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Search Results for: rivertowne

Riverdale

Riverdale is a thriv­ing res­i­den­tial neigh­bour­hood in Toronto, located just east of the down­town core. Since its amend­ment to the City of Toronto in 1884, it has devel­oped a stature as a neigh­bour­hood of inde­pen­dent arts, with sev­eral inde­pen­dent gal­leries located along Queen Street East. The res­i­den­tial land­scape within Riverdale is made up pri­mar­ily of Vic­to­rian and Edwar­dian style homes, con­structed in the 1800s as board­ing rooms for the working-class. Many of the res­i­dences have since been rede­vel­oped into homes for young fam­i­lies with homes redesigned to fit the tree-lined streetscape. The has dra­mat­i­cally increased the hous­ing value over the years and with many young pro­fes­sion­als as some of the cur­rent res­i­dents, Riverdale is now a trendy and expen­sive res­i­den­tial district.

The neighbourhood’s char­ac­ter is also defined by the CN Rail­way, which sep­a­rates the area into two dis­tricts, North Riverdale (north of the tracks) which is pri­mar­ily res­i­den­tial (for the excep­tion of Ger­rard Square Mall and The Dan­forth and South Riverdale (south to the Lakeshore) where a more afflu­ent and wealthy char­ac­ter is seen in the bistros and cof­fee shops located along Queen Street East.

Riverdale is also home to three large recre­ational parks; Riverdale Park, adja­cent to the Don River, With­row Park, in the North Riverdale, and Jim­mie Simp­son Park, in the South. These three parks serve as great land­marks within the neigh­bour­hood that many res­i­dents use for var­i­ous activ­i­ties, from swim­ming in out­door pools to tobog­gan­ing down the steep hills in Riverdale Park dur­ing the win­ter­time. These are the most com­mon out­door spaces within the area and accord­ing to Toronto’s Offi­cial Plan, are to be pre­served as an area of green space in the years to come.

South Riverdale, as its name sug­gests, is the south­ern half of the Riverdale neigh­bour­hood. Its approx­i­mate bound­aries are: the Don Val­ley Park­way to the west, Jones Ave. to the east, Ger­rard Street East to the north, and Lake Shore Boule­vard to the south.

Map of Riverdale

Map show­ing North Riverdale and South Riverdale

South Riverdale com­prises many smaller neighbourhoods:

River­side

River­side, for­merly known as the Queen Broad­view Vil­lage is a small neigh­bour­hood located within the larger neigh­bour­hood of South Riverdale. Def­i­nite bound­aries have never been drawn for River­side, but accord­ing to the River­side Busi­ness Improve­ment Area Plan’s def­i­n­i­tions it can be assumed that the bor­ders are the Don River to the west, Ger­rard St. East to the north, Logan Avenue to the east and East­ern Ave. to the south.

River­side is a mixed income and largely mul­ti­cul­tural neigh­bour­hood cur­rently expe­ri­enc­ing a trend of gen­tri­fi­ca­tion along Queen St. East and Broad­view Ave. While it is a small neigh­bour­hood it is home to sev­eral places of note such as the for­mer Don Destruc­tor, Toronto’s only garbage incin­er­a­tor, and Don Mount Court, a social hous­ing project that is under rede­vel­op­ment and will be rebuilt as part of a mixed social hous­ing and mar­ket value com­mu­nity. The mar­ket value por­tion is being sold under the name River­towne. Unques­tion­ably, the biggest land­mark in the neigh­bour­hood is the New Broad­view House Hotel, a romanesque hotel con­structed in 1893 that was the tallest struc­ture in South Riverdale for sev­eral decades. Other major land­marks include the Ralph Thorn­ton Com­mu­nity Cen­tre, Broad­view Lofts, and The Opera House.

