5Th Floor, Tower 1 2717 Joseph Howe Drive, Halifax, Ns

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

5Th Floor, Tower 1 2717 Joseph Howe Drive, Halifax, Ns 5TH FLOOR, TOWER 1 2717 JOSEPH HOWE DRIVE, HALIFAX, NS Furnished Sublease Opportunity Near Armdale Rotary FOR § Full-floor suite comprising 10,198 sf SUBLEASE § Short- or long-term opportunity By negotiation § Available now This sublease opportunity represents 10,198 sf of modern and quality Connie Amero office space overlooking the Northwest Arm. Situated in the west end of D 902.431.9967 Halifax, near the Armdale Rotary, Tower 1 is part of Manulife’s Business M 902.802.8480 Campus and offers quick and direct access to all ends of the Peninsula, [email protected] to Highway 102, the bridges, public transit, and surrounding amenities. Geof Ralph Property features include some free surface parking for D 902.444.3006 employees and clients, nicely landscaped grounds with outdoor M 902.877.9324 seating, 24-hour security, on-site property management, [email protected] a fitness centre, full-service cafeteria and daycare. partnersglobal.com 5th Floor, Tower 1 | 2717 Joseph Howe Drive, Halifax, NS GENERAL LISTING ID 10227 ADDRESS 2717 Joseph Howe Drive, Halifax, Nova Scotia LOCATION West End BUILDING NAME Tower 1, Manulife Business Campus CLASS TYPE Class A office BUILDING SIZE 80,092 sf SIZE AVAILABLE 10,198 sf FLOOR LOCATION 5th of 8 AVAILABILITY Immediately PARKING Some on-site surface stalls negotiable BASE RENT By negotiation (call for details) 2020 CAM & REALTY TAX $14.36 psf (estimate) HEAD LEASE EXPIRY December 31, 2021 OR February 29, 2028 NOTES Option to include all remaining furniture partnersglobal.com 5th Floor, Tower 1 | 2717 Joseph Howe Drive, Halifax, NS FLOOR PLAN LEVEL 5 SUMMARY i n t e r i o r s p a c e s. r e d e f i n e d. SALES SALES CUSTOM CUSTOMER CUSTOMER SALES CUSTOM MARKETING OFFICE 2 OFFICE 3 PUBLISHING 2 5363 Inglis St. Suite B Halifax NS Canada B3H 1J4 CARE OFFICE 1 CARE OFFICE 2 OFFICE 1 PUBLISHING 1 OFFICE 1 (BUILD NEW) (BUILD NEW) T 902.425.9277 F 902.425.9278 www.d360inc.com MEETING MEETING ROOM ROOM SEE NOTE 4 SEE NOTE 3 28 Aug 2015 CUST. CUST. CUST. CARE 1 CARE 2 CARE 3 OPEN OFFICE MARKETING DOC CENTRE STORAGE D A A (NEW) COATS COATS MRKTG MRKTG MRKTG MRKTG 1 2 3 4 RELOCATED MILLWORK CUST. CUST. CUST. CUST. A A CARE 4 CARE 5 CARE 6 CARE 7 UP DN OPEN OFFICE CUSTOMER CARE CUST. CUST. CUST. DN UP CUST. CUST. CUST. CARE 8 CARE 9 CARE 10 PUB. 1 PUB. 3 PUB. 4 H C C OPEN OFFICE CUSTOM PUBLICATIONS CORRIDOR MEN'S WOMEN'S CORRIDOR AD BF CUST. CUST. CUST. WASHROOM PUB. 5 PUB. 6 PUB. 7 OPS 1 CUST. CUST. CUST. CUST. CARE 11 CARE 12 CARE 13 CARE 14 JAN. A OPEN OFFICE CUSTOMER CARE 01 28 Aug 15 Issued for Test Fit No. Date Description DENOTES EXISTING PARTITION CUST. CUST. CUST. FHC ELECT. TELE. CARE 15 CARE 16 CARE 17 Revisions: FHC AD AD CRS 1 CRS 2 OPS 2 OPS 3 DENOTES NEW PARTITION H C C ELEVATOR OPEN OFFICE LANDING AD OPS / CRS / MEDIA PRODUCTION MEDIA MEDIA CUST. CUST. CUST. CUST. CRS 3 CRS 4 PROD. 1 PROD. 2 FR Client: CARE 18 CARE 19 CARE 20 CARE 21 The Chronicle Herald OPEN OFFICE MEDIA CUSTOMER CARE PROD. 17 A 2717 Joseph Howe Drive COFFEE MTG RM B3J 2T2 Halifax, Nova Scotia CUST. CUST. SALES 1 SALES 2 CARE 22 CARE 23 MEDIA Project: PROD.18 Chronicle Herald MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA Space Study H C C PROD. 3 PROD. 4 PROD. 5 PROD. 6 2717 Joseph Howe Drive B3J 2T2 Halifax, Nova Scotia OPEN OFFICE MEDIA PRODUCTION Drawing Title: OPEN OFFICE SEE NOTE 1 SALES 5 SEE NOTE 2 Level 5 Test Fit SALES 3 SALES 4 MEDIA PRODUCTION Option 2 OPEN OFFICE SALES MEDIA (SHARED WORKSTATIONS) This drawing is the exclusive property of Design 360 Inc., MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA