still, “we have a housing crisis in this country that we need to address,” she said. “where it makes sense to put housing, we have to look at it.”
the time it takes a developer to get municipal approval could be a deterrent, according to pasto.
the construction permit for the st. stephen’s project was issued at the end of october, seven years after his stanford properties group purchased the property in 2017.
in the meantime, the former church has sat empty and boarded up since the last occupant —
the open door — vacated at the end of 2018. pasto had let the drop-in centre serving unhoused people stay on while it searched for a place to relocate. tents occasionally dotted the grounds, but not since fencing went up in november to prepare for the start of construction.
pasto, whose company has done projects in historic buildings in and around old montreal, said his firm is used to working with heritage properties.
but st. stephen’s “is my first church, and maybe my last,” he said, laughing. “seven years. it’s long. it really is too long.”
“it’s been a very drawn-out process,” smith acknowledged of the st. stephen’s file, though she noted that city council approved the project in 2022. thereafter, the municipality was waiting on the developer’s remaining construction documents, which it deposited in june of this year, she said. still, there was “a lot of back and forth” with westmount’s urban planning department and its planning advisory committee to finalize the project, she said.