The area was once home to a large young pop­u­la­tion which is evi­dent in the clus­ter of schools just east of Broad­view Ave. Dun­das Jr. Pub­lic School is the res­i­dent school for chil­dren in kinder­garten through to fifth grade, after which they are trans­ferred over to Queen Alexan­dra Sr. Pub­lic School which sees stu­dents through to eighth grade. It is also home First Nations School of Toronto, a cul­tural sur­vival school that places heavy empha­sis on abo­rig­i­nal val­ues and cul­ture, and the cur­rent loca­tion of SEED Alter­na­tive Sec­ondary School, Canada’s first pub­lic alter­na­tive school.

Riverdale Farm

Riverdale Farm

East Chi­na­town

Toronto’s sec­ond largest ‘china town’, also known as East Chi­na­town is found at Broad­view & Gerrard.

Stu­dio District

The south­ern part of South Riverdale, just north of the Port Lands, is what’s called the Stu­dio Dis­trict. Indus­trial ware­houses along Lakeshore Avenue house pro­duc­tion stu­dios and many peo­ple work­ing in film and tele­vi­sion live in the old Vic­to­ri­ans found along the area’s side streets. Car­law and Queen has become an arts hub, with many artists choos­ing to run their stu­dios from the var­i­ous work-live lofts.

Blake-Jones

Blake-Jones is a sec­tion of tree-lined streets with res­i­dences built from the 1870s to 1930s. The neigh­bour­hood extends along Jones Avenue com­menc­ing at the ceme­tery south of Strath­cona and extend­ing down to Hunter. It is bor­dered by Dan­forth Avenue to the north, Pape Avenue to the west, Green­wood Avenue to the east and the CN Rail­way tracks just south of Riverdale/Boultbee Avenue to the south. Houses along Blake Street are more afford­able in this neigh­bour­hood than in many areas of the city because most of the homes are semi-detached. There are also a sig­nif­i­cant amount of res­i­dents within pub­lic hous­ing, resid­ing in apart­ment and town­house com­plex of Blake/Boultbee, owned by Toronto Com­mu­nity Hous­ing. With a 33.3% unem­ploy­ment rate in youth aged 15–19 (City of Toronto, 2006), the Blake-Jones cor­ri­dor of Riverdale has seen an increase in crime within recent years.

There are three local ele­men­tary schools zoned to the area; Blake Street (which also houses East end Alter­na­tive), Earl Grey, and Pape Avenue. The high school that is zoned to the area is Riverdale Col­le­giate Insti­tute. There is also an alter­na­tive high school, East­ern Com­merce, in the Donlands/Danforth area.

The neigh­bour­hood is served by the Pape, Don­lands, and Green­wood sub­way sta­tions and the 72 Pape and 83 Jones bus routes and is also home to the Green­wood Sub­way Yard, a land­mark within the area.

Riverdale Real Estate

Riverdale Real Estate

The Pocket

Located within Blake-Jones is an area res­i­dents refer to as The Pocket. Over time there have been some dif­fer­ences on the exact def­i­n­i­tion of the area, but cur­rently the Pocket is under­stood to be “acces­si­ble only from the west along Jones Avenue”. This would indi­cate that the area would be bor­dered by Chatham Street at the north (which itself is not acces­si­ble from Jones), and on the south­ern end by Boult­bee Ave. The East­ern side is bor­dered by the TTC Green­wood yard.

The name “The Pocket” was cre­ated by area res­i­dents dur­ing a plan­ning ses­sion attended by Susan McMur­ray, also an edi­tor of a newslet­ter for the area. The name has stuck in part because of the “vil­lage feel” of the com­mu­nity, and has become well used by res­i­dents and real­tors in the area. The Pocket has been expe­ri­enc­ing a gen­tri­fi­ca­tion sim­i­lar of that to the most of Riverdale and other neigh­bour­hoods within Toronto. For The Pocket, this started in the 1990s. The neigh­bour­hood is listed as one the ten hottest areas in Toronto Life and is described as “cov­eted” by the Globe and Mail indi­cat­ing that buy­ers will pay a pre­mium to live in the com­mu­nity. The Pocket has an above aver­age num­ber of peo­ple from the Mus­lim and Greek Ortho­dox com­mu­ni­ties liv­ing in the area.

