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Inside the weird world of Wychwood Park
Jim Rankin – Toronto Star
The trees of Wychwood Park stand naked, the leaves bagged and gone. On Taddle Creek Pond, a sign warns of deep water and quicksand in warmer months, but come winter – a real one, mind you – out will come the sturdy steel and twine hockey nets that rest on the bank.
Kids, as they do any time of the year, roam freely, and in whatever house they wind up in at noon on a Saturday, it is understood lunch will be served.
No pro hockey to watch? No problem. Reruns of the ’72 Canada-Russia series are playing in one home. Please do drop over.
Bucolic postcards from a unique private enclave tucked in the heart of urban Toronto. Indeed, all would seem fine in Wychwood Park, at least to an outsider.
But as usual, in a place where you do know all of your neighbours – and there are 60 households – who kick in private money to care for a private road and common land – there are the usual and occasional crises that, over the 121-year history of the park, tend to come to a full boil before something has to give.
Today, the trust deed that binds the place, drawn up long ago, is showing its age. It comes with no teeth to make folks pay up. It may not, in fact, even be tenable, depending who you ask. Trustees have had to go to court to force one resident who steadfastly, out of principle, refuses to pay for something he says brings him no benefit. A heritage document that sets out what one can and cannot do is also weak. There are suspicions over how a private levy is calculated and over who pays what.
In a place where everyone knows their neighbours’ business, yet these days communicates less eye to eye and more by cold email, how do you enforce neighbourliness? As the line from Jack Nicholson’s character in Mars Attacks! goes, why can’t we all just get along?
Neighbourliness.
That’s what this story is about, set in a stunningly beautiful pocket of forest and homes near Bathurst St. and Davenport Rd., which began as an artists’ enclave and is now home to CEOs, lawyers and architects – newer families with more money, more cars, more wants and less time to deal with the inherent weirdness of Wychwood Park life.
“It’s pretty big, eh, this house?” chuckles Marc Giacomelli, as he and Tikaani, his friendly Alaskan Malamute, pause at the nearly completed home that straddles a double lot at 106 Wychwood Park.
“I guess it will eventually fit in, when it’s green and there’s trees and stuff,” says Giacomelli, 62, one of three park trustees.
For now, 106 – a grey-brick design inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright – looks entirely out of place. Monster home comes to mind, although, at 4,500 square feet, it is not the largest in the park. However, in proportion to the lot frontage, and how it sits on the land, it is undeniably an oddball.
While it may not be a symbol of a sea change here – there are other examples of odd homes here – the story of 106 certainly illustrates the pattern of recurring flashpoint issues that dot the colourful history of the park.
In a place where a private trust deed, a provincial Heritage Conservation District designation and a city heritage bylaw set out rules, how did a home that screams suburbia come to be built here in the first place?
The answer, as usual, was a shotgun compromise, of sorts. More on this later.
Just inside modest open gates, at the point where Wychwood and Tyrell Aves. meet and Wychwood Park begins, there is a plaque that delivers a brief history of the place.
In 1874, painter Marmaduke Matthews built the first house here with the intention of starting an artist colony, and named it after a forest in England. In 1891, he and another early resident created a plan for the area in the form of a four-page trust deed that set out the private enclave’s rules.
Included in the document is a method of calculating an annual private levy, based on lot size and exclusive of buildings, to be spent on maintaining the road and common land. New homes were to be built in the spirit of the English Arts and Crafts movement and blend in with the landscape of the park.
The city takes care of garbage and other services, but residents are responsible to this day for maintaining a meandering circular road, two gates, one of which fronts on Davenport and is only opened for heavy trucks doing work, a ravine area, tennis court and Taddle Creek Pond.
The pond, it should be noted, was artificially created by damming Taddle Creek, which bubbles up from a spring within the park. Surely, not for the sole reason of giving resident artists – and there were a few – something to paint, but that is how one story goes.
In 1907, the trust deed was replaced by a corporation. In 1915, an early controversy over who would pay what and how the levy was calculated led to a new rule that proved unenforceable. That led to the reinstatement of the trust deed that binds to this day, legal or not.
