Scarborough Medical Building

Year: 2022 Status : Feasibility Study Location : Scarborough

7-Storey Medical Office Building

A Toronto medical office project designed to meet zoning, parking, access, and permit requirements without late redesign.

Seven-storey Toronto medical office building architectural design by Quadrant Architects

Scarborough, Toronto

Project overview

Quadrant Architects led the design and permitting process for a seven-storey medical office building in Scarborough. This was a regulated healthcare project reviewed by the City of Toronto and Toronto Building.

Medical office buildings face stricter requirements than standard commercial projects. Zoning, parking, accessibility, life safety, and site access all receive closer scrutiny, especially when a building is located along a major road. From the outset, this project was designed to address those constraints clearly and reduce approval risk.

What made this project complex

Several site, zoning, and access conditions shaped the design approach:

• Medical office use with additional building code requirements
• Seven-storey height, increasing fire and life safety review
• Limited parking under Toronto zoning rules, including accessible parking requirements
• Location along a major road requiring controlled site access and safe circulation
• The need to maximize usable and rentable floor area
• Review by multiple City departments

Quadrant’s role

Quadrant Architects was responsible for the building design and for guiding the project through the City’s approval process.

Our work included:
• Designing the building layout and overall building shape
• Reviewing zoning, parking, and site access requirements
• Coordinating building code and accessibility compliance
• Preparing permit drawings
• Supporting the project through City review and comments

Key decisions that supported approvals

Parking, accessibility, and site access strategy

Parking was a critical design consideration due to zoning limits, accessibility requirements, and the site’s location along a major road. Surface parking alone could not meet project needs without compromising the building program.

To address this, Quadrant Architects proposed two levels of underground parking. This approach allowed the project to meet zoning and accessible parking requirements while preserving usable floor area above grade.

Parking and access were planned as a coordinated system, including:
• Proper placement and quantity of accessible parking stalls
• Clear, code-compliant paths of travel from parking areas to building entrances
• Logical access from the main road to surface and underground parking
• Safe separation of vehicle and pedestrian movement
• Circulation that supports patient drop-off, visitors, and staff

By resolving parking, accessibility, and access together early in the design, the project avoided late revisions and reduced approval risk during City review.

Efficient building layout

Medical office buildings often lose usable space to oversized common areas. To protect rentable area, common spaces were carefully planned and kept efficient.

This allowed:
• More usable medical office space per floor
• Clear circulation without unnecessary square footage
• A layout that supports both tenant needs and code compliance

How the permitting process was handled

In Toronto, clear permit drawings matter.

The permitting approach focused on clarity, consistency, and conservative interpretation:
• Medical office use was clearly identified across all drawings
• Parking, accessibility, and site access were clearly coordinated and documented
• Permit drawings were organized to support efficient City review
• Building code and access decisions were made early to avoid later changes

This approach is especially important for healthcare buildings, where unclear documentation often leads to delays.

Outcome

The project moved through the City review process with a coordinated and permit-ready drawing set. Key parking, accessibility, and access challenges were resolved through early design decisions rather than late revisions.

For medical office buildings, success is measured by fewer surprises during approvals. This project demonstrates how early planning protects the client’s program and reduces risk.

Why this matters to clients

Medical office buildings carry higher approval risk than typical commercial projects. Parking limits, access constraints, accessibility requirements, and inefficient layouts often lead to redesign or lost rentable space.

This project shows how Quadrant Architects approaches regulated buildings in Toronto. Practical solutions. Careful research. Designs that meet zoning rules, support safe access, and protect the client’s business goals.

Working with Quadrant

If you are planning a medical office or other regulated commercial building in Toronto, early design decisions matter. Quadrant Architects works with clients who value approval clarity, reduced risk, and projects designed to move through City review without unnecessary complications.

Contact us at: tel: (416) 357-5713 or email: sara@quadrantarchitects.com

Scarborough Medical Building

Scarborough Medical Building