Yikes. To be completely honest, I was not expecting this post and this post to blow up in the way that they did. But hey, here we are and here's the blogTO article: "Developer shames City of Toronto into issuing permit for bold new skyscraper." What all of this suggests is that most people are shocked by how long it takes and how difficult it is to build a building. I mean, what I wrote about is just one sliver among the countless other things that need to come together for it to happen. But to my mind, these are productive discussions to be having. Because the more everyone is aware, the more likely we are to improve things.
As a follow-up to last week's post about giving free land to the City of Toronto, I am now thrilled to report that, today at 12:14 PM, we received our building permit!
Some of you were keen to hear about what happened following the post. So here's the update. I published the original post last Wednesday. And to be honest, it received far more attention than I was expecting.
On Thursday morning I received a call from the city. They weren't thrilled about my post, but were very helpful and said that they would ensure the conveyance happened immediately. It then got done before noon that same day.
Planning then sent a note to buildings saying that the permit was ready for issuance. Yay. Buildings acknowledged that they were working on it, and on Monday of this week we received a summary of the outstanding fees and the instructions for the wire transfer.
We paid the fees immediately and on Tuesday we received a payment receipt from the city. Then today -- Wednesday -- we received the building permit. So it was exactly one week from post to permit. A big thanks to everyone who helped to finally move this forward.
Hopefully it's clear that last week's post came strictly from a place of prolonged frustration. I wasn't trying to be mean. Our lawyer reminded me, after the post, that we've actually been working on this land conveyance for over 2 years.

This is an aerial photo of the construction site at One Delisle:

Currently, we are on hold and waiting to pour a number of columns on the ground floor because the city has not yet issued our above-grade building permit. And the reason the city has not issued our above-grade building permit is because we have not yet conveyed our parkland dedication land to the city. Frustratingly though, we have been ready to convey this land for over a year! We simply need the city to allow us to give them this free land. To date, we have meticulously documented at least 3-pages of follow-ups and back-and-forth emails as we try our best to do this.
I’ve been doing this long enough that this isn’t surprising or unusual. But it remains deeply maddening. Younger people on the team can’t believe that this is par for the course. On top of this, the city continues to charge interest on the fees that are payable upon issuance of the first above-grade building permit. The result is an insane dynamic where the city can delay things as long as it wants and then charge us, and all other developers, interest on its own delays! I mean, is it any wonder that housing keeps getting more expensive in this city?
During the last mayoral election, some candidates were quick to promise that, if elected, the city itself would start building affordable housing. This, I'm sure, sounded good to most. Toronto needs more affordable homes. But for all of us involved in the building of buildings, it was frankly impossible to imagine. If the city takes this long to accept free land from developers, how could it possibly build anything?