DETAILS
The Woodbine Racetrack site envisions a new future: A City within a City – an exhilarating place to live, work, study and recreate.
The project transforms the largest undeveloped tract within Toronto into an iconic and dynamic, fully integrated, transit-oriented mixed-use district. Capitalizing on the racetrack’s legacy and the site’s natural, cultural, and locational assets, the project is designed to become a new heart in Toronto.
The master plan includes a diversity of open spaces throughout to provide relief and respite. These spaces are anchored by the green corridor, connecting the Humber River Valley to Mimico Creek, the racing surfaces and infield, Woodbine’s Central Park, and the Urban Promenades that structure the built environment. Anchoring the western portion of the site is the green corridor. Due to the drainage basin divide that occurs in the NW corner of the site, the green corridor is divided into two portions. The northern portion drains to the Humber River and the southern portion drains to Mimico Creek with the divide being New Providence St. The water in the green corridor is set up as a series of ponds, to traverse the topography and to ensure a high aesthetic quality of the water. The northern ponds have the potential to be part of a staged quality control facility before outletting to the Humber River. The other ponds can be incorporated into the storm water management system as aesthetic ponds.
Santana Row
SWA provided full landscape architectural services for the development of a neo-traditional town center near downtown San Jose. The client’s vision called for a variety of design styles to create a town center with an impression of growth over time. This theme is expressed in building elevations as well as landscape design. The restaurants and boutique r...
Shenzhen Bay
Situated just across the bay from Hong Kong, the city of Shenzhen has transformed from a small fishing town of 30,000 to a booming city of over 10 million people in 40 years – and has grown over 200 times its original size since 1980. Along the way, the character of Shenzhen’s bayfront was radically altered. Over 65 km2 of marsh and shallow bay were filled to ...
Woodbury
SWA provided planning services related to entitlement and land use for 1,400 acres of land in the City of Irvine, representing the last “flat land” development within the Irvine Ranch. Fundamental to the planning of Woodbury was the concept of a village “commons” with a mix of retail, residential, and office uses, which also includes a recreation c...
Nanjing International Youth Cultural Centre
SWA was retained to design the landscape of this mixed-use development collaboratively with Zaha Hadid Architects. It contains performing arts, hotel, residential, office and retail functions. Located adjacent to SWA’s Nanjing Youth Olympic Park, the design strives to merge architecture, the park landscape, and people at this iconic focal point. Landform...