PROD. 7 and must be returned upon request. Reproduction in part PROD. 19 PROD. 15 PROD. 13 PROD. 11 PROD. 9 or in whole is forbidden without the designer's permission. SALES 6 SALES 7 SALES 8 SALES 9 Do not scale drawings MEDIA MEDIA The Contractor and all Sub-contractors shall verify all job MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA MEDIA PROD. 8 site dimensions, all drawings, details & specifications. PROD. 01 The contractor shall report any discrepancies, in writing, PROD. 20 PROD. 16 PROD.14 PROD. 12 PROD. 10 to Design 360 Inc. prior to commencing with any work. H C C For information concerning this drawing contact: KERI KOCH/MELISSA CUMMINGS @ 902.425.9277 Date: 28 AUG 2015 Drawn By: Checked By: LR KK Project No.: Scale: Sheet Size: 15.040 3/32"=1'-0" on 11"x17" Dwg No.: SP-05-OPT2 Issued for Test Fit partnersglobal.com Highway 102 Halifax Shopping Centre to Downtown Armdale Rotary Northwest Arm Connie Amero Geof Ralph D 902.431.9967 D 902.444.3006 M 902.802.8480 M 902.877.9324 [email protected] [email protected] Partners Global Corporate Real Estate (Partners Global) and its agents and affiliates do not warrant, represent or guarantee the accuracy, completeness or validity of the information provided herein. Parties interested in the property are to conduct their own independent investigations to determine the suitability of the property for their intended use and are strongly urged to discuss the property with their professional advisors. Partners Global expressly disclaims any liability arising out of any errors and omissions in the information. Prospective clients should not confine themselves to the contents but should make their own enquiries to satisfy themselves in all respects. Partners Global will not accept any responsibility should any details prove to be incomplete or incorrect. partnersglobal.com PARTNERS GLOBAL CORPORATE REAL ESTATE.
Recommended publications
  • Interpretation Planning of the Purcells Cove Granite Quarries
    Interpretation Planning for Purcell’s Cove Quarries Bachelor of Community Design Honours Thesis Rachael Groat School of Planning Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS Supervisor: John Zuck Winter 2016 Acknowledgements Thank you to John Zuck for all your direction and assistance with this project, especially hiking with us through the quarries and sharing your wealth of knowledge. It has been a pleasure to work with you on this project. Thank you to Marcos Zentilli and Rebecca Jamieson for sharing your expertise and passion for the area. Thank you to Patricia Manuel for your guidance throughout the year. Thank you to Jennifer Strang at the Dalhousie GIS Centre for helping us to track down data. Finally, thank you to Cole Grabinsky. There is no one else I would have rather collaborated with on this project. i Executive Summary Purcell’s Cove is located on the western shore of the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour, Nova Scotia. Historically there were six quarries located at Purcell’s Cove; three granite quarries and three slate or bluestone quarries. The remains of these quarries and their operations can still be seen today. This project explores the Purcell’s Cove Quarries through the lens of interpretation planning and with the intent of establishing the cultural significance and heritage value of the site. This project focuses on the geologic history theme and was completed in close collaboration with Cole Grabinsky, who focused on the industrial history theme. A site inventory established the approximate extents of the granite and bluestone quarries and located trails in the area, the rail bed of a historic railroad track, as well as significant quarry remains and environmental features.
