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You want that dream home? Why you’ll have to join the line in this thin housing market

Car­olyn Ire­land – The Globe and Mail

Toronto real estate agent Monte Bur­ris looked out the front win­dow of a Sun­ny­side Avenue house recently and saw a small crowd lined up on the side­walk. That was 45 min­utes before he was sched­uled to receive the hordes at the first open house as the prop­erty hit the mar­ket with an ask­ing price of $1.45-million.

One week later, the sell­ers had accepted an offer of $1.65-million.

Dur­ing the inter­ven­ing days, they had also repelled a hand­ful of bully offers and turned down the seven other bid­ders on offi­cial offer night.

It was obvi­ous early on that every­one wanted the prop­erty,” says Mr. Bur­ris of Keller Williams Real Estate Inc.

The red-brick detached house has six bed­rooms and five bath­rooms. Recently ren­o­vated, it has a gas fire­place in the foyer, a large kitchen, and an expanse of glass over­look­ing the deck and backyard.

When the first bul­lies launched their open­ing salvo, Mr. Bur­ris advised his clients to wait until the sched­uled night for review­ing offers. Bul­lies often step up with an eye-popping offer, but with the pro­viso that it’s only good for a short time. They gen­er­ally refuse to par­tic­i­pate in a bid­ding war.

But list­ings for detached houses are so thin that Mr. Bur­ris knew the prospec­tive buy­ers would likely come back to the table.

I was pretty con­fi­dent they would all show up on offer night. There’s still very lit­tle inven­tory on the market.”

This one sale is emblem­atic of the fickle Toronto mar­ket right now – or as agents like Mr. Bur­ris are say­ing more and more – the two Toronto markets.

Com­ment: True enough. I have a lit­tle semi in Hill­crest that peo­ple are lin­ing up to get into. Open house is today, I am afraid of the hordes that will come…

Con­dos are a com­pletely dif­fer­ent mar­ket,” says Mr. Burris.

That seg­ment is awash in “inven­tory” as agents say. Sell­ers are forced to cut their prices or wait a long time for a sale in some cases.

Com­ment: For some, not for all. Any­thing generic is sit­ting, as there are tons of sim­i­lar units avail­able. The larger or unique ones, with a view or in a bou­tique build­ing, they are still mov­ing nicely. The prob­lem is that there are more and more bor­ing lit­tle white boxes, the condo mar­ket is awash in sameness.

Detached houses will gen­er­ally attract mul­ti­ple offers if they are ren­o­vated and located in a prime neigh­bour­hood. Condo and loft units will attract mul­ti­ple offers in many cases if they are in a bou­tique build­ing or supremely well located. They need to stand out from the competition.

The num­bers show how unpre­dictable the mar­ket is now: sales in the Greater Toronto Area remained flat with a dip of about 1% in the first half of April com­pared with the same period last year. That’s not as grim as the double-digit drops recorded in pre­vi­ous months, but it’s not the spring bounce many agents were hop­ing for.

Com­ment: Sales jumped 16% from –17% to –1% and that is not a big bounce? Sure looks like a large increase to me.

Mean­while, the aver­age price rose 4.3% in the first two weeks of April from the same period last year. List­ings rose 16% in the first half of April com­pared with the first half of April, 2012.

Com­ment: After list­ings being down, sell­ers had held back when things looked bad. Less list­ings and fewer sales, now more list­ings and higher sales. Seems sim­ple enough. And bet­ter weather helps for sure. Spring 2012 saw 25 degrees in Feb­ru­ary for Pete’s sake, which really boosted sales. This year it was cold and crappy until almost the end of April. These things make a difference.

The num­bers were buoyed by sales of single-family homes in the sub­urbs, accord­ing to the Toronto Real Estate Board.

In the City of Toronto, sales of detached houses slipped 3.4% com­pared with the first half of April last year. Condo sales in Toronto declined 4.3% year over year for the same period.