In 1958 came a ratepayers association to act as a buffer between park trustees and the community. There were legal opinions sought over the trust deed and the power of the trustees. There were periodic disputes over land and new development, including one in the ’80s over a developer’s plan to wedge six houses on a large lot. As usual a compromise resulted, and three new homes were built instead.
In 1985, the area became a Heritage Conservation District, which ushered in new rules about what could and could not be built. But to this day, the plan remains weak, to wit, the freshly built monstrosity that sits at No. 106.
Through the ’90s, the sorry state of the pond was a recurring crisis du jour. It was so shallow it ran the risk of becoming a swamp. Residents eventually ponied up $90,000 to have it dredged.
In the early 2000s, the Wychwood TTC Barns and what to do with them became another divisive issue.
But nothing compares to the mysterious rash of tire slashings that culminated in the 2008 suicide of Albert Fulton, one of two unofficial park archivists, and nasty rumours and a defamation suit over who might be responsible.
It made the news. The private affairs of the private enclave became very public.
Neighbours were talking. About neighbours. To reporters.
Good neighbours who are neighbourly simply shall not do this, but if they must, please be civil.
Quick aside: Following a lovely 1994 Globe and Mail piece on the park by John Bentley Mays, in which one named resident remarked upon the total unsuitability for the area of another unnamed resident’s house – “terrible … too Bayview” – the deeply offended unnamed resident dropped a bomb of a letter on the named resident.
“Immediately I came to realize that to individuals with your views, (and I can only assume there are more of you out there), the reality of living in Wychwood Park for my wife and I differs drastically from the images portrayed by Mr. Mays, with your help,” reads part of a letter circulated widely in the park at the time.
“For we will never be able to live there in peace and contentment,” it continues, “without being aware that beneath the surface of an idyllic park-like setting lurk the negative, senseless and hurtful attitudes of narrow minded and miserable people like yourself.”
Both residents later moved away.
Albert Fulton, as it turned out, was also apparently under the illusion that all should be idyllic in the park. He was upset with cars being parked on the road and generally fond of the old ways. With wealthier people moving in, along came domestic helpers, more cars and regular home upgrading and renos. There was simply no place to park but on the road.
Fulton took it out on the tires.
After being charged criminally and outed in the media, Fulton, also the park’s Neigbourhood Watch captain, went missing. His body was recovered from Toronto Harbour.
That sad chapter speaks to what is inevitable in the park, and not necessarily a bad thing.
Change.
Over the years, homes did stay within families, but the park has gradually lost its old-name stock. It attracts eccentrics, professionals and academics. Marshall McLuhan lived here, and only recently did his family sell off the home at No. 3.
Today, the houses of Wychwood Park are home to some recognizable names. Bonnie Brooks, president of Hudson’s Bay Company. Joe Oliver, federal minister of natural resources. Journalist Libby Znaimer. Gary Clewley and Crown attorney Jennifer Lofft, a former trustee.
Lofft, 51, only the second female trustee in park history, resigned last year, along with a fellow trustee.
In a letter to the park, Lofft and Marvin Green lamented that the annual levy was under attack and there was no way to enforce payment, let alone coax out dough for special levies for major projects.
Things were degrading and in need of fixing. And a small minority was standing in the way of getting things done.
One improvement project would be the road. Such is the state of the asphalt road, Lofft and Green noted in their resignation letter, that a cab driver remarked that it reminded him of his home country.
“When asked where he was from, he said Afghanistan,” reads the letter.
“With over $110m of real estate in Wychwood Park we can only imagine what effect the degradation is having on the resale value of each and every home.”
The community, the outgoing trustees wrote, is being “held hostage to a super-minority who may for one reason or another be dissatisfied with what most thought was a sound community decision. This minority is now carrying the day, which is unjust.
“Furthermore there is a very long history of acrimony and dysfunction in Wychwood Park that inevitably results from the problems noted above. The history of bickering and resultant degradation of our environment is a predictable outcome of this no longer workable governance model …
“Until there is a new governance model, we are doomed to re-live the failures of old.”
What’s going on? There are differing wants and needs and priorities, and a power imbalance rooted in who pays what.
Marc Giacomelli, perhaps best known by SCTV Network aficionados as a creative director and associate producer in the Bob and Doug days, was named as a replacement trustee.