    [Show full text]
  • Impact of Grazing by Microzooplankton in the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour, Nova Scotia
    MARINE ECOLOGY - PROGRESS SERIES Vol. 47: 249-258. 1988 Published August 31 Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. Impact of grazing by microzooplankton in the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour, Nova Scotia D. J. Gifford* Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University. Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 451 ABSTRACT: Impact of grazing by natural assemblages of microzooplankton was measured in 5 in situ experiments in Halifax Harbour, Nova Scotia (Canada) using a seawater dilution method. The mi- crozooplankton assemblages, dominated numerically by oligotrich chates, exerted a seasonally vari- able grazing impact; 38 % of the initial standing stock of chlorophyll a d-' was consumed (= 47 % of potential chlorophyll production d-l) in June when flagellates < 12 pm dominated the phytoplankton. No significant grazing occurred in November during a bloom of large diatoms. In March, when grazing and phytoplankton growth were in balance, 100 % of the daily chlorophyll production was grazed. Assumptions of the dilution method that threshold feeding does not occur and that phytoplankton nutrients are not limiting were examined, and although probably violated in some cases, were found not to affect the results of the experiments. INTRODUCTION consuming nano- and microphytoplankton (e.g. Beers & Stewart 1970, 1971, Beers et al. 1975, 1980, Hein- The nlicrozooplankton size category (<200 pm) is bokel 1978a, b, Smetairek 1981, Stoecker et al. 1981). composed of a diverse taxonomic assemblage, includ- Indirect estimates suggest that microzooplankton con- ing planktonic Protozoa and larval and naupliar stages sume a substantial fraction of the phytoplankton pro- of Metazoa. Two suborders of ciliate protozoans, the duction in pelagic food webs (e.g. Rley 1956, Beers & Tintinnina (tintinnids) and the Oligotrichina (oligo- Stewart 1970, 1971, Takahashi & Hoskins 1978).
    [Show full text]
  • (A) the Northwest Arm Penitentiary, 1844-1852
    SECTION TEN (A) THE NORTHWEST ARM PENITENTIARY, 1844-1852 Anthony Thomson (2000) The Nova Scotia Penitentiary was built along the Northwest Arm in the south end just outside the property set aside for Point Pleasant Park. It was constructed in the middle of what historians claim to be a great "intellectual awakening" in Nova Scotia, which Harvey, for example, dates as having occurred between 1835 and 1848.1 Opened in 1844 and replaced by Dorchester Penitentiary in 1880, the Nova Scotia Penitentiary served several purposes subsequently and was finally demolished in 1948. In the early twentieth century, the functioning prison in Halifax was the City Prison built at the end of Gottingen Street in the North End of the city. When I first began research on the history of corrections in Nova Scotia, I mistook the city prison for the penitentiary. This error was reinforced by some early secondary sources. C. W. Topping, in his Canadian Penal Institutions, reported that, ‚In‖1854‖a‖two-story granite structure, one-hundred and eighty-one feet by thirty-six feet and containing eighty cells, was erected in Halifax, Nova Scotia. It has come to be called‖’Rockhead‖Prison.’‛ He refers to this institution as the one that was visited by J. M. Ferres in 1867.2 In his World Penal Systems: A Survey, Negley Teeters repeats this information and refers to the penal establishment‖ in‖ Halifax‖ as‖ ‚known‖ as‖ Rockhead Prison, [which] was erected in 1854. It is now a jail for the city‖of‖Halifax.‛3 FOUNDING THE NEW BRIDEWELL The Bridewell established in 1818 was supplanted thirty years later when a new House of Correction was opened, known as the Provincial Penitentiary.
