Moncton starts bylaw changes for proposed 17-storey riverfront towers - Action News
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New Brunswick

Moncton starts bylaw changes for proposed 17-storey riverfront towers

Moncton council took the first step Monday to change a series of city bylaws to allow a pair of 17-storey towers along the city's riverfront.

Public hearing set for early October for Gateway Towers

Two multi-storey buildings with a small parking lot to the lower left.
A rendering of the proposed Gateway Towers looking south toward the Petitcodiac River shows the public access right-of-way through the site under a pedway connecting the towers. (J.N. Lafford Realty Inc)

Moncton council took the first step Monday to change a series of city bylaws to allow a pair of 17-storey towers along the city's riverfront.

New Brunswick-based J.N. Lafford Realty Inc. has proposed the mixed-usetowers with about 380 residential units south ofAssomption Boulevard along Riverfront Park.

The company's proposalincludes commercial space on the main level, two levels of indoor parking and a public right-of-way to access the park.

"The developer will help create a gateway and create amenities for people that use the park, whichprobably will make it a safer environment as well," Bill Budd, the city's director of planning and development, told council on Monday.

Public hearing in October

City staff recommended council approve first reading of bylaws amending the municipal plan, downtown plan andzoning bylaw to allow the proposal to move ahead.

Council voted unanimously in favour.

The project named Gateway Towers is valued at about $90 million.A city staff report says10 to 25 per cent of the apartments may be considered affordable housing.

The proposal has already met with some opposition. About three dozen residents signed a petition calling on the city to halt the proposal.

The vote means the public will have a chance to weigh in, whether for or against, at a public hearing set for Oct. 7.

While none of those calling for the plans to be halted spoke Monday, council members raised some of their concerns with planning staff.

An elevated view showing a construction site, tower crane, various vehicles and equipment, streets and the riverfront in the background.
The site is now being used as a staging area for the construction of three 15-storey towers along Foundry Street and would include the wooded area on the right of the image and the former Northumberland dairy building, shown centre. (J.N. Lafford Realty/Submitted by City of Moncton)

Deputy Mayor Paulette Thriaultasked about whether the proposal opens the door to further development in or around Riverfront Park.

Budd said it wouldn't create a precedent. He said most of the Gateway Towers site covers land Lafford already owned it has the right to develop and has the right zoning already.

Earlier this summer, council voted to sell some municipally-owned land to the developer.

"Because of the huge cost that developing there, he's trying to make the most efficient development possible and required some additional land to make it feasible," Budd said of the land sale.

Budd described the land the city is selling as a "ditch area" that has been "problematic" because of homeless encampments in the past.

And while residents have suggested the Gateway Towers proposal would go against city plans by developing green space, Budd appeared to push back on that idea.

Buddpointed to a map in the city's 2017 downtown plan showing the site, part of whichoccupied by a building and parking lot for years, redeveloped with four buildings.

"Some form of this type of development was always contemplated at this location," Budd said. "It's just slightly becoming a little larger."

A map with various shapes with a red circle around four structures.
Moncton's 2017 downtown development plan included maps showing the Gateway Towers site redeveloped with four buildings, shown circled in red. (City of Moncton)

The deputy mayor also asked about flood risk, another concern raised by residents.

City rulesrequire habitable spaces be constructed above theone-in-100-year flood zone of 10.5 metres elevation, a level near the high-water markof the1869 Saxby Gale.

Buildings within the flood zone are also required to be designed to withstand flooding. One of the Gateway Towers approval conditions would be for the builder to include flood mitigation measures.

Budd pointed to the courthouse nearby as an example, saying its main level is constructed higher, and its underground parking is meant to withstand flooding.