Residents now have busier lives. There are younger families. More money. And it is becoming more and more difficult to be neighbourly, says Giacomelli, who along with wife Sarah (she’s in real estate and grew up in Wychwood) live in a lovely home built by artist George Reid.
When longtime park caretaker Peter Caddick, who resigned a year ago, died in late November, only 11 houses of the 60 in the park were represented at the funeral, according to one person present.
The service was less than a 10-minute walk from the park.
“There are more, newer people moving in, with more money, especially young couples who I guess are kind of in between ‘charming, idyllic, historical Wychwood Park’ and ‘can’t the road be fixed and what about my property values’ kind of attitude,” says Giacomelli, who has served as treasurer and is in his second stint as a trustee.
“I guess because it’s unique and it’s lovely and it’s got trees and a pond, it’s different … but I don’t think it’s different in the neighbour dynamic, other than it’s more personal.
“It’s like a village, a weird little village, so the agreements and disagreements get emphasized. The benefits and the negatives are emphasized because everybody knows everybody.”
Perhaps the only Wychwood owner that still has family ties to an original owner is Gerald Owen, a Globe and Mail editorial writer who, along with his wife, inherited his father’s home on Alcina Ave. It backs onto Wychwood Park and is part of the area subject to provincial and municipal heritage rules.
Owen, 59, also happens to be at war with the Wychwood Park trustees over the trust deed.
While he believes in the heritage aspects of the neighbourhood and the philosophy behind it, he believes the trust deed has no merit. Five years ago he stopped paying annual levies, for which he argues he receives no benefit, since his home fronts onto a city-owned street. (A number of Alcina homes are part of the park.)
The trustees took him to small-claims court, where Owen lost. On appeal to divisional court, the ruling was upheld.
Unchallenged in either court, however, was whether the trust deed is binding on future homeowners. Or even legal. The trust deed is not registered on the title of his home and Owen believes it is a feudalistic arrangement – one he didn’t agree to.
Owen remains steadfast and refuses to pay the regular levy. In a subsequent small-claims case brought forward by the trustees, Owen will have a chance to make new arguments on what turns out to be an old issue.
Owen contends that his family, in paying the levy over the years, has been subsidizing benefits received by others.
In 1952, a legal opinion cast doubt on whether the trust had any legal hold on a strip of common frontage on Alcina Ave. and warned trustees not to make any claims of ownership on that land. In other words, do not rock the boat.
The trustees, argues Owen, have been winging it for more than a century.
“We have every reason to believe that a succession of trustees have been afraid of what some of the beneficiaries would say to the court in that event – some would simply want out,” Owen said in an email to the Star.
At the heart of it all are the fees, suspicions over who pays what, who wants what, and who benefits.
Over the years, others have not paid or withheld payment until the last moment because of various disagreements with the trust over spending and projects. Records indicate past lawsuits where the trust went after residents.
In rare cases of financial problems, payments were delayed or staggered and, if left unpaid, were recouped by placing liens on properties, the amounts owed realized when the property was sold.
Owen’s regular annual levy now stands at more than $3,000, which is high for the park. Only eight other properties pay more than $3,000.
While the trust will not disclose who pays how much in levies, for privacy reasons – which is odd, given that one can look up city tax information – the average levy for the coming fiscal year is $2,027. The highest levy is $8,423; the lowest, $729.
With growing park costs, levies jumped by 25% from the previous year.
This is on top of city property taxes.
At the end of each year, the homeowners of Wychwood Park vote with their chequebooks. By the end of this past fiscal year, three residents, including Owen, had not paid.
Owen, it should be noted, is not part of the “super-minority” that led to the resignation of the trustees. But he does have supporters who wonder about the trust deed. A neighbour on Alcina offered a letter of support for the court battle, saying that the private tax is “unfairly and inappropriately levied.”
Owen says that when he first started asking questions at a general meeting in 2007, he was treated “rather disdainfully.”
“The whole thing needs to have a complete overhaul,” Owen said in an interview. “But we essentially just want out. The deed is illegal and trusts aren’t really allowed to go on indefinitely, unless they’re actual charitable trusts. It just doesn’t make sense for us to be part of this.”