Chan­der Chad­dah of Sut­ton Group-Associates Bro­ker­age Inc. spe­cial­izes in the Ron­ces­valles area. He says sales are def­i­nitely down and the mar­ket remains spotty.

He’s advis­ing his clients who want to buy to aim for a house that does not incite a frenzy.

I had to talk clients out of an offer last week.”

The house was listed with an ask­ing price of $849,000 and Mr. Chaddah’s clients thought they might be able to stretch to an offer of $875,000 or so. Mr. Chad­dah checked out the num­ber of bids on the offer date and told his clients not to get their hopes up. “We don’t have a chance,” he advised them.

The house sold for $1.020-million.

Mr. Chad­dah says many buy­ers seem to fall into the trap of bid­ding for a house as soon as they know that other peo­ple want it.

Com­ment: I can­not say that I have ever seen that. But I have seen them try to throw in a low bid “just in case” they get it. The prob­lem is, they won’t. And if there are 20 bids, at least 10 of them are hail mary bids hop­ing beyond hope that it goes for list price or less. It won’t. What that does, though, is push up the seri­ous bids. All you have to go on in a bid­ding war is the num­ber of bids. And gen­er­ally you see the sale price around $5–10,000 per bid over ask­ing. So 10 bids could push an $849,000 house to $900,000 but 20 will eas­ily send it to $1,020,000. The peo­ple who do not want the price to go too high are the very ones push­ing it up. Had they stayed out of it, the house would have sold for $100,000 less than it did. Now, the next house on the street is listed for $899,000 with bids and sells for $1,100,000 and so on… The peo­ple who were never in the run­ning for the house have now pushed the prices even higher. Exactly what they com­plain about. I try to explain this to peo­ple but they just get mad at me. They think it is their right to make an offer… “just in case”…

There’s no ques­tion that there’s this per­verse need for affirmation.”

He says house hunters who hear that sell­ers who find out that they won’t have to join a con­test – either because the sell­ers haven’t set an offer date or because no rivals have shown up – then start to ques­tion their own judgment.

The ques­tion starts to creep in, ‘what am I missing?’”

Lots of good houses are over­looked that way, he says, and he thinks buy­ers often end up pay­ing too much as a result.

I do more talk­ing peo­ple out of houses than I ever do talk­ing peo­ple into houses,” he says.

Usu­ally buy­ers know pretty quickly if a house feels right to them. If it does, he encour­ages them to be grate­ful if other buy­ers are pass­ing it buy.

Com­ment: Exactly. Your gut tells you it is the right place. If you don’t know it the moment you walk in, then it is not for you. You should never have to con­vince your­self or jus­tify it.

If we think it’s a good house, it’s a good house and we don’t need three other peo­ple to con­firm that. Then I’ll tell them, let’s see if we can go in and knock a cou­ple of bucks off the ask­ing price.”

Mr. Chad­dah is wish­ing that many more sell­ers will decide to list soon. Often peo­ple who are think­ing of putting a “for sale” sign on the lawn will wait for spring flow­ers and bud­ding trees.

More prod­uct,” says Mr. Chad­dah. “That’s what I hope happens.”

At the same time, he tells condo sell­ers that they have to be patient.

There’s a ton of prod­uct out there.”

A really slick condo town­house, or a high-rise unit with a really good view will some­times stir up com­pet­ing bid­ders, he says.

He worked with a buyer recently who bought a nicely ren­o­vated condo on Que­bec Avenue in High Park. The ask­ing price was $489,000 and the buyer beat out the other con­tenders with an offer of $511,000.

Even when it goes over list, it’s more mea­sured,” Mr. Chad­dah says of the action.

—————————————————————————————————–
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.

—————————————————————————————————–

Fearing crash, Toronto condo builders retreat

Bloomberg News

Toronto condo builders are slow­ing devel­op­ment in a bid to avoid a crash after a decade-long boom led to 159 tow­ers now under construction.