The area has ben­e­fited from a strong group of vol­un­teers who have done much to make the area safer and pret­tier. Such projects as clean­ing up and renam­ing Ben Kerr Lane, an annual street party on Daw­son Avenue, street sales, orga­nized pot lucks, not to men­tion a great num­ber of improve­ments to Phin Park. Phin Park has had a num­ber of mature trees planted along its cen­tral lighted walk­way, an out­door ice rink cre­ated every win­ter, the place­ment of large boul­ders removed dur­ing street work, and the build­ing of a gazebo next to the play­ground for par­ents to cool off while their chil­dren play. Through­out the year there are events at the park orga­nized and paid for by the com­mu­nity includ­ing monthly movie nights and an excel­lent fire­works show on Vic­to­ria Day. Another beau­ti­fi­ca­tion project included build­ing a small orchard and com­mu­nity gar­den area north of the Green­wood TTC yard.

Other

Some Riverdale res­i­dents dif­fer­en­ti­ate between “upper” and “lower” Riverdale. “Upper Riverdale” is char­ac­ter­ized as the part of the neigh­bour­hood north of Riverdale Ave., and “Lower Riverdale” is the area south of Riverdale Ave. In terms of the qual­ity of the hous­ing sup­ply, homes built in “Upper Riverdale” are more likely to be ren­o­vated, but “Lower Riverdale” con­tains more orig­i­nal and clas­sic designs of the late 19th cen­tury. There are a num­ber of remark­able century-old homes built on Simp­son and Lan­g­ley Avenues, the lat­ter street named after Toronto’s well-known early 20th cen­tury archi­tect, and the for­mer fea­tur­ing the old­est Vic­to­rian houses in Riverdale. Of note, Simp­son Avenue is home to the orig­i­nal six houses of Riverdale; located at the west end of the street and locally known as the ‘Six Sis­ters.’ The area bounded by Dun­das St. East in the south, Jones Ave. to the east, the rail­way tracks to the north, and Car­law Ave. to the west is also referred to by local res­i­dents as “Bad­gerow,” after a res­i­den­tial street that runs through the cen­tre of that area. This pocket includes the leg­endary Maple Leaf Tav­ern, as well as a Sikh tem­ple, Turk­ish cul­tural cen­tre and Jew­ish ceme­tery, in addi­tion to the Ger­rard Square shop­ping mall.

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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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    Dono­van Vin­cent – Toronto Star

    They’re not quite teenagers but clearly at that impres­sion­able age when ado­les­cent swag­ger starts creep­ing in.

    It’s a bright Sat­ur­day after­noon, and the group of boys is exchang­ing friendly ban­ter on the doorsteps of a sub­si­dized home in the for­mer Don Mount hous­ing com­plex, just east of the Don River.

    A stranger approaches and asks them what they think of their new neigh­bours, the condo own­ers who’ve recently started mov­ing in.

    Uh-uh, it’s not going to work,” one of them offers.

    Why?” he’s asked.

    It just wasn’t meant to be,” the boy replies.

    Don Mount — or River­towne, as some are renam­ing it — is, like Regent Park, under­go­ing a mas­sive over­haul that is trans­form­ing the com­mu­nity from 100 per cent pub­lic hous­ing to a mixed-income model.

    Key to the Don Mount revi­tal­iza­tion is a con­certed effort by Toronto Com­mu­nity Hous­ing Corp. — which oper­ates the sub­si­dized units — local city coun­cil­lor Paula Fletcher and oth­ers to encour­age social cohe­sion between the condo pur­chasers and pub­lic hous­ing tenants.

    There’s even a “com­mu­nity devel­op­ment coor­di­na­tor” whose job is to forge pos­i­tive rela­tions between the two groups.