    [Show full text]
  • Year Book and Almanac of Newfoundland
    : APPENDIX. (Corrected to Gazette of January 32nd, 1918.) COLONY OF NEWFOUNDLAND-page 17, For Colony, read Dominion. GOVERNMENT HOUSE-page 17. Add—Private Secretary—Lt. Col. H. W. Knox-Niven. Add—Aide-de-Camp—Capt. J. H. Campbell. EXECUTIVE COUNCIL-page 17. For the Executive Council and Departmental Officers, read Hon. W. F. Lloyd, K.C., D.C.L., Prime Minister and Minister of Justice. W. W. Halfyard, Colonial Secretary (acting). M. P. Cashin, Minister of Finance and Customs. J. A. Clift, K.C., Minister of Agriculture and Mines (acting). W. Woodford, Minister of Public Works. J. Crosbie, Minister of Shipping (acting). W. F. Coaker, 1 A. E. Hickman, > Without portfolio. W. J. Ellis, ) Departmental Officers not in Cabinet. John G. Stone, Minister of Marine and Fisheries. John R. Bennett, Minister of Militia (acting.). LEGISLATIVE COXJNCIL-page 17. Add— Ron. W. J. Ellis. HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY—page 19. ^f^^—Clapp, W. M.— St. Barbe. Devereux, R. J. — Placentia and St. Mary's. Goodison, J. R. —Carbonear. Morine, A. B., K.C. — Bonavista. Morris, F. J., K.C— Placentia and St. Mary's. Owi^-Morris, Rt. Hon. Sir E. P., P.O., K.C.M.G.—St: John's West. Prime Minister's Office—page 21. Prime Minister—For Rt. Hon. K. P. Morris, read Hon. W. F. Lloyd, K.C, D.C.L. Colonial Secretary's Office—page 21. Colonial Secretary—For Hon. R. A. Squires, K.C, read Hon. W. W. Halfyard (acting). After A. Mews, J.P., add C.M.G. Agriculture and Mines—page 2(Xi. Minister of Agriculture and Mines—For Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • LAND USE BY-LAW HALIFAX PENINSULA (Edition 223)
    LAND USE BY-LAW HALIFAX PENINSULA Halifax Regional Municipality LAND USE BY-LAW HALIFAX PENINSULA (Edition 223) THIS COPY IS A REPRINT OF THE LAND USE BY-LAW WITH AMENDMENTS TO JUNE 17, 2017 LAND USE BY-LAW FOR HALIFAX PENINSULA THIS IS TO CERTIFY that this is a true copy of the Land Use By-law for Halifax Peninsula which was passed by a majority vote of the former City Council at a duly called meeting held on March 30, 1978, and approved by the Minister of Municipal Affairs on August 11, 1978, which includes all amendments thereto which have been adopted by the Halifax Regional Municipality and are in effect as of the 17th day of June, 2017. GIVEN UNDER THE HAND of the Municipal Clerk and under the seal of Halifax Regional Municipality this ____ day of ________________________, 20___. ________________________________ Municipal Clerk The Halifax Regional Municipality, its Officers, and Employees, accept no responsibility for the accuracy of the information contained in this (By-law, Plan, etc.) Please note that HRM Council at its meeting on May 9, 2000, approved a motion to insert the following notation in the Land Use By-law as follows: The provisions of the zones described in this by-law do not apply to property owned or occupied by Her Majesty the Queen in right of the Province of Nova Scotia or Canada in respect of a use of the property made by the Crown. Where a privately owned or occupied property is to be used for a federally regulated activity, the federal jurisdiction may, depending on the particular circumstances, override the requirements of this by-law.