Com­ment: Are they slow­ing down for that rea­son, or are you just cre­at­ing a newsy head­line? Have builders told you this? No? Ah right, so it could just be a lull, a sea­sonal thing. Maybe because of the ter­ri­ble weather we had all of the first part of this year? Maybe the city was slow with per­mits? Could be 100 dif­fer­ent rea­sons, but you are going to spec­u­late the worst rea­son you can think of so that the news looks bad. Nice…

So far this year, they’ve announced 13 new con­do­minium projects, the fewest since the reces­sion in 2009, when there were just three over the same period, fig­ures from real estate researcher Real­Net Canada Inc. show. In the same period last year, 29 new projects were announced, includ­ing Tridel Corp.’s Ten York, the third-tallest res­i­den­tial tower in the coun­try at 75-stories when it was first marketed.

Com­ment: Q1 2012 had 20 degree weather on Feb­ru­ary – we have feet of snow the same time this year. If you don’t know that real estate is weather-dependent, then you have no right writ­ing real estate stories.

Most devel­op­ers have their hands in their pock­ets right now,” said Brad Lamb, pres­i­dent of Brad J. Lamb Realty Inc., a devel­oper and the city’s largest con­do­minium bro­ker. His firm, which is mar­ket­ing more than 45 high-rise devel­op­ments in the city, won’t start a new project until 2014, Lamb said in an inter­view at Bloomberg’s office in Toronto. Lamb said he has eight projects in Toronto and Ottawa “on the draw­ing board.”

Com­ment: Yet he did not say that he was not build­ing because he was afraid and was try­ing to avoid a crash. Does Mr. Lamb know you put those words in his mouth, by impli­ca­tion? I would think he would not like that very much.

The slow­down comes as a near-record sup­ply of con­dos comes to mar­ket in a city with the most tow­ers being con­structed in the world, accord­ing to BuzzBuz­zHome, a Toronto-based real estate list­ings and research firm. Devel­op­ers are try­ing to man­age the slow­down as buy­ers retreat amid tighter mort­gage rules, a slow­ing econ­omy and the bur­den of record con­sumer debt.

Com­ment: Comes to mar­ket? You mean com­plete. That means that units that are already BOUGHT AND PAID FOR are done and peo­ple take pos­ses­sion of them. They are not being offered for sale and flood­ing the mar­ket. Fig­ures from Real­net, who you quote above, show that around 10% of new con­dos are offered for sale once the own­ers take title. So even a heavy year like 2013 will be, with some 28,000 com­ple­tions, will see around 2,800 new list­ings added to an annual sales total of around 85,000. So maybe 3% more… wow… so much extra inven­tory, what will we ever do?

The sup­ply of new high-rise units reached 21,262 in Feb­ru­ary, 34% more than the same period a year ago and close to a record 21,696 in Octo­ber 2012, Real­Net fig­ures show. About 61,000 units are cur­rently under con­struc­tion — the most ever — and a record 35,757 res­i­den­tial units will come on stream next year, Real­Net said.

Com­ment: Clar­ify your data. Are there 21,262 new con­dos cur­rently for sale? And the 35,757 com­ing “on stream” – what does that mean? Built? Sold? Offered on MLS? You are throw­ing around num­bers that mean noth­ing. Like 61,000 units for sale. It can take 3 years or more for a large tower to be built, once ground is bro­ken. Those 61,000 units could com­plete this year through to 2016 or beyond. It means nothing.

Can­celed lumen

Devel­oper Con­cord Adex post­poned its pre­vi­ously announced Lumen this year, a 30-story build­ing in a clus­ter of con­dos near the Gar­diner Express­way, a major high­way that con­nects the west­ern sub­urbs with the city, accord­ing to BuzzBuzzHome.

