Brandon Donnelly
Daily insights for city builders. Published since 2013 by Toronto-based real estate developer Brandon Donnelly.
Brandon Donnelly
Daily insights for city builders. Published since 2013 by Toronto-based real estate developer Brandon Donnelly.
At the beginning of the year, I wrote this:
The desire to add more housing to single-family neighborhoods will continue to pick up steam across North America. How exactly this plays out will be market specific, but in Toronto I expect to see new planning policies put in place, as well as supportive building code changes.
And this continues to happen. Right now, the City of Toronto is working on making fourplexes permissible in all low-rise neighborhoods across the city.
This is exciting. But it's not done yet. And it's not perfect.
The biggest change that I think still needs to happen is around maximum densities. If we actually want to encourage more missing middle housing, we need to increase the permitted FSIs or, better yet, remove them all together.
Urban planner Sean Galbraith does a good job of explaining this in NRU:

I responded to the city's multiplex survey last night and this was one of my main comments. If you'd also like to voice your opinion, you have until March 10, 2023. Here's the link.
One of my favorite YouTube channels is the B1M. Apparently it is the most subscribed-to channel focused on construction. If you don't already subscribe, you can do that over here.
Below is a recent video about Australia 108 in Melbourne. It's still under construction, but it is topped out and it is now the tallest building in the country at over 300m. That makes it a "supertall."
When you're building this tall, it can make a lot of sense to segment and occupy portions of the building before construction is fully complete. Among other things, it helps to manage risk. And that's exactly what they've done here.
The contractor building Australia 108 is Multiplex. They also happen to be our construction management partner on Junction House. Except our project is a bit more boutique than Australia 108.
https://youtu.be/aJGiiMIeWxA
At the beginning of the year, I wrote this:
The desire to add more housing to single-family neighborhoods will continue to pick up steam across North America. How exactly this plays out will be market specific, but in Toronto I expect to see new planning policies put in place, as well as supportive building code changes.
And this continues to happen. Right now, the City of Toronto is working on making fourplexes permissible in all low-rise neighborhoods across the city.
This is exciting. But it's not done yet. And it's not perfect.
The biggest change that I think still needs to happen is around maximum densities. If we actually want to encourage more missing middle housing, we need to increase the permitted FSIs or, better yet, remove them all together.
Urban planner Sean Galbraith does a good job of explaining this in NRU:

I responded to the city's multiplex survey last night and this was one of my main comments. If you'd also like to voice your opinion, you have until March 10, 2023. Here's the link.
One of my favorite YouTube channels is the B1M. Apparently it is the most subscribed-to channel focused on construction. If you don't already subscribe, you can do that over here.
Below is a recent video about Australia 108 in Melbourne. It's still under construction, but it is topped out and it is now the tallest building in the country at over 300m. That makes it a "supertall."
When you're building this tall, it can make a lot of sense to segment and occupy portions of the building before construction is fully complete. Among other things, it helps to manage risk. And that's exactly what they've done here.
The contractor building Australia 108 is Multiplex. They also happen to be our construction management partner on Junction House. Except our project is a bit more boutique than Australia 108.
https://youtu.be/aJGiiMIeWxA
Toronto's chief planner Gregg Lintern (who you can follow over here on Twitter) was recently in the Toronto Star talking about the city's plans to allow more multi-unit dwellings in our low-rise single-family neighborhoods.
I was careful to say "more" because they are already permissible in some areas. The challenge is that they're not happening at any sort of meaningful scale, which is an obvious signal that some key ingredients are still missing.
Or perhaps there are too many required ingredients. For example, right now the zoning by-law requires one car parking space for every dwelling in a multi-unit building. This is, of course, dumb and the requirement should be completely eliminated.
Changes like this, as well as many others, are long overdue. Not just in Toronto, but in many other cities. And it is partially what I was getting at when I wrote about laneway housing this past weekend and hinted at the need for other solutions to increase housing supply.
So when you have a few minutes, I would encourage you to complete the city's survey on expanding permissions for multiplexes across the city. I just did it and voted to bring on the multiplexes.
Photo by Tiago Rodrigues on Unsplash
Toronto's chief planner Gregg Lintern (who you can follow over here on Twitter) was recently in the Toronto Star talking about the city's plans to allow more multi-unit dwellings in our low-rise single-family neighborhoods.
I was careful to say "more" because they are already permissible in some areas. The challenge is that they're not happening at any sort of meaningful scale, which is an obvious signal that some key ingredients are still missing.
Or perhaps there are too many required ingredients. For example, right now the zoning by-law requires one car parking space for every dwelling in a multi-unit building. This is, of course, dumb and the requirement should be completely eliminated.
Changes like this, as well as many others, are long overdue. Not just in Toronto, but in many other cities. And it is partially what I was getting at when I wrote about laneway housing this past weekend and hinted at the need for other solutions to increase housing supply.
So when you have a few minutes, I would encourage you to complete the city's survey on expanding permissions for multiplexes across the city. I just did it and voted to bring on the multiplexes.
Photo by Tiago Rodrigues on Unsplash
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