Others agree that the trust deed needs improvement. Options include scrapping it in lieu of a condominium–like arrangement, or, just turning over everything to the city, with heritage rules in place to protect the area. And there are residents who are leaning that way.
The only way to deal with changes to the trust deed is to open it up in court, which is costly. The results could be unpredictable.
Tsur Moses pads through the nearly finished interior of 106 Wychwood Park in rubber boots. His iPhone chirps constantly. A couple of workers do brickwork on the main entrance.
The soft-spoken, 39-year-old Israeli-born engineer and developer and a business partner bought the land in 2007 for $1.5 million, and in doing so sent a collective shudder through the park.
That the old ’50s bungalow that sat on one side of the lot would come down was almost a given. For starters, no one much liked the bungalow, although the garden, including a lovely rose garden, on the empty lot beside it, was pleasing to the eye.
“It was a given, as soon as Tsur Moses bought that property, that something big was going to happen because our very own heritage document identified the lot as one for potential development,” says former trustee Lofft.
Initially, Moses wanted to put two large houses on the double lot. The city and the Wychwood Park Heritage Advisory Committee stopped him cold. A revised plan for two smaller homes looked promising but not to the residents of Wychwood Park, who galvanized over this issue.
“It was an amazing thing in some ways because a lot of the residents really came together and pitched in and there’s actually an extraordinary amount of expertise here,” says Lofft. “There are lawyers and planners and architects and artists.”
Architect Paul Oberst, who drew up one of the homes, remembers showing off the drawings at a community open house at the Wychwood Barns.
“The councillor (Joe Mihevc) liked it, the staff liked it, people came to the open house and just said, ‘It’ll never happen.’ And it didn’t.
“We got completely slaughtered. The neighbourhood is very tight. They sort of go to the wall.”
For what it’s worth, Oberst says he fell in love with Wychwood Park at first sight. “This would be years and years ago, it was just like, ‘Holy crap, I can’t believe there is this right in the middle of the city,’ and, ‘Oh, what a lovely place to live.’ And (now) it’s like, ‘You couldn’t make me go there. It’s just too weird.’ “
Their two-house plan thwarted, Moses and his business partner went to the Ontario Municipal Board, where, after years of back and forth on the property, hammered out a settlement with the Wychwood Park heritage committee. There would be one house and a plan that would not result in the total demolition of the existing house.
The park was adamant that a demolition precedent not be set.
So, although you’d never know it to look at it, encased in double-thick foundation walls are remnants of the original bungalow.
This particular compromise will hence be known as the “house at 106.”
The fight, while always civil, took its toll on everyone involved.
As for the house, people “hate it,” in the words of one resident.
“As much hard work that was done, it looks like a monster house,” says Giacomelli. “When you stand and look at it, it looks like one of those fake French chateaus that you can see in Forest Hill or the Bridle Path.”
Even the developer thinks it doesn’t fit the lot. It’s “too huge” and the two smaller houses, Moses thinks, would have blended in better.
Five years after he embarked on the project, Moses will soon walk away without making any money, he says. He sold his share of the property to his partner, who may or may not live in the house before selling. It could potentially be ready for listing in a month.
Greeting a reporter for a tour of the house, Moses begins with a sales pitch: “What can I tell you about lovely Wychwood Park? Wychwood Park, it’s the oasis in downtown or middle downtown Toronto. It’s a place, if you are a young CEO, you want to raise your children in a countryside feeling and be ten minutes from your office.
“And the secret of this place is that a lot of people don’t know it exists.”
And then this piece of advice for fellow developers:
“I recommend to everybody not to do it. It’s not worth the time. It’s too hard. The neighbours are very picky, and I understand them, because they really love the neighbourhood and they really care. They want to protect it like a mother protects a child. But they overprotect it.
“For a builder, it’s very hard to get it approved. And they want to be involved in all the details.”
Moses calls this house – boasting a home theatre room, library, walnut floors and soaring ceilings – his baby and predicts it might go for $5.5 million, which would be a record for Wychwood Park.
It appears to be well built, with fabulous views of the park and tennis court.
“Whoever buys it is lucky,” he says. “He’ll have a finished house and he won’t have to deal with the neighbours. Because somebody already did it for you.”
