Tall & Urban News

Social Housing Tower Proposed for Vancouver

Conceptual artistic rendering of 508 Drake Street and 1317 Richards Street, Vancouver. (DA Architects & Planners/MCYH Multigenerational Housing Society/Larco)
Conceptual artistic rendering of 508 Drake Street and 1317 Richards Street, Vancouver. (DA Architects & Planners/MCYH Multigenerational Housing Society/Larco)
17 November 2020 | Vancouver, Canada

A new mixed-use redevelopment in downtown Vancouver will have new cultural uses and 100 percent social housing for its residential component.

On behalf of MCYH Multigenerational Housing Society, Larco is proposing to turn 508 Drake Street and 1317 Richards Street — the southwest corner of the intersection of Drake Street and Richards Street—into a 409-foot-tall (124-meter-tall) 40-story tower

Featured Buildings
CTBUH Member Companies
(showing member level)

The site is currently occupied by a ground-level parking lot, and a 1972-built, two-story building with the Ismaili Community Centre and Jamatkhana.

The redevelopment, designed by DA Architects & Planners, would offer a replacement community space and place of worship in levels two to four, totalling 32,300 square feet (3,000 square meters) within the tower podium.

This includes a prayer hall on the second level, reading room on the third level, social hall and recreational space on the fourth level, and learning center on the fifth level that opens up to an outdoor amenity space on the podium rooftop.

A total of 198 units of social housing, offering a variety of options for families and individuals, will be provided in the remaining levels of the building over the cultural uses.

On the 10th level, residents will have access to about 1,000 square feet (92 square meters) of indoor amenity space that opens up to 2,730 square feet (253 square meters) of outdoor amenity space on the upper podium rooftop. Another outdoor amenity space is provided on the tower rooftop.

This is envisioned as a “best in class urban mixed-use project including community hub, where people can convene in a number of ways including socializing, learning, praying, living, and supporting each other.” It will also facilitate “a multigenerational context allowing for young professionals, families, parents, and grandparents to have a better quality of life through close proximity of habitation and activities.”

However, the building’s design and scope is severely impacted by a view cone that protects views of Camel and Crown mountains. The upper levels from the 10th level and upwards cut through this view cone, requiring the proponents to create triangular-shaped floor plates for the remaining 30 levels of the tower.

As a result, the floor area size of the vast majority of the social housing levels are roughly halved, relative to the size of the podium.

The Shangri-La tower, the tallest building in Vancouver, is also triangular in shape for the same reasons to overcome a view cone that crosses through the property.

Four underground levels will provide just 55 vehicle parking stalls, and 150 bike parking spaces.

The proposed total building floor area is 169,000 square feet (15,700 square meters), creating a floor space ratio density of 14.12 times the size of the 12,000-square-foot (1,114 square meters).

This project is currently in its pre-application public consultation phase; a formal rezoning application will be submitted to the municipal government at a later date.

For more on this story, go to Daily Hive.