    One indi­ca­tor of suc­cess is the dif­fer­ences start to melt away … and peo­ple begin work­ing together in a pos­i­tive community-building atmos­phere, regard­less of owner or ten­ant,” says coor­di­na­tor Dale Hamilton.

    Laud­able goal or pipe dream?

    If the young boy’s atti­tude is any indi­ca­tion, it’ll be a chal­lenge bring­ing peo­ple of dif­fer­ent races, classes, incomes and edu­ca­tions together in the reborn Don Mount, a com­mu­nity with a trou­bled past.

    At Regent Park, just west across the Don Val­ley, the scale of the revi­tal­iza­tion is much larger, and what has emerged there so far pro­vides lim­ited oppor­tu­ni­ties for intense inter­ac­tion between income groups.

    That’s because as Regent Park’s old stock is grad­u­ally being destroyed, the new struc­tures that have sprung up to this point, includ­ing a con­do­minium and a high-rise with sub­si­dized units for fam­i­lies, are fairly self-contained — sep­a­rated from each other and the older Regent Park.

    Don Mount/Rivertowne, a devel­op­ment near Dun­das St. E and Broad­view, has been evolv­ing dif­fer­ently, however.

    With the first phase com­plete, rows of attrac­tive town­home–style build­ings now over­look the Don Val­ley Park­way. Delib­er­ately, the builder con­structed sub­si­dized units and mar­ket con­do­mini­ums that look vir­tu­ally iden­ti­cal from a dis­tance. Dif­fer­ences in design details, such as win­dow trim­mings, are only appar­ent up close. The pub­lic hous­ing ten­ants were removed from their dwellings pre-demolition and reset­tled later in rebuilt units.

    The goal was hav­ing build­ings that didn’t accen­tu­ate dif­fer­ences between the two groups, TCHC offi­cials have stated.

    Notably, many of the units in Don Mount/Rivertowne — there will be roughly 230 pub­lic hous­ing units and nearly 200 con­dos when the project is com­plete — are very close together.

    Encour­ag­ing inter­ac­tion among res­i­dents, regard­less of social stand­ing, “was the orig­i­nal intent,” explains Tony Whitaker, vice-president of sales and mar­ket­ing for Intra­corp Devel­op­ment Inc., one of the build­ing part­ners. He adds that TCHC was on board with the approach.

    And pur­chasers of the now sold-out con­dos were well aware of this going in, he noted.

    We tried to sell to end-users, rather than investors,” Whitaker says, adding, “Any­one look­ing to buy there would have an enlight­ened atti­tude,” about mixed housing.

    Still, strolling through the com­mu­nity one gets the sense of a divide.

    As she watches her rel­a­tives strug­gle with a couch that’s too wide to fit through her front door on move-in day, condo owner Cici Gatere, 39, a pub­lic health worker, says she intends to get to know her neigh­bours regard­less of their backgrounds.

    We’re all in this together, and we’re shar­ing the neigh­bour­hood,” she says enthusiastically.

    The same for new owner Chris­tine Kirch, 44, a reg­is­tered nurse at St. Michael’s Hos­pi­tal, who’s excited to be liv­ing in her first condo, and that it’s in a mixed-income community.

    The last apart­ment I lived in was in the Beaches, an afflu­ent neigh­bour­hood,” Kirch says in an inter­view in the din­ing room of her condo. “But I was look­ing for, how do I put it? The mixed neigh­bour­hood was an attrac­tion. I like mix­ing with peo­ple of dif­fer­ent back­grounds … It’s just more interesting.”

    But Pamela Brown, 34, a long-time res­i­dent who lives in one of the new pub­lic hous­ing units, says she has no time to “mix and mingle.

    I’m not try­ing to have any friends,” she says. “I stay to myself.”

    Another res­i­dent — a sin­gle mom in pub­lic hous­ing who asks to be iden­ti­fied only as “L” — expresses sen­ti­ments sim­i­lar to Brown’s.

    I think the condo peo­ple will sep­a­rate them­selves…” she says, adding that they may not like the sight of young peo­ple from the com­mu­nity con­gre­gat­ing, or the fact the area can get a bit noisy in the summertime.