Com­ment: Why did they can­cel it? No sales? Crappy design? Bed­rooms with cars zoom­ing past the win­dows? Did they need 38 storeys to make finan­cial sense and the city would only approve 30 storeys? You can­not sim­ply through stuff like this around with­out con­text. Unless you are just try­ing to write a neg­a­tive story.

Menkes Devel­op­ment Ltd was one of the first to announce this year, putting its 29-story 365 Church devel­op­ment on sale for pur­chase in March. Due for com­ple­tion in 2017, unit size starts at 323 square feet among the small­est in the city.

Condo prices are not going up now the way they have been,” said Finn Poschmann, vice pres­i­dent of research at the C.D. Howe Insti­tute in Toronto. “From the devel­op­ers’ side, they’re say­ing, ‘OK, enough is enough right now. We’re digest­ing a shift in the mar­ket as it is, and we really don’t need to be beat up more.’”

Com­ment: Builders have real­ized that they have hit the wall in terms of what first time buy­ers and investors will buy. But they are shrink­ing units, which pushes up the cost per square foot. Trust me, con­dos are not going down in price any time soon.

Sales drop­ping

Sales of high-rise homes in the city have dropped 34% since 2011 after ris­ing 64% in the past decade until 2012. Prices have declined 5.5% over the past two years, accord­ing to RealNet.

Com­ment: New con­dos we are talk­ing about here, let’s be clear. And if there are a record num­ber of com­ple­tions, how could there be less sales? More com­pleted con­dos means more were bought. And tak­ing a slice out of a longer term is cherry pick­ing the data. Your two data sets over­lap – how could sales drop from 2011–2013 when sales rose from 2002–2012? If sales rose in 2011 and 2012, how did they drop? Your math makes no sense…

Sales are weak­en­ing after the gov­ern­ment tight­ened mort­gage rules to curb record house­hold debt and orches­trate a so-called “soft land­ing” in the hous­ing mar­ket. Bench­mark inter­est rates held at 1% since 2009 in the longest pause since the 1950s stoked a hous­ing boom. The gov­ern­ment has been try­ing to rein it in, short­en­ing amor­ti­za­tions in June to 25 years from 30 years, the fourth time in four years it tight­ened home loan reg­u­la­tions. The Office of the Super­in­ten­dent of Finan­cial Insti­tu­tions also intro­duced tougher stan­dards for lenders.

Com­ment: And it worked – sales fell around 10–15%. But once we hit July and have two months with the same mort­gage rules, we will not be talk­ing about less sales any­more. The funny part is that num­bers will prob­a­bly rise again through the end of next year and will look strong against the weaker 2012 num­bers. And the press will go on about ris­ing sales – just as they did about the drop­ping sales – with no con­text. Mark my words!

The gov­ern­ment has also pres­sured banks not to cut home loan lend­ing rates below 3%, with Finance Min­is­ter Jim Fla­herty say­ing March 19 that “we don’t want a race to the bot­tom on mort­gage rates.” Man­ulife Finan­cial Corp. with­drew a pro­mo­tional 2.89% five-year fixed mort­gage rate after the finance depart­ment called the bank to express the minister’s “displeasure.”

Com­ment: No, Fla­herty did not tell banks to stay above 3% – he just said he was not happy when BMO offered the lower rate. They responded by offer­ing 2.79% to their best clients, secretly. And I have seen ads in CIBC offer­ing 2.99% mort­gages with 3% cash back.

Gov­er­nor warns

The effect of the government’s focus on rates and bor­row­ing was that many first-time home buy­ers were priced out of the mar­ket and grew cau­tious as Mark Car­ney, the Bank of Canada gov­er­nor, empha­sized the risk to an over-heated hous­ing mar­ket, Poschmann said.

Every­one knows that soft land­ings are dif­fi­cult to nego­ti­ate,” Poschmann said. “So you use mul­ti­ple tools, you push on mul­ti­ple but­tons, and that’s what the gov­ern­ment has done.”

Com­ment: And finally one worked. But most first-timers will just wait and save more, or buy some­thing dif­fer­ent, or look out­side the 416.