    [Show full text]
  • Northwest Arm Infilling / Alghabra, Wilkinson, Jordan // June 2021
    Halifax Community Office: Parliament Hill Office: 808-1888 Brunswick St. House of Commons Halifax, NS, B3J 3J8 Ottawa, ON, K1A 0A6 Tel: 902 426 8691 Tel: 613 995 7614 Fax: 902 426 8693 Fax: 613 992 8569 [email protected] [email protected] Andy Fillmore, MP Halifax June 21, 2021 The Honourable Omar Alghabra Minister of Transport House of Commons Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6 The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson Minister of Environment & Climate Change House of Commons Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6 The Honourable Bernadette Jordan Minister of Fisheries, Oceans & the Canadian Coast Guard House of Commons Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6 Re: Coastal infilling on the Northwest Arm in Halifax, Nova Scotia Dear Honourable Ministers, I write to you today regarding the potential infilling of water lots on the Northwest Arm in Halifax Harbour For a number of properties along the shoreline of the Northwest Arm, there are attached properties called “water lots,” which extend out into the water. These water lots were granted pre-Confederation to property owners. Originally, they were intended to 1 of 4 preserve the property owner’s access to the water and allow for the construction of wharfs and moorings. Recently, however, property owners have begun infilling the water lots to extend their property—an eventuality that was never considered or intended at the time of their creation. This infilling activity, if it is allowed to continue, will have a number of adverse impacts. For example: ● Fishing of all kinds takes place in the Northwest Arm and the infilling could destroy lobster breeding and fish spawning habitat.
    [Show full text]
  • 1017-1021 BEAUFORT AVENUE | HALIFAX, NS Development Opportunity – Six Single Family R-1 Building Lots
    FOR SALE A DIVISION OF KELLER WILLIAMS SELECT REALTY 1017-1021 BEAUFORT AVENUE | HALIFAX, NS Development Opportunity – Six Single Family R-1 Building Lots TOM GERARD, CCIM, SIOR LARRY ALLEN,BA KW COMMERCIAL ADVISORS Real Estate Advisor Real Estate Advisor Young Tower, Suite 308 902-830-1318 902-430-7197 6080 Young Street [email protected] [email protected] Halifax, NS B3K 5L2 www.kwcommercialhalifax.com EXECUTIVE SUMMARY A rare opportunity to acquire prime “As of Right” infill single family development sites located in the south end of Halifax. The project provides for six single family large building lots for construction of executive custom homes in a bare-land condominium community located on a newly constructed cul-de-sac named Merlin Court. Property Type 6 Large Residential Building Lots Unit Nos. 1 – 6 of Halifax County Condominium Civic Address: Corporation No. 412 Lot Sizes 8,256 sf to 9,960 sf Total Site Area 62,006 sf / 1.42 Acres R-1A – Currently approved through Bare Land Zoning Condominium Development - Residential Frontage Private Lane and Beaufort Ave frontage 2 storey vacant home and 5 vacant lots with Current Use private lane Minimum Bid Terms $3,400,000, plus HST Minimum Deposit 10% of Bid Price Interested parties are to sign and return the attached confidentiality agreement for further information concerning the bid process and to access the data room. 1017-1021 BEAUFORT AVE / MERLIN COURT | HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 2 AREA OVERVIEW – SOUTH END HALIFAX The subject property is located in the deep South End of the Halifax Peninsula just around the corner from Dalhousie University and within walking distance of Saint Mary's University, the Atlantic School of Theology, Gorsebrook Park, Point Pleasant Park, the IWK hospitals, the Northwest Arm and the downtown Halifax CBD.
