Sudbury

826 unit apartment complex approved for downtown Sudbury

An 826 unit apartment complex could soon be coming to Sudbury's downtown. On Monday, the city's planning committee approved the rezoning for the two-building complex.

The two buildings will offer affordable and senior housing

The side of the Tom Davies building in Sudbury that reads "Place Tom Davies Square" with lights overhead.
(Yvon Theriault/Radio-Canada)

An 826 unit apartment complex could soon be coming to downtown Sudbury.

On Monday, Greater Sudbury's planning committee approved the rezoning for the two-building complex.

The request for rezoning was made by Kaymic Developments (Ontario) Inc., the Trustees of All Nations Church and the City of Greater Sudbury. The development is still in early stages, but it is expected to offer affordable and seniors housing for the downtown core.

Before the rezoning was approved, the committee debated on the amount of parking required for a complex of that size, as well as Kaymic Developments request for less parking than required.

Current Sudbury bylaws state that multi-unit dwellings must have a minimum of 1.5 parking spaces per unit. However, a 25 per cent parking reduction can be applied if there's an affordable housing agreement.

City councillor Geoff McCausland says other cities are moving toward less parking and more active transportation. He asked city staff to look into what other cities are doing for parking in multi-unit dwellings and make recommendations for parking solutions.

He adds that regardless of parking, this apartment complex is needed in the downtown.

"What downtown Sudbury needs more than anything is people, people living in the area, walking the streets, eating at the restaurants, shopping at the stores." McCausland said.

"826 units would fast forward our downtown and our city in a serious way."

Al Sizer is the city councillor for Ward 8 in the City of Greater Sudbury. (Submitted by The City of Greater Sudbury)

Councillor Al Sizer agreed, adding that more affordable and senior housing is something that residents in this city have been asking for for years.

"We need this housing — both senior and affordable. We must support this."

"It gives us 826 units. It helps with our people living downtown. We talked about having people living in the downtown core will help the downtown businesses and rejuvenate the downtown, it fits that also," Sizer said.

Within a year, city staff will return to the planning committee with recommendations on parking.

All planning committee decisions must be approved by Greater Sudbury city council before projects can move ahead.