The Red Door Family Shelter has marked another key step in securing its long-term home in the community.
On Wednesday, May 6, Toronto City Council unanimously approved financing to purchase the 20,000-square-foot complex from Harhay Developments that will house a purpose-built, 94-bed shelter within a new seven-storey, 118-unit condominium development at 875 Queen St. E. at Booth Avenue.
“This is one of those big check marks that had to be checked in order for the project to move forward. A big, important step in the process has been achieved,” said Red Door’s Executive Director Bernnitta Hawkins during a recent interview.
“The city has demonstrated that it has done its part in securing the future of the Red Door.”
The financial terms of this purchase, which also includes provisions for a long-term below-market lease to be negotiated with the Red Door, are confidential.
“This is an exceedingly happy, joyous story here on Queen Street,” said Toronto-Danforth Councillor Paul Fletcher during the recent council meeting, noting the planning study for Leslieville includes a special clause that allows consideration for social purposes, like the development that will soon house the Red Door Family Shelter.
Fletcher went on to say while the news is good now, the 106-bed shelter provider, not to mention those in the community, faced the reality it could have been forced to leave its longtime home in Leslieville if an agreement wasn’t reached.
“This has been a very long journey to get to today,” she said.
”There was such an outpouring of support for the Red Door,” she said.
In June 2014, council voted in favour of directing staff to undertake a series of actions to support the shelter in its efforts to be a part of the redevelopment of 875 Queen St. E.
If all goes as planned, construction could begin by the end of 2016. At that point, the shelter will be temporarily relocated to a new home until the project is done in late 2018 or early 2019.
In the meantime, the Red Door must also raise $3 million to outfit it’s future home so it can continue to meet the needs of the homeless families it serves.
The next step is for City Planning to approve Harhay’s development application. A community consultation date has yet to be set. Stay tuned for more details.
Harhay Developments and Carttera Private Equities' new 75 on The Esplanade development has been speeding past construction milestones on the southwest corner of Church Street and The Esplanade in Toronto's St Lawrence Market area.
Construction is pressing along on the southwest corner of Church Street and The Esplanade in Toronto's St Lawrence Market area, where a new condominium tower from Harhay Developments and Carttera Private Equities is racing towards welcoming its first residents later this year.
For developer Chris Harhay his first memory of the old Red Door shelter plays back like a TV commercial. He was a touring a property formerly owned by the United Church at Queen Street East and Logan Avenue in 2016 with an eye to building condos in what was then the Red Door’s quarters.
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A small group of Leslieville residents felt it was important to preserve and incorporate a piece of the community’s history into a new development so they contacted there local councillor, who in turn consulted the developer and the city’s planning department, and made it happen.
On Wednesday, May 6, Toronto City Council unanimously approved financing to purchase the 20,000-square-foot complex from Harhay Developments that will house a purpose-built, 94-bed shelter within a new seven-storey, 118-unit condominium development at 875 Queen St. E. at Booth Avenue.
Harhay Developments and Carttera Private Equities have submitted a proposal to the City of Toronto for a 34-storey condominium to be located at 75 The Esplanade, at the southwest corner with Church Street.
Three months ago, it looked as if the Red Door Shelter would be forced to close. The building in which it had been a tenant for 33 years was caught in a nasty real estate dispute between two wealthy families. It had been placed under bankruptcy protection. A new developer was eager to build an upscale condominium on the site.
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