Ontario rejects plan for housing towers across from Stoney Creek’s Battlefield Park
Global News
Ontario's Land Tribunal rejected the idea for a large complex that would have seen towers of 18 and 20 storeys right next to a historic Hamilton park.
The developer of a proposed two-tower residential complex in Stoney Creek, Ont., across from a Hamilton museum and park is likely going back to the drawing board after the province rejected an appeal to change zoning permissions.
The Ontario Land Tribunal’s (OLT) ruling suggested the 18 and 20-storey development, which would have brought 564 units of housing next to Battlefield Park around King Street East and Centennial Parkway, “represented over-intensification” of the area.
In a written decision, the OLT’s Tee Fung Ng said the property, earmarked for 2900 King St. East, was located within an area “that is not for the high intensification proposed” and insisted it would “overwhelm” the neighbourhood.
Project developers Camaro Group had been seeking to re-designate the parcel from a lower density ‘neighbourhoods’ classification to a ‘mixed-use medium density’ ranking which would clear the way for a maximum of 969 units per hectare.
Aside from a pair of restaurants, the area is surrounded by Battlefield Park to the east, vacant lands to the south and a municipal cemetery to the west.
The latest plan called for the two housing towers, a commercial space on the ground floor and underground parking.
During a hearing in late January, lawyers for the appellant argued the idea fit with the city’s initiatives to accommodate future population growth through infill and intensification.
Attorney Denise Baker said the building plan presented “no adverse impacts” to the neighbourhood.