What Development At Shannon Park Tells Us About Halifax’s Housing Crisis
Why is it so hard for Halifax to create affordable housing? One of the city’s most consequential developments provides some answers.
Why is it so hard for Halifax to create affordable housing? One of the city’s most consequential developments provides some answers.
The Saint John Airport wants to help solidify the city’s position as a logistics hub for the next century.
Nearby residents don’t like the project and say it will imact their properties.
On January 10, council unanimously approved the second of five buildings, even before work on the first has begun.
John Lafford, the developer behind the Three Sisters Along the River, is preparing to bring his company’s headquarters to a piece of property near the Petiticodiac he purchased last year.
A three-storey, 30-unit building is being proposed for the site near a former industrial area.
A staff report to council said the centre “would provide a much-needed childcare service for existing and future residents of the neighbourhood.”
The owners of Mic Mac Mall want to rip up most of the mall’s parking lot and transform the mall property into a massive, mixed-use development with more than 2,000 homes.
The store takes over part of the space once occupied by Sears. The rest of the space will hold a Quebec-based department store and a full-service restaurant.
Mani Suissa and Universal Realty Group want to put up a new tower near Peace and Friendship Park and the Westin Hotel.