To recap: In this beautiful weird neighbourhood, there’s been a legal bun fight over a dusty 121-year-old document, a developer managed to build a house no one wanted built, divisive issues continue to crop up, there are suspicions over money, and occasional unneighbourly conduct.
And people who continue to love living here for a host of reasons.
“It is without a doubt the best place in the city to live,” says Lofft, who loves being “surrounded by beauty and interesting discourse.
“The eclectic mix of people who live here don’t fit perfectly into any one category. It’s not the place for those seeking instant social status or recognition; it is the quiet secret of midtown, and it’s more of a village.”
She and her husband Gary Clewley, who bought into the park in 2000, have had the pleasure of watching their five children – aged12 to 20, including 14-year-old triplet daughters – grow up there.
“It still is an amazing place to bring up kids,” says Giacomelli, who raised three kids here. “The positives are your neighbours know your business. The neighbours know your kids. The kids can run around, go in the pond, skate on the pond, look for rabbits.
“So, the negatives of a village turn into a positive.”
In the wake of last year’s trustee resignations and obvious neighbourhood issues, there’s now a new approach to getting along, and it turns out to be a very old approach.
Go slow. Walk around and talk to people, just like the trustees of olden days, who were typically older and had a lot of time on their hands.
“They would walk around on a weekend or on an evening and talk to people and ask what’s going on,” says Giacomelli. “Tree fallen down? Is your street light out? Do you really want to put that colour of roof on your house?
“It was face-to-face and it was like elders in a village.
“It sounds like some kind of weird idyllic thing.”
In other words, you do want to be a good neighbour, don’t you?
Weird anywhere else, perhaps, but not in Wychwood Park.
“It’s a great positive experiment in urban living,” says Giacomelli. “You wonder why there aren’t more neighbourhoods actually like this.”
For pleasure and sport, the residents of Wychwood Park will now hope for a frozen Taddle Creek Pond and watch the new trees at 106 Wychwood grow – and, now that the monstrosity is built, speculate on just how much she might go for.
Not that good neighbours ever talk about such things.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
—————————————————————————————————–
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Ghost town in a city
Toronto military neighbourhood set to be dismantled to make way for condos
Joshua Rapp Learn – National Post Staff
William Baker Park is like a ghost town. A whole row of empty houses sits with overflowing mailboxes and weathered, unused phone books on the porch. The only sound you can hear other than a passing airplane is the buzz of cicadas and the wind blowing through the thick canopy of mature trees. A deer sits peacefully on the grass between two houses. An emaciated tomcat slinks up a driveway nearby.
This is the last Canadian military housing area in Toronto. It is set to be bulldozed as early as this fall to make way for condos after the military completes its eviction process.
The result is a peaceful, empty neighbourhood that feels like a cottage district outside of tourist season. Weeds overflow from the flower boxes but the lawns are perfectly shaved. Furniture sits on the curb of one house while a sign at the entrance to the neighbourhood reads “All salesmen must be licensed by Canadian Forces Housing Agency.” One of the last residents in the neighbourhood describes it as looking “like one of those nuclear test communities.”
“I’m going to miss it,” says a resident from the Royal Canadian Air Force as movers carry furniture from his duplex into a truck that looked larger than his house. “If you were here two years ago there would be kids running around, riding bicycles,” he says. “It was a really bustling neighbourhood.”
Although the military transferred most of the 7.99 hectares of William Baker Park to Downsview Park in 2006, they will only transfer the actual land the houses sit on after the last residents move out. Meanwhile, Downsview Park will soon make a proposal call to developers. Once Downsview reviews the proposals and bids, they will sell the land. It is unclear how many trees the developers will cut.
“Generally speaking the bulk of houses will be deconstructed,” says David Anselmi, vice president of development and sustainability for Downsview Park.
The Canadian military built William Baker Park in 1953 and originally housed people from the air force in detached and semi-detached homes. Although most residents like the neighbourhood, they aren’t all thrilled about the quality of the houses.
“There’s not a single right angle in the house,” one resident says. “Everybody complains about them, but then everybody complains when they can’t move into them as well.”
