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- Q19870818 subject Q8204311.
- Q19870818 subject Q8219875.
- Q19870818 abstract "The 2015 Pan American Games Athletes' Village is a complex of six buildings in Toronto, Canada built to accommodate on the order of 10,000 athletes and team officials in 1,300 units. The Village was built east of the intersection of Cherry and Front streets, in Toronto's West Don Lands. The same village will be used to house athletes for the 2015 Parapan American Games. Six buildings compose the Athletes Village, five are residential mid-rise buildings and the sixth is a training facility. After the Pan Am/Para Pan Am Games, four residential towers will become the Canary District housing development. The fifth will become a dormitory for students of nearby George Brown College, and training facility will become a YMCA, and serve as a men's hostel. The village was completed in February 2015, and cost $709 million CAD. As well, the village includes the Corktown Common park which was built a year before.Like the Olympic Villages provided for other games, the Athletes' Village provided in Toronto for the 2015 Pan American Games was a new construction. However, learning a lesson from the Athletes' Village provided for the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver, British Columbia, developers decided the units would not be fully completed before athletes moved in. Since the athletes were going to eat in central cafeterias the room that would eventually become the units' kitchens could serve as an additional bedroom. Hardwood, tile and carpet flooring are to be installed after the games are over. Painted concrete floors was seen as more appropriate for housing for athletes, who could mar the surface of more expensive flooring, with spiked shoes or other athletic gear.The village is built on the site of former railway and industrial lands, including the William Davies Company, at one time the world's largest pork processing facility. After the meat industry moved out in the 1980s, the area was taken over by government to build a public housing project. The "Ataratiri" project failed in the 1990s, leaving the site mostly vacant for over ten years before the Waterfront Toronto agency was created to speed up the redevelopment of harbour lands in Toronto. The project was fast-tracked once Toronto was awarded the games, changing a twelve-year plan for redevelopment into a six-year plan.".
- Q19870818 thumbnail Village_Welcome_Centre.jpg?width=300.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q1104069.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q1185431.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q1470041.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q14875128.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q157169.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q16.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q172.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q19876784.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q24639.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q3178426.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q5092480.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q5537326.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q7974096.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q7984975.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q8007646.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q8204311.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q8219875.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q866623.
- Q19870818 wikiPageWikiLink Q9674.
- Q19870818 comment "The 2015 Pan American Games Athletes' Village is a complex of six buildings in Toronto, Canada built to accommodate on the order of 10,000 athletes and team officials in 1,300 units. The Village was built east of the intersection of Cherry and Front streets, in Toronto's West Don Lands. The same village will be used to house athletes for the 2015 Parapan American Games. Six buildings compose the Athletes Village, five are residential mid-rise buildings and the sixth is a training facility.".
- Q19870818 label "2015 Pan American Games Athletes' Village".
- Q19870818 depiction Village_Welcome_Centre.jpg.