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Category Archives: Toronto Condos

Toronto condo parking spaces can fetch $60K

The resale market for parking spots and condos is steady with some ranging in price up to $60,000. Still, there are a few wrinkles in selling a spot.

Ian Harvey – Toronto Star

With parking a hot commodity for downtown residents who drive, condo owners are taking advantage of the demand and selling their parking spaces.

A spot that was purchased for $18,000 about 15 years ago, for example, was recently sold by its owner for $38,000.

Still, that was a bargain compared to prices that begin at $55,000 — and generate bidding wars — for parking spots in newly built downtown condominiums. Most buildings have fewer parking spaces than condo suites, and many have no visitor parking at all.

Yet even at $40,000 to $60,000, Toronto condo dwellers are still in a sweet spot. In cities such as London, England and New York, parking spots for multi-million-dollar condo units can run up to a cool one million dollars.

In Singapore, one luxury builder has installed a parking elevator to bring owners’ cars to their units where they are off-loaded into a special ensuite parking bay. A home with a two-bay parking garage is $7.7 million.

In Toronto, the resale market for parking spots and condos remains steady with MLS for early March showing some 23 parking spots ranging up to $60,000 and also three lockers for sale with prices from $4,000 to $6,000.

Still, there are a few wrinkles in selling a spot or a locker.

First, read your condominium declaration, says Lorne Shapiro of Basman Smith LLP , a real estate lawyer who works with developers.

“It’s the bible and it will spell out what you can and cannot do,” he said.

Comment: It all depends on whether or not the spot is owned or exclusive use. If you have a deed for the parking spot, you can sell it. If it is a common element that you have exclusive use of, too bad, it stays with the unit and cannot be sold. Same with a locker.

While some older condo corporations may not have anticipated sales of parking spots and storage lockers, most declarations allow sale only to another owner in the building, Shapiro said. And there are reasons why: mainly security.

Assuming it’s permitted, selling a parking spot or locker is the same as selling title to your condo, he said.

“The residential unit, parking spot and locker are all titled and numbered separately so there are no issues with title,” he said. “And you have to pay the maintenance fees on them.”

You also might want to read over your mortgage documents if you’re thinking about “flipping” a parking spot or locker soon after purchase, warns Robert Wong, a real estate broker with Keller Williams Realty . In fact, it’s a good idea to check with your mortgage period.

“If you’ve got a mortgage then the locker or parking spot will likely be included in the value of you condominium,” he said. “If you sell the parking spot or locker, you have changed the value of the property and there could be a problem.”

With more downtown condos going up with fewer parking spots — the 42-storey project at the old Royal Canadian Military Institute on University Ave. near Dundas St., will have none at all — the price for those suites that do have spots, and the resale market for parking spaces, are both escalating.

Politics has also raised its head in the condo parking issue.

The city of Toronto usually demands .67 to .75 parking spaces per unit for most condos and up to 1.1 in some outlying areas but will waive that ratio depending on location.

Homeowners in the Woodbine Ave. and Queen St. E. area in the Beach were recently incensed when they learned a 70-unit condo planned for the neighbourhood would have only 65 spaces — actually more than the requirement. The residents fear an overflow of cars will flood their streets and force those homeowners with street parking further from their regular spots.

Of course, getting a parking spot with a condo all depends on location, location, location. Buyers in the suburbs usually expect parking included the deal, along with a locker, because transit isn’t always close, fast or convenient depending on where they work.

Singles, young couples and empty nesters who buy within the city’s core for the lifestyle, however, aren’t usually interested in parking spots said Jim Ritchie, Tridel’s senior vice president of sales and marketing. Those residents don’t rely on cars and instead use streetcars, subways, bicycles and even shared rides such as ZipCar or AutoShare when they need wheels, he said.

“A car is more important as you move away from the core,” said Ritchie, explaining the demand curve for parking.

“Cars are expensive,” said Debbie Cosic, of In2ition Realty who specializes in marketing and selling new home developments. “Parking spots can add $50,000 to the cost of buying a condo, that’s another $240 a month in mortgage payments. Then’s there $300 a month for the car, $100 a month at least for insurance, gas. That’s nearly $1,000 a month for something you don’t need every day.”

Developers are increasingly reluctant to offer parking, she said. Because the cost of land continues to climb, they have to go higher to create enough units to pay back their investment costs.

This, in turn, means developments with small footprints must go deeper to create multi-level parking floors.

“You’d think the cost would go down as they went down but it’s the opposite, the costs increase the deeper you go to build more parking levels,” Cosic said, adding the extras can also be bargaining chips to make or break a sale.

“In the 905 and outside, if they’re having trouble selling they throw in parking spots and lockers to drive sales.”

Wong agrees.

“It does depend on where you want to buy,” he said. “Typically now, the new condos downtown are selling parking spots and lockers separately. But if you go out a bit, say Parklawn Rd. and Lake Shore Blvd., they might offer to throw one in.”

Even lockers are add-ins to a deal, Wong said, and can be sold off — more likely so because some of the lockers in new buildings are cramped and there is not always a ratio of one locker for each unit.

The mix of units in a development will also dictate parking, Cosic said, noting those buying a two-bedroom unit and planning a family will likely end up getting car. They may anticipate that when they buy, even if they don’t initially need parking. Meanwhile, buyers of small, entry-level units downtown won’t make parking a priority.

Lockers, too, are becoming premium items as condo spaces get tighter, she said. Most start at around $2,500 and go to $7,500, depending on size and location. Lockers in luxury buildings can hit $10,000.

“There are some lockers we’ve put in a project on the same floor — like a pantry — which are really cool,” Cosic said.

“They’re in the nooks and crannies left after the mechanicals, like the plumbing and electrical, are run. Others are part of the parking space which people like, as well.”