Investors are begin­ning to hear about the high amount of sup­ply and are back­ing off, Will Dun­ning, pres­i­dent of real estate mar­ket analy­sis firm Will Dun­ning Inc., said in a phone inter­view from Toronto. The government’s mort­gage tight­en­ing has taken at least a quar­ter of con­do­minium buy­ers off the mar­ket, he said.

Com­ment: No, they cer­tainly are not. Why would they? Not when they can buy a condo and have a line up to rent it out. Vacancy rates are like 0.8% now, there are bid­ding wars on rentals. Land­lords have their pick of ten­ants. This is exactly what investors want. I have heard from builders that they are bang­ing on their doors ask­ing why they are not build­ing. The buy­ers taken out of the mar­ket are first-time buy­ers, owner-occupiers, not investors.

Attrac­tive investment

Low inter­est rates made con­dos a very attrac­tive invest­ment, I wouldn’t say a bub­ble but I would say too much activ­ity,” he said. “There are mul­ti­ple out­comes, includ­ing the investor say­ing ‘It’s time to get out of this mar­ket’ and if a lot of them say that at the same time, then you see prices fall.”

Com­ment: No bub­ble. There is no sud­den increase, in sales or prices. Prices have risen around 3–8% annu­ally since 1996 – how is that a bub­ble? And take off 2% for infla­tion, so it is more like 1–6%. Whoo. And sales have remained awfully steady for a decade now, how is that a bub­ble? Sure, more con­dos that houses, but if you can’t see the demo­graph­ics behind that, then I can’t help you.

Prices of single-family homes in the city are con­tin­u­ing to rise due to the lack of avail­able prop­er­ties and space con­straints on build­ing. Homes are at a record pre­mium of $204,000 ($200,866) to their high-rise coun­ter­parts, accord­ing to Real­Net data. Since 2009, condo prices have risen steadily 25%, com­pared to a 45% spike for low-rises over the same period.

Com­ment: The dif­fer­ence can be even higher than that. I think you are talk­ing new, since Real­net tracks new devel­op­ments. But in the resale mar­ket, con­dos are aver­ag­ing around $350–360,000 while detached homes are now over $900,000 – on average.

Still the Toronto Real Estate Board, or TREB, fore­casts the slow­est over­all growth since 2008 this year, with aver­age home prices of $515,000 in 2013, a 3.6% advance over 2012. The board fore­casts 80,000 total hous­ing sales this year, a 6.5% decline from last year and what would be the steep­est decline since 2008.

Com­ment: What? We are now call­ing “only” a 3.6% price rise a prob­lem? This is a sign of some­thign bad? Seri­ously? Peo­ple used to say 8% annual increases were a sure bub­ble, now 3.6% is a sign of mar­ket col­lapse? Really? And we tend to for­get that 2011 was a crazy year and last year would have been just as bad had the new mort­gage rules not changed things halfway through the year. If we have 80–85,000 sales, then it is right in line with the 10-year trend. Again, not the begin­ning of the apoc­olypse. Please, con­text folks. Saves me a lot of typing!

Two mar­kets

It’s a tale of two mar­kets when it comes to price growth,” said Jason Mer­cer, head econ­o­mist at TREB. “On the low-rise side of the mar­ket it’s been extremely tight. There’s a lot of com­pe­ti­tion out there and lots of inven­tory. On the condo side, you’ve got quite a bit of supply.”

Com­ment: Yet they both sell and both increase in value over time.

The boom in some ways has helped reg­u­late the sup­ply com­ing to mar­ket, Lamb said. Devel­op­ers are all simul­ta­ne­ously build­ing a record num­ber of units, which means there isn’t enough con­struc­tion equip­ment such as cranes, or enough work­ers to go around, delay­ing sales, con­struc­tion, and occu­pancy. Devel­op­ers saw this com­ing more than a year ago, Lamb said.