    (The condo crowd) might not like the way things are here,” she adds.

    Atti­tudes like hers aren’t sur­pris­ing if one con­sid­ers results from research pub­lished last year by the Uni­ver­sity of Chicago’s school of social ser­vice admin­is­tra­tion. Explor­ing inter­ac­tions among res­i­dents in two new mixed-income projects, researchers found “low to mod­est” lev­els of casual inter­ac­tion — essen­tially con­ver­sa­tions in passing.

    The study, in which 65 peo­ple — about 80 per cent of whom were African Amer­i­can, 9 per cent white and 9 per cent “other” — found most respon­dents see­ing “sig­nif­i­cant ben­e­fit to main­tain­ing some distance.”

    Despite its new look and attempts at rebrand­ing, Don Mount/Rivertowne car­ries some bag­gage from the pre-demolition days, when it was infa­mous, a past that res­i­dents like Brown and “L” feel could get in the way of bring­ing peo­ple together now.

    There were drug deal­ing, rob­beries and a few mur­ders. The com­mu­nity was a sham­bles, and not just socially. In 2000, an engi­neer­ing study found exten­sive con­crete dete­ri­o­ra­tion in the orig­i­nal build­ings, which were con­structed in 1968.

    Demo­li­tion began in 2004.

    The new sub­si­dized units in phase one were com­pleted first and the dis­placed ten­ants were reset­tled two years ago. As with Regent Park, the sale of con­dos has been used to help finance the rede­vel­op­ment. (Phase two has already begun and is expected to wrap up soon.)

    Hamil­ton, the com­mu­nity devel­op­ment coor­di­na­tor, says chal­lenges and con­flicts are “inevitable” in any com­mu­nity, but she’s con­fi­dent the two-year pilot project she’s spear­head­ing is paving the way for open dia­logue among residents.

    Action teams” have been or are being estab­lished to tackle con­cerns such as the envi­ron­ment, train­ing and jobs for res­i­dents, seniors’ and youth issues, and crime and safety, she explains.

    One recent event pro­vides an exam­ple of the oppor­tu­ni­ties, but also the chal­lenges, for rela­tion­ship build­ing in the neigh­bour­hood, says Hamil­ton. The event was called a choco­late foun­tain wel­com­ing party and it was held a few weeks ago to greet the new condo res­i­dents.

    Hamilton’s task was tak­ing some of the com­mu­nity hous­ing ten­ants with her to knock on the doors of the new­com­ers and invite them.

    There was some hes­i­ta­tion on the part of some (pub­lic hous­ing ten­ants), who felt it was like cross­ing a bor­der,” Hamil­ton recalls. “They were ner­vous and won­dered how they’d be received. Some just weren’t will­ing to go.”

    But the event turned out being a suc­cess with some 90 peo­ple attend­ing, about 60 per cent ten­ants, 30 per cent condo own­ers and 10 per cent peo­ple who live in single-family houses nearby.

    Hamil­ton proudly points out that when the party ended, one cou­ple who own a condo invited some of the ten­ants back to their unit for an after-party.

    Paula Fletcher, the city coun­cil­lor whose Ward 30 takes in Don Mount/Rivertowne, hopes a planned two-acre com­mu­nity park will also help gal­va­nize res­i­dents. Right now there’s a small par­kette in the area, but it isn’t very “ani­mated,” she points out.

    A ground­break­ing is expected some­time this sum­mer, and city parks offi­cials hope work on the new green space can be com­pleted in early sum­mer next year.

    How do peo­ple come together in a new com­mu­nity?” says Fletcher. “They come together through pub­lic spaces.

    You have to help social cohe­sion along. It’s like a birthing process.”

    Fletcher’s dream is to see Don Mount/Rivertowne become a suc­cess like the St. Lawrence neigh­bour­hood, a mixed-income com­mu­nity of munic­i­pal rent-geared-to-income hous­ing, co-operatives, pri­vate non-profit rentals and mar­ket condos.