Councillor Anthony Perruzza wants the area saved. “It has a long history in the community. People who have lived there, I’m sure, have gone off and fought for this country, and some have even died for this country. It was housing that was specifically built to a particular style in a particular era for a particular neighbourhood,” he says.
“They are beautiful homes in a beautiful setting and are worth preserving. I can see it becoming another Wychwood Park,” says Rosanna Iaboni, secretary of the Downsview Lands Community Voice Association. She blames the destruction on Ottawa.
“The whole situation is terrible because the Conservative government refuses to fund this park,” she says “It’s a shame that this is the sort of thing [Downsview Park] has to do in order to make that money.”
Mr. Perruzza criticizes the North York Community Preservation Panel (NYCPP) for not stepping in to save William Baker. “The North York Preservation panel and their historical board is asleep at the switch,” he says.
But the preservation panel chairman, Geoff Kettel said no one alerted him. “Has he brought it to our attention? The answer is no. Nor has anybody else.”
Mr. Anselmi says the military has asked them to deconstruct the houses sooner rather than later to avoid vandalism. “There’s a chance some of them also might be picked up and moved, or auctioned off to preserve them,” he says. “There are some interesting little houses.”
The houses aren’t all as cheaply made as the ones along Robert Woodhead Crescent. The houses along John Drury Drive get progressively nicer as you go deeper into William Baker Park. One former resident, a former military policeman, said the bigger houses were reserved for the “big wigs.” According to him, the house at the end of John Drury Drive started with the base commander’s, then worked all the way down through the lieutenants and officers.
Although the former MP used to live in Stanley Greene Park, another former military neighbourhood Downsview is demolishing right now (having sold the land to Urbancorp for townhouses), he spent a lot of time in William Baker.
“It’s a nice, quiet area in the middle of the war zone,” he joked.
Indeed, it’s an oasis of tranquility, blocked off from Keele Street and the rest of Toronto by an eroding brick fence and a huge canopy of trees.
Huge old maple, oak, ash, douglas firs and beech trees cover the area and Mr. Anselmi would not say how many will be preserved through development.
“Magnificent trees. It’s like an old forest,” says Mr. Perruzza.
“There was a lot of community involvement to spruce up the area,” says the former military policeman. “People planted a lot of these trees.”
When the city dragged its feet on approving Downsview Park’s plans, the park took the city to the Ontario Municipal Board. It a ruling last year, the OMB identified three hectares of the William Baker area as preferred locations for parkland. Some of the forested areas will be added to the Natural Heritage System.
“It would be a very sad thing indeed if we lost the bulk of those trees,” Mr. Perruzza says. Residents say animals abound in the woods: deer, pheasants, raccoons, skunks and groundhogs.
Mr. Anselmi also likes the woodlot, but won’t promise to save it. “It contributes greatly to the canopy of the park,” he says. “Any development that we do, or that development partners do, we will look to the extent to which that woodlot can be integrated into the overall national urban park concept.”
“If you want to build a park, [William Baker] is where you build a park. This is where the trees exist already. You don’t have to wait 100 years for the little seedlings you planted to grow up, right?” Mr. Perruzza says.
He says Downsview Park didn’t drive the the planning process by park consideration. “It was driven by planning consideration. You know, where can you stack housing? Where will developers pay a premium buck for it? Where do you locate the storm water management pond?”
But Mr. Anselmi disagrees. “It’s just not that simple. Do we locate development neighbourhoods where we think they make the most sense? Yes, of course. And that includes economically where they make the most sense. But the entire plan of the park has not been based on where to get development,” he says.
“It used to be a very vibrant community neighbourhood,” says the former military policeman of William Baker.”You’d hear the pitter-patter of little feet coming around,” he says after noting he raised three children in Stanley Greene in the 1980s.
“It’s very unfortunate but it’s progress.”
—————————————————————————————————–
Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
—————————————————————————————————–
Incoming search terms
Burgers bow to condos in the Beaches
Peter Kuitenbrouwer – National Post
Carl, a mechanic with Black & McDonald waiting in line at Toronto’s original Licks Homeburgers/Ice Cream Friday, expressed shock when he learned more condos are coming to the Beaches.
