flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Safdie Architects unveils design for ORCA Toronto

Mixed-Use

Safdie Architects unveils design for ORCA Toronto

The project comprises nine towers in total.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | June 10, 2021
ORCA Toronto development

Renderings courtesy Safdie Architects

Safdie Architects has shared its design for ORCA Toronto, a proposed mixed-use development in Downtown Toronto that weaves together the surrounding neighborhoods with a new 10.5-acre park.

By decking over the 100-meter-wide, 800-meter-long rail corridor leading to Union Station, the project looks to reclaim a 16.5-acre site just west of CN Tower. Of the 16.5 acres, 10.5 acres are available for an urban park with six acres that feature residential, office, hotel, retail, and transit facilities.

Safdie’s design features a configuration of slender residential towers connected by elevated bridges that accommodate housing units, gardens, and recreational facilities. Pedestrian bridges will connect the towers and create special public and community amenities. The shared indoor and outdoor amenities will exist at multiple levels and encourage interaction among residents, fostering a sense of community.

 

ORCA Toronto aerial view

 

The design will also activate 65% of the site’s area through a multilevel park. The park, designed in collaboration with PWP Landscape Architecture, will feature open lawns, playgrounds, walking trails, and bike baths that are accessible by ramps, escalators, and elevators interwoven throughout the development.

Shops, restaurants, and cafes will be directly connected with the park’s outdoor areas on several levels. The retail galleria seamlessly integrates with the park and is designed to be opened to the park in good weather and enclosed during the winter months. Direct access for pedestrians and bicyclists will be provided on all North-South cross streets to allow free movement from the surrounding streets to the park without requiring entrance through the retail galleria.

 

ORCA Toronto view from the park

 

The project incorporates nine towers in total, including a corner office tower and eight residential towers that will provide approximately 3,000 housing units.

Safdie Architects developed the project in collaboration with Arup Engineering.

Tags

Related Stories

Mixed-Use | Jul 23, 2019

Shanghai’s T20 stacks office and community space atop a plant-filled parking garage

Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio designed the building.

Mixed-Use | Jul 19, 2019

Lendlease and Google to develop mixed-use neighborhoods in San Francisco Bay

The residential, retail, hospitality, and other civic components have an estimated development value of $15 billion. 

Mixed-Use | Jul 2, 2019

Brooklyn’s Flatbush Caton Market redevelopment will preserve the Caribbean community amidst gentrification

Freeform + Deform designed the building with Magnusson Architecture + Planning as the Architect of Record.

Mixed-Use | Jun 20, 2019

SOM-designed mixed-use tower opens in Sydney

The building is located in Sydney’s Central Business District.

Mixed-Use | Jun 13, 2019

Site of former Motorola headquarters will become a mixed-use district

UrbanStreet Group and Antunovich Associates are developing the master plan for the project.

Mixed-Use | Jun 3, 2019

12-story mixed-use development opens in Washington, D.C.

Cooper Carry designed the project.

Mixed-Use | May 28, 2019

Broward County Convention Center expansion to include Headquarters Hotel

Omni Hotels & Resorts will manage the County-owned hotel.

Mixed-Use | May 23, 2019

237-room hotel will anchor Nashville’s new $540 million mixed-use development

Chartwell Hospitality will operate the hotel.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021