Alphabet Aims to Win Over Toronto With Affordable Housing

Alphabet Aims to Win Over Toronto With Affordable Housing
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Alphabet’s digital city on Toronto’s waterfront will be made out of wood, heated by geothermal wells and offer a swathe of affordable housing, according to Bloomberg. With that, the company seeks to win over a skeptical public concerned about privacy issues at the development.

Sidewalk Labs the urban innovation unit of Alphabet says about 40 percent of the 2,500 residential units on the 4.9-hectare (12-acre) development dubbed “Quayside,“ will be below-market housing, including 20 percent affordable. Just over half will be purpose-built rental.

“Toronto is effectively in a state of housing gridlock. People feel stuck where they are, they’re unable to get into the market, whether its owning homes or even just renting,“ Jesse Shapins, director of public realm at Sidewalk, said in media briefing. "We’re making an unprecedented commitment here to below-market housing. Our approach here ensures a truly mixed-income community and we hope this can be a model for really tackling the housing challenges in Toronto today.

Sidewalk’s proposal comes amid an immigration and economic boom in the city that’s sent rents soaring and driven the vacancy rate for condos rentals to 1.1 percent and for purpose-built rentals to 0.5 percent. At the same time, Sidewalk’s project has been entrenched in controversy over concerns about how data collected from smartphones, sensors and the like will be controlled and protected. The company has proposed that an independent civic data trust be created to oversee the control of the information and advocated for an independent body to set privacy rules for the development.

The company plans to use mass timber to construct all of its buildings which will likely be 30 stories or lower and be a mix of residential, commercial spaces with lower floors for retail, arts or community areas. Proponents of mass timber or engineered wood say the product is as strong and fire-resistant as those made from steel or concrete, and Sidewalk said its use in the development could spark a new industry in Canada.

Energy in buildings will be managed by an AI-powered system that would result in 20 percent less energy use while the project is targeting a 75 percent to 85 percent reduction in greenhouse gases with heat recovery and geothermal technology. More than 9,000 jobs will be created in the province as a result of the building construction process in Quayside, which will likely be home to 3,900 jobs with a focus on technology and urban innovation. Sidewalk Labs plans to test out technologies related to autonomous vehicles in Quayside to prepare for a future of driverless cars.

The plans have yet to be approved by the project’s stakeholders, which includes Waterfront Toronto, the government organization overseeing the project, Alphabet and the City of Toronto. Sidewalk Labs will bring its proposals forward for approval next spring.