    St. Lawrence is hailed as a model for a planned com­mu­nity of hous­ing that works well — as opposed to some of the neigh­bour­hoods across the city that over time evolved organ­i­cally into mixed-income areas, such as Park­dale.

    Despite the cyn­i­cism expressed by the boy out in front of the sub­si­dized unit, hous­ing expert Scott Sorli believes Don Mount/Rivertowne’s youngest res­i­dents will steer change and social cohe­sion there.

    Maybe it’s too late for some of the older res­i­dents, and maybe that’s not a big deal,” says Sorli, a long-time Toronto res­i­dent cur­rently teach­ing a stu­dio in mass hous­ing at the Uni­ver­sity of Water­loo. “You can’t force peo­ple to be friends.”

    But chil­dren will go to the same schools and become “obliv­i­ous” to dif­fer­ences in class, income, race, etc., Sorli says, adding: “My real dream here is that the daugh­ter of a lawyer will fall in love with the son of a wel­fare recipient.”

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    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion  -  416−388−1960

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    Riverdale regeneration at Rivertowne

    From New Homes & Con­dos Magazine

    Pre­ced­ing the mas­sive Regent Park rebuild­ing, River­towne is quickly becom­ing one of the most highly antic­i­pated regen­er­a­tions of a city neigh­bour­hood in Toronto, and with good rea­son. This mixed-income infill com­mu­nity is a prod­uct of the col­lab­o­ra­tion between devel­op­ers Intra­corp and Mar­ion Hill Devel­op­ment Corp., who have teamed up with Toronto Com­mu­nity Hous­ing Cor­po­ra­tion, Canada’s largest social-housing provider, to bring a breath of fresh air into one of Toronto’s old­est neigh­bour­hoods. River­towne will include 176 rent-geared-to-income town­homes, a four-storey apart­ment build­ing hous­ing 56 affordable-housing units; and 187 one– and two-storey stacked, market-priced town­homes geared towards sin­gles and young couples.

    What makes Intra­corp such a suc­cess­ful builder? It all begins with insight into home­buy­ers’ needs; the vision to design com­mu­ni­ties with a unique flair; and the exper­tise to build them. Intra­corp has proven it has what it takes, hav­ing built over 10,000 homes and high-rise con­do­mini­ums in Toronto, Cal­gary and Van­cou­ver over the last 25 years. From the coun­try club res­i­dences of Castle­more, Brampton’s exec­u­tive ravine com­mu­nity of Cas­tles, the tra­di­tional her­itage com­mu­nity of Lib­erty Cross­ing in Bow­manville, and the unique con­do­minium suites at the Pan­tages Hotel and Spa in down­town Toronto, the Intra­corp name dots all cor­ners of the GTA.

    Over the last 15 years, Mar­ion Hill Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion and its affil­i­ated com­pa­nies have designed, built and devel­oped over $350 mil­lion of res­i­den­tial, com­mer­cial and insti­tu­tional projects. Mar­ion Hill’s exper­tise and focus is devel­op­ing and build­ing master-planned com­mu­ni­ties includ­ing lux­ury cus­tom homes through­out North Amer­ica, with offices in Toronto, Dal­las and New Jersey.

    Together, Intra­corp and Mar­ion Hill bring exper­tise and pro­fes­sional atten­tion to every detail at River­towne. Pre­vi­ous joint ven­tures include the waterfront-inspired town­homes at Canoe Land­ing in Pick­et­ing; One Deer Park, a 58-suite mid-rise on St. Clair Avenue West; 100 semi-detached homes at Shaw Gar­dens in down­town Toronto; and Strath­more, a con­do­minium town­home com­mu­nity in Pick­er­ing. At River­towne, as with all of their devel­op­ments, they are com­mit­ted to ensur­ing total cus­tomer satisfaction.