    [Show full text]
  • "Halifax's South End Railway Cut", by Barry Copp
    HERITAGE LOST Halifax’s South End Railway Cut Barry Copp Having grown up in Halifax’s South End across the street from the Oakland Road bridge, I knew well the effects of the city’s railway cut. Countless nights, I heard the rumble of freight trains passing by on their way to the Ocean Terminals. I also lived less than 200 metres from where the Oaklands grand man- sion, owned by Samuel Cunard’s second eldest son, once stood. I had always been curious about the impact that the railway cut had on Oaklands and a num- ber of estates that were expropriated and demolished by the government of Canada for the new South End terminals Oaklands, William Cunard’s Residence, Halifax, Nova Scotia, n.d. (Courtesy of Nova Scotia Archives, and rail lines along the route. Notman Studio, NSARM accession no. 1983-310 number 50203) The desire for an enlarged Ocean Terminal had been talked about before the turn of the century. Conservative Sir a mechanic’s district”; however, this op- met sometime in the fall of 1917. Robert Borden was an avid supporter of position didn’t last. Jubilee, the former estate of West this cause, and when he became prime On August 21, 1913, the Herald Indian merchant William Pryor, which minister in 1911, he began to make this reported, “Thirty-eight dumping cars, existed in the area of today’s Woodlawn dream a reality. two locomotives and two steam shovels” Terrace and Dunvegan Drive, was one of There was a great deal of specula- were on their way to the city.
    [Show full text]
  • Bluestone Formation of the Halifax Group: Metamorphosed Slope and Mass-Transport Deposits, Halifax Peninsula, Nova Scotia
    atlantic geology . volume 47 . 2011 24 Bluestone formation of the Halifax Group: metamorphosed slope and mass-transport deposits, Halifax Peninsula, Nova Scotia R.A. Jamieson1, JoHn W.F. Waldron2, and C.E. WHite3 1. Department of Earth Sciences, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4J1, Canada <[email protected]> ¶ 2. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E3, Canada ¶ 3. Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources, P.O. Box 698, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 2T9, Canada Fine-grained metasedimentary rocks of the Halifax Group in southern mainland Nova Scotia can be subdivided into mappa- ble units. In Halifax Peninsula, pyrite-rich hornfels, black slate, metasiltstone, and metasandstone of the Cunard formation are overlain by grey metasedimentary rocks with abundant cross- laminations and local carbonate and calc-silicate concretions, assigned to the Bluestone formation, the highest part of the succession exposed in Halifax Regional Municipality. The most suitable type section lies along a railway cutting and adjacent roads into Point Pleasant Park. No fossils are known from the Bluestone formation but lithological correlatives elsewhere contain graptolites and acritarchs indicating Tremadocian age. Contact metamorphism produced cordierite + biotite + muscovite + albite + ilmenite + pyrrhotite in pelitic horizons throughout Point Pleasant Park. The cordierite-in isograd marks the outer limit of the contact aureole north of a con- spicuous grain elevator; the biotite-in isograd is predicted to lie ~200 m to the south. Andalusite ± K-feldspar appear west of Northwest Arm; the andalusite-in isograd is interpreted to run under the Arm, curving inland towards Williams Lake. The distribution of andalusite contrasts markedly with the underly- ing Cunard formation, where chiastolite appears before biotite in graphitic slates in the outer aureole.
    [Show full text]
  • Trends and Architecture of the Bluestone Formation Turbidites in Point Pleasant Park, Halifax, Nova Scotia
    atlantic geology . volume 46 . 2010 50 Trends and architecture of the Bluestone Formation turbidites in Point Pleasant Park, Halifax, Nova Scotia Adam Fraser and Grant Wach Department of Earth Sciences, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3J5, Canada <[email protected]> In the Meguma Supergroup, a series of sandy and shaly intervals formed in a range of depositional environments from deltaic to deepwater. The Lower Ordovician Bluestone Formation in Point Pleasant Park on the Halifax Peninsula is part of the Halifax Group and includes low density turbidites containing Bouma Sequence Ta-e. The goal of this project is to understand the distribution and architecture of these tur- bidites. Data collection includes measuring and logging sec- tions, paleocurrent measurements from such features as tool marks and current ripples, petrographic analysis, scintillom- eter measurements to create synthetic gamma logs, LiDAR to develop 3D models in Petrel, to investigate the geometry and AGS Abstracts – 36th Annual Colloquium & Annual General Meeting 2010 Copyright © Atlantic Geology, 2010 Atlantic Geology, 2010, Volume 46, Number 1 Copyright © 2015 Atlantic Geology atlantic geology . volume 46 . 2010 51 architecture of the studied sections. Data were collected at out- crops along the Northwest Arm, Black Rock Beach, the Battery, and Sailors' Memorial Road. The strata are made up of mainly quartz, mica, zircon, and tourmaline, and show five lithofa- cies. These lithofacies make up a cyclic lithofacies association which is separated by sharp or scoured contacts. Scintillometer analysis showed no apparent relationship to lithology, likely due to the moderate metamorphism throughout the Meguma Supergroup. Interpretations suggested that the lithofacies as- sociation is characteristic of the Bouma Sequence.
