Toronto housing complex may be rebuilt years after ceiling collapse - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:00 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Toronto housing complex may be rebuilt years after ceiling collapse

A public housing property that residents were forced to leave after a ceiling collapse two years ago could finally be rebuilt if a new plan is approved but likely won't be ready for several years.

The complex was evacuated after a concrete ceiling collapsed in May 2022

Rebuilding Swansea Mews could take years to complete

6 days ago
Duration 2:15
Two years after a ceiling collapsed at a Toronto Community Housing complex, plans to rebuild are still in flux. As CBCs Tyler Cheese reports, former residents of Swansea Mews say theyre still recovering from the sudden displacement they experienced in 2022.

A public housing property that residents were forced to leave after a ceiling collapse two years ago could finally be rebuilt if a new plan is approved but likely won't be ready for several years.

A new Toronto Community Housing Corporation report suggests the complex at Swansea Mews could be rebuilt to include hundreds of additional units.

The report presented to the TCHC's building investment, finance and audit committeeon Monday, proposes a new complex of up to 695,000 square feet that would include replacements for the 154 existing public housing units and another 550 to 700 new units. It is not clear in the report if the additional units are also intended for public housing.

The complex was marked for demolition after the collapse, when engineers found all of the buildings unsafe for habitation.

Swansea Mews residents,including Jardel Sallay-Ferreria and his family, wereeventually relocated to other public housing complexes.

"It was pretty rough because that's where all my memories are," he told CBC Toronto. "Any person who has a home could sympathize with that. The idea of having to lose it, right? I took it pretty bad."

Sallay-Ferreria, a man with a dark beard, wearing a white t-shirt and a baseball cap, sits on a couch in his home.
Jardel Sallay-Ferreria, 23, lived with his mother and two younger brothers at the Swansea Mews complex when it was evacuated. They now live together in another TCHC complex in Scarborough. (Paul Borkwood/CBC)

The existing complex of 175,000 square feet is spread across nine smaller buildings.

The proposed complex includesthree new buildings in the same location near Windermere Avenue and The Queensway.

City working diligently to rebuild: Perks

Gord Perks, city councillor for ParkdaleHigh Park, told CBC Toronto the city is working as diligently as it can to get the rebuild project underway.

Once the initial development plan is approved by the TCHC board, it will then go to city council for their approval, he said.

"Then we'll start in on our rezoning and get a new building put there."

But Perks does admit the project has taken a long time to get going.

Gord Perks, a man with grey hair, wearing a blue suit jacket, stands outside the front door to Toronto's city hall.
Gord Perks, city councillor for ParkdaleHigh Park, says the city is working as diligently as it can to get the rebuild project underway, but timing will depend on federal funding. (Grant Linton/CBC)

"The previous mayor wasn't as committed to publicly and socially-owned housing as the current mayor is," he said. "So, you know, we could have done better in that."

He also outlined that the city is in the process of reapplying for federal funding for the project. Previous funding was approved for repairs to the existing complex, but rebuilding requires a different process.

In a statement provided to CBCToronto, a representative for the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, the federal entity responsible for this financing,said it can't disclose details of ongoing applications.

"CMHC is committed to continuing our work with TCHC to reach positive housing solutions for Toronto through National Housing Strategy programs and initiatives," the statement said.

Perks reiterated that the city is working quickly on its side of a potential agreement, but timing will also depend on that federal funding.

"I can't give an exact timeline on that, but we're optimistic that this will move quickly," he said.

Ahead of Monday's report, TCHCtold CBC Torontothat the agency plans to present the initial development plan to city council before the end of this year.

Call for open channel between residents and TCHC

Sallay-Ferreria now lives with his mother and two younger brothers at another TCHC complex in Scarborough. He's hopeful to one day move into the rebuilt complex.

In the meantime, he wants former residents like himself to be informed of what's happening and be involved in the decision-making process.

"I feel like the main struggle has been communication," he said. "We need to have some sort of open channel so we can actually, you know, feel like we're getting something out of this."

In the provided statement, TCHC said once the initial development plan is approved by city council, it will "launch a detailed community engagement process" in 2025.

Though the rebuilding process is expected to take years, Sallay-Ferreria said he'll work on convincing his family to move back to a neighbourhood full of memories and friendly faces.

"They like this place a lot better," he said. "But I mean, we'll see if I can change their minds."