Plan to Flood Protect the Port Lands and Unlock Development Estimated to Cost $1.25 Billion, Project Construction and Development of Port Lands Projected to Create over $5 Billion in Economic Value
TORONTO, Oct. 20, 2016 /CNW/ - Waterfront Toronto today released an extensive Due Diligence Report on the proposed Port Lands Flood Protection Project. The Report provides greater certainty on the cost estimate, schedule and risks associated with the proposal to naturalize the mouth of the Don River, provide flood protection to the area and unlock significant economic development potential. The Report was developed in cooperation with the City of Toronto, the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority and the Toronto Port Lands Company.
Key components of the project include creating two new outlets for the Don River – a 1,000 metre river valley and greenway – that will safely convey flood waters into Lake Ontario, as well as infrastructure such as roads, bridges and services to support development. This project also includes 29 hectares of naturalized area in the river valley, two new parks and 14 hectares of aquatic habitat.
"The Port Lands Flood Protection project addresses the fundamental challenge of transforming the underused Port Lands into a long-term asset that will support Toronto's competitiveness," said Will Fleissig, Waterfront Toronto's CEO. "Excavating a new river mouth in an urban post-industrial brownfield is a pioneering project for Toronto. The opportunity here is immense – no other North American city has such an asset on the doorstep of downtown that can support the creation of new communities and new economic opportunities."
The key findings from the Due Diligence Report include:
"Based on Waterfront Toronto's experience working on waterfront projects and the poor underground conditions, contaminated soil and high water table that characterize the area, we knew that flood protecting the Port Lands will be challenging," said Waterfront Toronto Chief Operating Officer David Kusturin. "We wanted to provide as much assurance as possible to governments on what this project would cost, how long it would take to build and the nature of the project's risks – and that's what led us to undertake this Due Diligence Report."
About the Port Lands
The Port Lands is a 400-hectare (880 acre) parcel of downtown waterfront land, unique in that no other North American city has a plan to unlock such a large-scale waterfront development. Currently, about 290 hectares (715 acres) in the area – including parts of Riverside, Leslieville and the First Gulf/Unilever development site – are at risk of flooding from the Don River and cannot be developed until they are flood protected.
Flood protecting the Port Lands would complete flood protection on the waterfront and unlock considerable economic development potential in the area. An earlier phase is the flood protection infrastructure built in the West Don Lands which now protects 210 hectares of eastern downtown Toronto and has spurred $1.3 billion in private sector investment in the West Don Lands.
The Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change has previously approved the Don Mouth Naturalization and Flood Protection Project EA, after extensive stakeholder engagement and public consultation over the past decade.
The full media kit is available at www.waterfrontoronto.ca
SOURCE Waterfront Toronto
Image with caption: "Aerial View of Port Lands Existing Conditions and Rendering (CNW Group/Waterfront Toronto)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20161020_C4067_PHOTO_EN_800528.jpg
Image with caption: "Artist Rendering Looking West Across the Naturalized Don River Valley (Full Vision). (CNW Group/Waterfront Toronto)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20161020_C4067_PHOTO_EN_800530.jpg
Andrew Hilton, Director of Communications and Public Engagement, Waterfront Toronto, Telephone: 416-214-1344 x263, Mobile: 416-427-4613, E-mail: [email protected]
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