    [Show full text]
  • Case 22036: Rezoning of Shoreline Properties Along the Northwest Arm
    P.O. Box 1749 Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 3A5 Canada Item No. 13.1.1 Halifax and West Community Council September 19, 2019 TO: Chair and Members of Halifax and West Community Council -Original Signed- SUBMITTED BY: Eric Lucic, Acting Director, Planning and Development -Original Signed- Jerry Blackwood, A/Chief Administrative Officer DATE: July 15, 2019 SUBJECT: Case 22036: Rezoning of shoreline properties along the Northwest Arm ORIGIN On June 26, 2018, the following motion of Halifax and West Community Council was put forward and passed: “That Halifax and West Community Council request a staff report on not allowing any further rezoning of shoreline properties along the Northwest Arm from the Armdale Rotary up to 505 Purcells Cove Road1 until a full review of the Halifax Mainland Land Use Bylaw has been completed.” LEGISLATIVE AUTHORITY Halifax Regional Municipality Charter, Part VIII, Planning and Development RECOMMENDATION It is recommended that Halifax and West Community Council recommend that Regional Council direct the Chief Administrative Officer to review the protection of properties along the western side of the Northwest Arm from environmental degradation and visual intrusion as part of the Plan and By-law Simplification program. 1 Purcells Cove Road was renumbered on January 25, 2019. 505 Purcells Cove Road is now 16 Shipside Lane. Rezoning of shoreline properties - Northwest Arm Halifax and West Community Council Report - 2 - September 19, 2019 BACKGROUND The Northwest Arm is an inlet off the Atlantic Ocean that helps to define the boundary between the Halifax Peninsula and Halifax Mainland South, where it is bordered by parkland, many estate-type single-unit dwellings, multi-unit housing at Regatta Point, recreational clubs, trails and the iconic Dingle (Cavanaugh) Tower that commemorates the inventor of Standard Time (Sir Sanford Fleming).
    [Show full text]
  • Point Pleasant Park Comprehensive Plan- Executive Summary | Halifax.Ca
    ÐÑ×ÒÌ ÐÔÛßÍßÒÌ ÐßÎÕ ÝÑÓÐÎÛØÛÒÍ×ÊÛ ÐÔßÒ October 2008 submitted by: NIPpaysage Ekistics Planning and Design in association with: Peter N. Duinker PhD Black Spruce Heritage Services Form:Media LandDesign Engineering Services ©© ©ò°±·²¬°´»¿•¿²¬°¿®µò½¿ ѽ¬±¾»®ô îððè Report layout designed by ÐÑ×ÒÌ ÐÔÛßÍßÒÌ ÐßÎÕ ÝÑÓÐÎÛØÛÒÍ×ÊÛ ÐÔßÒ Ûµ·•¬·½• д¿²²·²¹ ú Ü»•·¹² ñ Ò×Ð °¿§•¿¹» Tæ ÌßÞÔÛ ÑÚ ÝÑÒÌÛÒÌÍ Executive Summary .................................................................1 1. Background........................................................................................................................ 1 2. The Forest.......................................................................................................................... 6 3. The Shoreline .................................................................................................................... 12 4. Fortifications...................................................................................................................... 15 5. Park Development Plan ...................................................................................................... 19 6. Implementation.................................................................................................................. 23 Introduction...........................................................................27 1.1 Background .................................................................................................................... 27 1.2 Park Chronology .............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]