TORONTO -- It’s starting to look very different at the southwest corner of Bloor and Bathurst streets.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, most of the city has slowed down or come to a halt, but some major construction developments, including the Mirvish Village project, are booming.

On Monday, construction and building services company EllisDon posted four updated photographs of the progress being made at the downtown Toronto site.

The digging is well underway, multiple construction cranes are up and residential units are beginning to stack on top of one another.

It appears as though a community is building.

The massive site, which housed iconic bargain store Honest Ed’s for more than six decades, is on track to becoming a mixed-use development.

honest ed's

The project, according to EllisDon, consists of six buildings ranging between eight and 28 floors. The buildings will have 916 residential units, including 336 affordable units.

Last year, the federal government committed $200 million to the site for affordable rental units to be built. The 336 affordable units will cost no more than one-third the median Toronto income and 100 of those 336 units will be secured at 80 per cent of the average market rate in Toronto.

Tory, Mirvish Village

The Mirvish Village BIA said the 100 per cent rental project will host 279 studio units, 230 one-bedroom units, 284 two-bedroom units, 87 three-bedroom units and 36 live/work units.

In addition to the residential units, the project plans to have commercial retail units, a public market, a daycare centre, an outdoor performance venue, a cycling program, a public park, and 586 residential parking spaces.

mirvish village

As part of the project, 24 heritage buildings are being fully restored to shell space for food and beverage outfitting. As well, two heritage facades are being restored and incorporated into the new construction.

Mirvish Village is expected to be complete in 2022 and the budget for the 1,336,957 sq. ft. project is $350 million.

mirvish

Real estate developer Westbank Corp. bought the Honest Ed’s land from the Mirvish family in 2013. The discount store closed in 2017.

Honest Ed’s was founded by Ed Mirvish in 1948.