Project Spotlight: Bresler's Hip Parliament Street Data Centre
The Parliament Street Data Centre, nearing completion at the edge of the Distillery District, is the first purpose-built data centre downtown in decades. It's also an awesome-looking building designed to resemble a punch card. We met up with the guys who created it.
Developed by Bresler, the centre is a five-storey, 237k SF facility designed for lead tenant Equinix, which is taking about one third of the building's white space. WZMH Architects principal Nicola Casciato, snapped here with Zenon Radewych (also a principal) tells us it was a challenge to make the data centre look interesting when design requirements meant extremely limited use of windows. “There are privacy issues involved, but also heating and ventilating issues,” he explains. “Putting windows into a building like this compromises the mechanical systems.”

The data centre features black metal cladding and terra cotta panels that tie it in with the red-brick character of the surrounding area, while also evoking the look of an old-school computer punch card. Though windows are few windows, it has glass on the ground level for the tenant's offices. There's also a glass cube at the southwest corner that houses conference rooms on the upper floors, with great city views. (Conference daydreamers: beware.) Nicola notes glass is used here to connect the building with street life on Parliament and the pedestrian traffic coming from the Distillery District.
The facility's interior isn't shabby either...so we're told. While we weren't granted entry to the top-secret data centre, Nicola tells us “there's a high level of design inside—it's not just some basic space.” He notes the lead tenant values good design. “We visited a couple of their buildings in New York and the interiors are really cool, so we're lucky to be able to implement that here.”
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INTEL REPORT: Canadian Foreign Investment Continues to Grow
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What Made Bentall Kennedy a WWF Champion
Bentall Kennedy continues to set the industry green standard, having been named World Wildlife Fund-Canada's company of the year. Sustainability manager Melissa Jacobs, snapped at the reception with WWF-Canada CEO/ex-TO mayor David Miller (and sponsor HP Canada's Frances Edmonds) tells us her firm got the award for its ForeverGreen tenant engagement program, which provides employees and tenants with literature, checklists, and sustainability-focused activities. Bentall Kennedy implemented ForeverGreen at its own offices, too.

Here's Bentall Kennedy's Blue Team (its version of a green team): Kathy Segismundo, Sarah Campitelli, Ella Farias, Marissa Doongoor, Justine Mulligan, the WWF panda, Melissa Jacobs, Irene Hawkings and Jill Tate (missing: Tanya Clarke). Under the Blue Team's guidance, Bentall Kennedy employees took part in WWF campaigns this year like National Sweater Day and Earth Hour, while a number of BK properties in Ontario supported WWF's Arctic conservation work by raising $37k. Melissa, who joined BK just over a year ago, says she's been “blown away” to see how deeply sustainability is ingrained in Bentall Kennedy's culture.
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The Source Gets Intimate and Interactive
The Source wants to be more hands-on in how it tempts you with tech. The electronics retailer is testing out a new open-concept store format that real estate director Deborah Matos tells us creates “a more intimate and interactive experience.” She's pictured at a kiosk The Source just opened at Pearson International Airport Terminal 1, a "skinnied down" prototype of the new store design that lets shoppers fiddle with gadgets while getting advice. The Source will roll out the full concept at a GTA store next year.
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Longchamp Coming to Yorkdale
Yorkdale Shopping Centre will get a fresh injection of haute couture in 2015, as French luxury brand Longchamp is coming in the spring. The 1,600 SF space, the retailer's first store in Canada, will be located in the mall's expansion wing, alongside a lineup of luxe tenants that includes Holt Renfrew, Ted Baker London, Hugo Boss and Lacoste. Yorkdale has housed the first Canadian locations of international brands like Jimmy Choo, Kate Spade New York and Mulberry. Co-owned by Oxford Properties and Alberta Investment Management Corp, Yorkdale is undergoing a $331M expansion that will add 300k SF of space, bringing its total size to a whopping 2M SF. (And still your kids buy you socks for Christmas.)
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Jack Daniel's Barrel Tree Boosts Festive Spirits
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Jack Daniels is literally making spirits bright. An 18-foot tree made from 54 used JD whiskey barrels has arrived outside the King West office building of Brown-Forman Canada Powered by The Hive, the whiskey-maker's marketing agency. This is the second year for the JD holiday barrel tree. Guests at the event last week got to sample Winter Jack, an apple whiskey punch, while being treated to carols by local group Choir! Choir! Choir!.
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The tree-lighting included appearances by CFL Hall of Famers Michael “Pinball” Clemens and Damon Allen, pictured at right with The Hive VP Rick Shaver, Brown-Forman Canada manager Brad Fletcher, The Hive's Davinder Dhillon, and Heather O'Brien with Dr. Jay Charitable Foundation, a palliative care support organization for which the holiday tree event has been raising funds.
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