
City Hall crackled Monday night like a power line in a storm. On the table: a provincial mandate that says Peterborough has to cough up 4,700 new homes by 2031 or risk punishment from Queen’s Park. In the crosshairs: East City, where a 17-storey apartment tower could soon loom over Hunter Street like a glass-and-steel warning shot.
The vote? 7–4 in favour. Mayor Jeff Leal and his allies sold it as survival math — 205 units in one go, right on a bus corridor, just a stone’s throw from downtown. “We can’t afford to keep saying no,” one councillor said flatly, staring down the opposition. “This city’s either going to grow or get strangled.”
But East City wasn’t buying. “Seventeen storeys? That’s Toronto, not Peterborough,” snapped one resident outside City Hall, clutching a petition. Another worried about the Hunter and Armour choke point, already gridlocked at rush hour: “You throw 200 cars in there and it’s a nightmare.”
Inside chambers, councillors against the project sounded the same alarm bells. Bierk, Baldwin, Lachica, Riel — the “no” bloc — called it too tall, too dense, too quick. They argued the so-called solution to the housing crisis looked more like a developer’s payday. With projected rents from $1,650 up to $2,700 a month, it’s not the struggling families or young renters who’ll catch a break. “Who are we actually building for?” one opponent shot back.
TVM Group, the developer, played their ace: the Mark Street United Church stays. The 1910 red-brick building won’t be flattened, just carved into its own lot beside the tower. Heritage optics intact. Density delivered.
But the vibe in the room made one thing clear — this wasn’t just zoning. This was a culture clash. East City’s low-slung character on one side; the province’s growth hammer on the other. Monday night, Peterborough blinked. The tower won.
Final approval lands September 2. If council doesn’t reverse course, expect cranes in East City and a skyline no one asked for but everyone will have to live with.