“I didn’t think they would put a condo in the Beaches,” Carl says. “I thought this was sacred.”
Not any more. Carl hadn’t noticed the big colour sign on the front of Licks: Developers plan to knock the restaurant down and build a six-storey, 29-unit condominium unit, with 27 underground parking spaces.
A red banner on the front of Licks — an institution on the corner of Kenilworth Avenue and Queen Street East since 1985 — promises, “Our homeburgers are getting a new home. New Beach location coming soon.”
Shane Fenton, 28, who with his father, Shelley Fenton, does business as Reserve Properties, bought this site two years ago. Mr. Fenton vows, “Licks is not leaving the neighbourhood. We are working with them to find a new site.”
The Beaches, or The Beach, as some prefer to call it, is among Toronto’s original genteel old-money residential neighbourhoods, a redoubt of gardeners and sailors and studied elegance: mobbed by tourists in summer and braved by dog-walkers in winter. But lately a new group has shown up: developers, buying single-family homes to assemble parcels of land, and turn them into condo projects. Many locals are not amused.
“The downtown core is expanding into these established neighbourhoods,” says Bill Burrows, owner of a business that helps people find companies via the Internet. He has lived on Kippendavie Avenue for 10 years; his front yard is Garden of Eden, resplendent with a koi-stocked pond, six varieties of Japanese maple, a twisted baby locust, rhododendrons and Japanese carpet junipers.
Recently a developer bought six houses next to Mr. Burrows and proposed an 83-unit, six-storey condominium building with an underground garage.
“Many of us understand and appreciate the need to intensify,” Mr. Burrows says. “It should be done according to the neighbourhood. The character of the Beach will change: ‘Kippendavie got it, so why can’t Beach Avenue or Silver Birch Avenue?’ ”
After a long battle, most members of the Kew Beach Residents’ Association have nearly settled with the developer, in exchange for a reduction to 60 units and the developer’s agreement to name adjacent homeowners as co-insured on its policy.
On Monday, two hold-out residents at No. 60 Kippendavie will face the developer at the Ontario Municipal Board, and Mr. Burrows notes, “We haven’t formally settled. We agreed to pospone the OMB hearing for a week so our water expert can review the city’s water report.” Basement flooding is a huge problem here.
Also Monday, Beaches residents gather at 7 p.m. at the Beaches Recreation Centre, 6 Williamson Rd., for a public meeting about the Licks condo plan.
“We expect a full house,” says Councillor Mary-Margaret McMahon (Beaches-East York). “We’re going to get development. We just want to get smart development and want to attract ethical developers who care about the neighbourhood. … We need something more small-townish feel down on the Beach.”
Even so, the Fenton family has made friends with its modest plan to leave standing the Bellefair Methodist Church (1922), at 2000 Queen E., and repurpose it into 23 condos and six townhomes, complete with parking stackers, a kind of elevator for residents’ cars. The developers have converted the sanctuary into a sales centre.
“If you come in with the right attitude and the right approach and work with the community, it can work,” says Shane Fenton, dressed casually in a checked purple shirt with the top two buttons undone, and bell-bottomed jeans. Both Ms. McMahon and Mr. Burrows say they like the Fenton approach, though Ms. McMahon wonders whether six storeys at the Licks site — where adjacent buildings are one and two stories — may be too high.
A few blocks west, there is a standoff. Queen Street East Properties has assembled all the addresses but one on the north side of Queen between Rainsford Road and Woodbine Avenue. The house at 1878 Queen St. East, home to Barber Cuts and Design Wardrobe and, in back, the Pooran family, has held out. Ruth Pooran, who lives here with her son Anthony, says the developers have approached the family “many, many, many times,” to sell the house, built in 1901, but her father refuses.
On Friday, a backhoe pawed at the rubble that was her neighbour’s house to the west (future home of a condo tower). A sign indicates the builder plans more condos to the east.
“It’s rather troublesome,” says Anthony. “I try to study and there’s constantly dust flying.”
“I’ve been to all the meetings,” says Ms. Pooran. “They are all against all the condos because it is ruining the entire Beach. This has always been this way and it shouldn’t change.”
Still, she admits, “ask me in a year when they are digging an 80-foot hole beside my house.”
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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