That may not be enough to engi­neer a soft-landing.

We had a hous­ing bub­ble in 1989 that burst, so there’s an exam­ple of where the gov­ern­ment pol­icy did not cre­ate a soft land­ing,” Craig Alexan­der, senior econ­o­mist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, said in a phone inter­view from Toronto. “Real estate has gen­er­ally been more volatile than the over­all econ­omy and it’s tended to under­per­form dur­ing reces­sions and then rebound early in the eco­nomic recovery.”

Com­ment: There was no gov­ern­ment pol­icy in 1989. Peo­ple went crazy spec­u­lat­ing and pushed prices up 127% in about 15 months. Then, it stopped. Dead. And prices dropped. But they never went below where they were when it began. Sure, if you bought at the peak you had to wait until about 2006 to see your house worth the same again, but that was some­thing very very dif­fer­ent than now. Peo­ple need to stop com­par­ing it. A 127% jump in a lit­tle over a year is very dif­fer­ent that 5–6% a year for a decade and a half.

Land demand

Demand for space to develop down­town remains strong. Res­i­den­tial land trans­ac­tions hit a record $2.75 bil­lion dol­lars last year, encom­pass­ing all trans­ac­tions for res­i­den­tial prop­erty, land to build res­i­den­tial prop­er­ties, and for mixed– use pur­poses, accord­ing to RealNet.

Hous­ing starts have also begun to rise again after reach­ing the low­est level in almost two years in Jan­u­ary. They rose for a sec­ond month in Feb­ru­ary to a 184,028 annual rate.

On lower vol­ume, the hous­ing price is still creep­ing higher — in the equity mar­ket that doesn’t last, it’s a diver­gence,” said Jef­frey Burchell, fund man­ager at Aston Hill Finan­cial Inc., which man­ages $6.7 bil­lion in North Amer­ica. “You run for the hills when you see that.”

Com­ment: What? That does not even make sense to me… And why are we ask­ing an asset man­ager to com­ment on real estate? I don’t com­ment on the stock market.

Aston Hill owns shares of Inter­Rent Real Estate Invest­ment Trust, an Ottawa-based res­i­den­tial mul­tires­i­dence man­ager that owns about 4,700 units in Ontario.

If you see the mar­ket going up on low vol­ume, you just sell every­thing and walk away for a while,” Burchell said. “It’s bizarre that hous­ing prices are still going up but volume’s down because all it does is it takes less to tip it all over.”

Com­ment: That does not make sense either. If vol­ume is down, it is because there is less sup­ply. High demand and low sup­ply means lower over­all sales. High demand and lower sup­ply also pushes prices up. I am con­fused how this is read as a bad thing.

—————————————————————————————————–
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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  • New in Toronto real estate: The Perry Condos

    Robyn Urback – blogTO

    The Perry Con­dos is an Avenue and Dav­en­port midrise set to receive occu­pants some­time next year. This build­ing offers all the lux­u­ries you never knew you needed – a piano lounge, read­ing room, and peo­ple wear­ing white gloves – just so long as you’re pre­pared to pay. Units start decep­tively low in price at just shy of $400,000, but if you’re keen on a sep­a­rate shower and soaker tub, mul­ti­ple bath­rooms, and room for actual full-sized fur­ni­ture, you should be ready to fork over some seri­ous cash. Here is a closer look at The Perry Con­dos.

