Friday, April 26, 2024
  • Dentec - Leaderboard - 2023 - Updated
  • CWRE 2024 - Leaderboard
  • Keith Walking Floor - Leaderboard - Sept 2021
  • IAPMO R&T Lab - Leaderboard
  • Revizto - Leaderboard - March and April
  • Premier Leaderboard - updated Nov 19
  • Procore Leaderboard 2024
oakridge centre vancouver
October 22, 2020

Developers of Oakridge Centre ask for more density in new rezoning application

The developers of Oakridge Centre, one of the largest real estate projects by size in North America and driver of the most expensive condo pre-sales by dollar value in Vancouver, are asking for major revisions to their future plans, seeking to build more density and swapping an entire luxury condo building for market rental.

Oakridge is a massive 28-acre site where a first phase of construction that will take four years to finish is currently underway. Pre-sale units went on the market in late 2018 and developers sold $1 billion in units in less than a year, more than the combined pre-sales for all downtown Vancouver developments during the same period, according to a Bloomberg report in December 2019.

A full rezoning of the site at 41st Avenue and Cambie Street took several years to complete.

On Wednesday, the city posted a new rezoning application submitted by Westbank and QuadReal and architect Henriquez Partners for the next phases of the Oakridge site.

The companies are hoping to glean more value from the site by being able to increase the maximum heights, adding nine storeys to 11 of the buildings approved in 2018.

In total, they seek to increase the overall density by about 10 per cent, from 3.71 to 4.10 floor space ratio, or what can be built compared to the size of a lot.

Their new proposal would require them to build 775 new housing units, including 319 additional market rental units and 94 moderate income rentals.

It also includes over 375,000 square feet in new office space and will see a decrease of about 100,000 square feet in what had previously been earmarked for market condo space.

Keep reading in the Vancouver Sun