Formwork work on Voya in downtown Mississauga is nearing completion, with the North Tower now reaching its top and the South Tower approaching the same milestone. Designed by Turner Fleischer Architects for Amacon, the 38- and 44-story towers are part of the developer’s Parkside Village community west of Square One. They rise right next to Amacon’s completed Avia 1 and 2 towers, which were delivered last year.
In November 2025, the North Tower in the background in this view has reached the height of 38 floors, while the South Tower has risen to around 43 floors, with the top residential floor panels still exposed and exterior protection in place. The curved edges of the balcony slabs can be seen along both towers. On the north-east facades, the installation of the white ceiling edge panels and the dark window wall glazing has progressed up to around the 24th floor of the north tower and up to the 25th floor of the south tower. A completed Avia tower rises in the center.
Looking northwest at the progress of cladding on both towers, image by UrbanToronto forum contributor drum118
A month later, from a greater distance, the North Tower is fully formed by its mechanical penthouse, recognizable by the heavier roof panel and closed roof volume. To the right, the south tower continues to progress, with the formwork installed at around the 44th floor. A white concrete boom pump reaches to the top level, while the exterior construction elevator travels up the southeast corner. Below this, there are dark window-wall glazing up to around the 33rd floor of both towers.
Looking northwest at the mechanical penthouse formation of the North Tower and the upper formwork of the South Tower, image by drum118, UrbanToronto Forum contributor
A zoomed-in view highlights the flowing plate edges that characterize Voya’s architecture, where the stepped podium flows into the twin towers through a series of undulating floor plates, reinforced by newly installed white-painted balcony guards that enclose the terraces of both towers up to approximately the 17th floor. The top podium terrace is waiting for the balcony protection to be installed. Behind the balconies, dark window-wall glazing fills the living bays.
Close-up of Voya’s wave-shaped podium and balcony installation in the lower tower, image by drum118, UrbanToronto forum contributor
In February 2026, the north tower’s crane will now be removed and its mechanical penthouse will be clad in alternating panels, while the roof slab above will continue to be exposed concrete. The south tower has reached its top suite level, and a gray tarp is protecting the recently poured 44th floor as work moves to building its mechanical penthouse. The dark glazing of the window walls now extends over the entire height of the north tower and reaches around the 37th floor in the south tower. White balcony railings are in place up to approximately the 26th floor of the North Tower and up to the 25th floor of the South Tower, although some floors still await installation of guards. Below, the roof terrace of the stepped podium is clearly visible, but parts of the top edge of the slab remain without cladding.
Looking northeast at the remaining tower crane on the south tower, image by UrbanToronto Forum contributor Lake Ontario
Viewed at night from Zonta Meadows Park, the construction elevator remains attached to the north facade of the North Tower. On the south tower, the fencing at this height has progressed to around the 37th floor.
Looking southeast at the illuminated mechanical penthouse and shared podium base of the north tower, image by UrbanToronto Forum contributor ThatSlickCat
Upon completion, Voya will deliver 960 condominiums and 22 affordable rental units.
View north of Voya, designed by Turner Fleischer Architects for Amacon
UrbanToronto will continue to monitor the progress of these developments, but in the meantime you can learn more in our database files linked below. If you’d like, you can join the discussions in the associated Project Forum threads or leave a comment in the designated area on this page.
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