    Bor­dered by Dun­das Street East to the north and Queen Street East to the south, between the Don Val­ley Park­way and Broad­view Avenue, the neigh­bour­hood boasts all the con­ve­niences of a down­town loca­tion while offer­ing a dis­tinct “com­mu­nity” feel.

    It is the eclec­tic mix of old and new; com­fort­able and cutting-edge that appeals to its res­i­dents and draws vis­i­tors in. From the old-style shops of Queen Street East inter­wo­ven with con­tem­po­rary bistros and bou­tiques to the diver­sity of res­i­dents and vis­i­tors to the area, there’s no other like it. You’ll appre­ci­ate the neigh­bour­ing park­land – a rare find right in the city. The down­town core is a short trip west; the Beach is to the east; the Dis­tillery Dis­trict is to the south. Take a stroll to Chi­na­town East or Lit­tle India for an authen­tic cul­tural expe­ri­ence, or sim­ply step out­side your door and explore the count­less ameni­ties of Dun­das Street, Broad­view and Queen, where you can con­ve­niently catch the TTC. You are lit­er­ally in the mid­dle of it all.

    The new homes at River­towne are a reflec­tion of Riverdale’s revi­tal­iza­tion – they’re con­tem­po­rary, mod­ern and con­ve­nient. With a vari­ety of town­home designs, rang­ing from one-bedroom-plus-den, two-bedroom and two-bedroom-plus-den, up to 1,118 sq. ft. and start­ing from an afford­able $219,990, includ­ing park­ing, this com­mu­nity offers some­thing for everyone.

    The River­towne homes fea­ture archi­tec­turally con­trolled exte­rior colours and mate­ri­als to ensure a pleas­ing streetscape. And wel­com­ing you to your home: an invit­ing front porch; Juliet bal­conies or ter­races; walk-out patios; or rooftop ter­races (all as per plan). Steep roof pitches enhance exteriors.

    Inte­rior fin­ishes are spec­tac­u­lar, to say the least. Dec­o­ra­tive wrought iron or nat­ural oak-finish pick­ets and rail­ing on stair­wells offer time­less beauty. Imported ceramic tile floor­ing graces the foy­ers, pow­der rooms and bath­rooms. Engi­neered lam­i­nate floor­ing in the living/dining room, kitchen and main hall is a clas­sic choice. Choose between premium-quality nylon or berber car­pets to make bed­rooms extra cozy. Mir­rored slid­ing closet doors in the mas­ter bed­room and foyer, and brushed chrome inte­rior door hard­ware are small details that will not go unno­ticed. Cen­tral air means you’ll be com­fort­able in your home all year round, no mat­ter what Mother Nature throws as you.

    Kitchens are fash­ion­able, yet func­tional. Track light­ing with three heads illu­mi­nates the styl­ish Corian coun­ter­tops. Deluxe kitchen cab­i­netry, avail­able in a choice of fin­ishes, offers plenty of space for food prepa­ra­tion and stor­age. Six brand-name appli­ances – black or white fridge, stove, dish­washer and over-the-range microwave, and white stack­able washer/dryer – are a much-appreciated bonus. The glazed ceramic tile back­splash is a gleam­ing fin­ish­ing touch.

    Bath­rooms are sim­ply lux­u­ri­ous – your per­sonal hide­away – fea­tur­ing your choice of deluxe cab­i­netry and Corian coun­ter­top; an acrylic soaker tub; rain shower head; ves­sel sink; and energy-efficient water saver shower and toi­let tanks.

    And the low main­te­nance fee of $155.50 per month means you never have to worry about snow removal; land­scap­ing and main­te­nance; build­ing insur­ance; park­ing garage fees; and water.

    See what the buzz is all about.

    New Homes & Con­dos Mag­a­zine is an excel­lent source of hous­ing infor­ma­tion for those look­ing for infor­ma­tion on new homes in Ontario, Canada. We offer the most up-to-date infor­ma­tion on new com­mu­ni­ties across the Greater Toronto Area.
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    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960


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