    SPECS

    Address: 128 Pears Avenue
    Floors: 11
    Total num­ber of units: 45
    Ele­va­tors: 2
    Types of units: One bed­room, one-plus-library, two-bedroom, two-plus-library, town­home
    Unit sizes (in square feet): 540‑1785
    Ceil­ing heights: 9.0′-10.0′
    Prices from: $385,990
    Park­ing: $45,000
    Locker: $6,000
    Main­te­nance fees: $0.58
    Devel­oper: Man­souri Liv­ing
    Archi­tect: Young + Wright/IBI Group Architects/GH3
    Inte­rior Design: The Design Agency
    Ameni­ties: Piano lounge, meet­ing room, library, concierge, valet, guest suite, gar­den
    Expected occu­pancy: Sep­tem­ber 2014

    THE GOOD

    This is one area that will never go out of style. Of course, this isn’t the Park­dale–is-suddenly-hip-type style, but rather, a ven­er­a­bil­ity that is much more estab­lished in gen­eral regard. In that way, an invest­ment in The Perry would prob­a­bly offer a lit­tle more peace of mind (in the long term, at least) than, say, a condo pur­chase in Cork­town or King West that might waver based on rep­u­ta­tion and whether a night­club moves in next door. That just won’t hap­pen at Avenue and Davenport.

    While it cer­tainly isn’t the most “hap­pen­ing” of neigh­bour­hoods (excite­ment might be lim­ited to the new arrange­ments at the nearby flower shops), Perry res­i­dents will have some superb din­ing and café options close by, as well as (splurge) shop­ping options down the road, Rams­den Park next door, and acces­si­bil­ity in the form of Rosedale, Dupont, and Bay sub­ways sta­tions all about a 15 minute-walk away. Of course, for the buy­ers who opt for a million-dollar “Two Bed­room Plus Library” condo, I doubt nearby pub­lic tran­sit will be much of a sell­ing point.

    Now, it’s easy to laud a million-dollar condo that’s plush with plenty of lux­u­ries (sep­a­rate shower and bath­tub in the mas­ter ensuite, 2.5 baths, sep­a­rate liv­ing and din­ing spaces), but I’m keep­ing an eye out for the non-venture-capitalist types who might want to keep their pur­chase, oh, under half a mil­lion dol­lars. And yes, The Perry has some quite accept­able options. Take the small­est unit – the 540 square foot one-bedroom option. Equipped with a 61 square foot bal­cony, the condo is quite func­tional with a proper, window-outfitted bed­room (which, sadly, is not always the case with Toronto con­dos), a cor­ner kitchen with an island and pre­mium Gagge­nau appli­ances, hard­wood floors, and an open foyer space.

    It’s def­i­nitely a step up from lam­i­nate and natural-light-free bed­rooms, which is what you can some­times find for the same price in an arguably less desir­able spot in the city. If I had my pick and unlim­ited funds, I’d absolutely go for the 1,300 square foot two-bed-plus-library, but down here on earth, the 500-something-square-foot one-bedroom would cer­tainly do, too.

    THE BAD

    That dreaded phrase – “Priced from…” You never really know what it means until you sit down to cross your T’s, or, more appro­pri­ately, add in your zeros. The cost from the get-go is already pretty steep at around $700 per square foot, and that fig­ure will likely only go up based on unit loca­tion in the build­ing, date of clos­ing, and per­haps the mood of the sales agent that morn­ing. It’s also some­what mis­lead­ing to say that Perry units are “priced from” $389,990, when the next low­est fig­ure jumps a whop­ping $87,000 to $472,990. I guess that’s the price of a build­ing with a “piano lounge” and ensuite “libraries” instead of “dens.”

    At that price point, how­ever, you have to won­der why some­one would opt for a one-bedroom condo – even if it is walk­ing dis­tance to Hazel­ton Lanes – over a semi– with some land that is per­haps a lit­tle fur­ther from the core. Did I just answer my own question?

    The Perry is def­i­nitely an aes­thetic improve­ment over the park­ing lot pre­vi­ously occu­py­ing the spot, but I can’t help but think that the struc­ture comes off as some­what generic when con­sid­er­ing the pro­fuse use of glass in seem­ingly every new Toronto condo. Yorkville is one that can get away with a lit­tle brick and stone – a more clas­sic, time­less exte­rior façade. Glass, in this case, just seems a lit­tle too easy.

    THE VERDICT

    An easy “yes” for trust fund babies.

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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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