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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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New in Toronto Real Estate: The Madison

Sarah Ratch­ford – blgoTO

The Madi­son is a behe­moth condo com­plex under con­struc­tion at Yonge and Eg. The devel­op­ment, due for com­ple­tion in 2015, is com­posed of no fewer than three build­ings, for a total of 644 units. And those don’t seem to be 644 units of blase condo liv­ing, either. The ameni­ties on this prop­erty are pretty decent, with a salt water pool, a sauna, a steam room, and a two-level gym.

There are few in-depth ren­der­ings of the actual suites at this point, but from what is avail­able, they look to be rea­son­ably bright and livable.

SPECS

Address: 101 Eglin­ton Ave. E.
Floors: 33, 30, 8
Total num­ber of units: 260, 230, 154
Types of units: One bed­room, one plus den, two bed­room, two plus den.
Unit sizes (in square feet): 400 to 1,050
Ceil­ing heights: 9′
Prices from (avail­able units): the mid-$200,000s
Main­te­nance fees: $0.54
Devel­oper: Madi­son Homes
Amenities/building fea­tures: 24 hour concierge, fit­ness room, games room, roof deck, movie area, party room, swim­ming pool, sauna.

THE GOOD

Madi­son Homes appears to be pay­ing close atten­tion to the human need for out­door air and green­ery. They’ve included an egal­i­tar­ian ter­race on top of the small­est build­ing, com­plete with bar­be­ques and fire pits. Camp­ing in the city? I think yes. It sounds like most units will have bal­conies as well, which is a bonus when your unit isn’t sweep­ing in size.

THE BAD

It seems there are sus­pi­ciously few win­dows in some of the units. My best guess is the devel­op­ers are try­ing to stun Toron­to­ni­ans into help­less lethargy. The city is grow­ing all the time, and while that’s totally awe­some, the extra food has to come from some­where. Some of the kitchen areas look fairly teensy accord­ing to the floor plans as well, but that’s par for the course at most new developments.

And, as I said last week, Yonge and Eg. is already home to a stag­ger­ing num­ber of condo devel­op­ments. So if you’re look­ing for demo­graphic diver­sity, this might not be the pocket of the city you’re after.

OUR TAKE

In short, this does not look like a bad devel­op­ment. But it doesn’t look espe­cially stel­lar, either. This, alas, is true of so many new devel­op­ments. The ameni­ties are above aver­age even as the units them­selves are pre­dictable. In other words, if you find the area appeal­ing this is a project worth keep­ing an eye on.

—————————————————————————————————–
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.

—————————————————————————————————–

New in Toronto Real Estate: 155 Redpath Condos

Sarah Ratch­ford – blogTO

The Yonge and Eglin­ton area is about to wel­come yet another condo devel­op­ment. This one will land at 155 Red­path Ave, and while it’s still on the mys­te­ri­ous side in that the devel­oper has only released a hand­ful of ren­der­ings, it looks like it might rate pretty well on that whole quality-of-life scale. Or what­ever that’s called. Any­way, this place has a boat­load of ameni­ties with com­par­a­tively low main­te­nance fees. Also, they seem to like yoga — a lot. Chill waves.

SPECS

Address: 155 Red­path Ave.
Floors: 36
Total num­ber of units: 470
Ele­va­tors: Yes
Types of units: Stu­dio, one plus den, two plus den.
Unit sizes (in square feet): 377 to 1500
Ceil­ing heights: N/A
Prices from (avail­able units): $229,900
Main­te­nance fees: $0.49
Devel­oper: Freed Devel­op­ments
Amenities/building fea­tures: Out­door pool & hot tub, out­door shower, pool­side cabana lounge, sun­bathing area, gas fire pit lounge and BBQ, out­door din­ing area, floor amenity space com­plete with a pool table, kitch­enette area, meet­ing lounge, indoor wash­rooms with chang­ing area, sauna, multi-level fit­ness cen­tre, indoor/outdoor yoga facil­ity, gar­dens, party room, deck and lounge areas.

THE GOOD

Though I write about con­dos just about every week, and though I think they clearly make sense when it comes to fos­ter­ing the kind of den­sity we need in the city, I’m less than thrilled with many devel­op­ments. I’m not going to lie, though. This place kind of makes me want to ditch my apart­ment and move on in.

The list of ameni­ties that come with this prop­erty is actu­ally shock­ing. It’s mad­ness. Pool­side cabana lounges, fire pit lounges, multi-level fit­ness centre…I’m sorry? There are resorts in Toronto now, and you can live in one start­ing from the mid-200,000s? Cor­rect me if that doesn’t sound kind of amazing.

The lay­outs look pretty good, too, with pro­por­tional atten­tion given to liv­ing space and bed­rooms. There are large win­dows, and most units offer bal­conies of some sort, as well.

THE BAD

While this place seems like par­adise, it has yet to be built. The main­te­nance fees seem a lit­tle on the low side to sup­port such sup­posed grandeur, but inno­cent until proven guilty is the way it’s gotta go.

The one other issue I take with this prop­erty is some­thing that’s cropped up many weeks in a row. I hate to belabour the issue, but there are rooms with­out win­dows. Clearly, I’m not an archi­tect, but I can’t help but think that win­dows are a par­tic­u­larly impor­tant design component.

OUR TAKE

We have yet to see ren­der­ings that more specif­i­cally reveal what the suites will look like, and obvi­ously that car­ries the most weight. But if they fea­ture bright­ness and the same clean design as the rest of the build­ing, it seems like an ideal spot, if you’re cool with liv­ing at Yonge & Eli­gi­ble. I feel gross even typ­ing that.

—————————————————————————————————–
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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