Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 5 Oct 2011, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Now accepting registrations! 2489 Lakeshore Road West, Oakville Bronte Harbour Nursery School CALL OR EMAIL TODAY! Classes are filling quickly 905-465-3508 bronteharbour@hotmail.com Toddlers: 18 months - 2 years Preschoolers: 2 - 5 years 2, 3 or 5 mornings per week Bronte Harbour Nursery Schoolwhere every single child is valued, supported, encouraged and treasured. YOU DRAW FOR YOUR DISCOUNT Treat Youself to Savings This Thursday, Friday & Saturday! 100 Bronte Road South, Oakville 905-847-8148 Oct. 6,7 & 8 LANAS BOUTIQUE REGULAR PRICE 10 % 15 % 20 % OFF Thorough, consistent and reliable home cleaning 100% satisfaction guaranteed Regular and occasional service Spring Cleaning Gift Certificates e-mail: anderson@mollymaid.ca VAC HealthIdentificationCardsWelcome Contact us today for a free, no-obligation, in-home estimate: (905) 681-7484 9 W ednesday, O ctober 5, 2011 O A K V ILLE B EA V ER w w w .in sid eH A LTO N .co m By David Lea OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF Area residents opposed to an apart- ment complex, proposed for 331 Sheddon Ave., say theyre worried the development will set a precedent for the nearby hospital lands. The site is currently occupied by a medical building just south of the Reynolds Street Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital (OTMH) property. Due to its proximity, it is part of the expanded hospital study area and this has residents concerned that when the facility moves to its new Dundas Street and Third Line location in 2015, the apartment may influence what replaces the hospital. Proposed by 1458408 Ontario Ltd., the apartment will be three storeys and feature 20 units and 45-50 park- ing spaces. The plan calls for a density of 53 units per site hectare higher than is currently allowed. Oakvilles Official Plan restricted the site to a density of six to 17 units per site hectare while the new Livable Oakville Official Plan permits 29 units per site hectare. Residents said they do not want to see something similar on the hospital site. Any favourable consideration of this proposal will prejudice what might be planned for and or developed on the existing Oakville hospital site, said John Canham of the Trafalgar Chartwell Residents Association dur- ing a recent council meeting. Area resident Gail Cosman said many residents are hoping whatever is built there will be low-density or even parkland. The apartments architect, Bill Hicks, told council the proposed devel- opment would be a good precedent. We have broken it down so it appears not like an apartment build- ing, but like a series of interconnected townhouses, said Hicks. We think it is a positive attribute to the site. There is certainly going to be a reduction in automobile use to the project. The medical building generates a lot of traffic movement. Other resident concerns included perceived insufficient parking on the site and the removal of mature trees from the property. Hicks said a number of the mature trees will be preserved on the property and new trees will be added. He also said there are a number of different densities in the area and it has not been determined what density will dominate the hospital lands. A council decision on the develop- ment will be made at a later date. Apartment complex near OTMH has residents concerned

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy