the restrictive limit be removed to allow for larger apartment units.

“All six leading mayoral candidates have indicated they support taking steps to quickly build much-needed housing and increase affordability in Toronto,” says RESCON president Richard Lyall in a statement. “We are proposing remedies that, if implemented expeditiously, would pave the way for more residential construction throughout the city and support efforts by builders to increase housing supply.”

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