Tag Archives: condo floor plans
Davisville Village Condos and Condos on Merton Street
Centrally located and popular with young professionals and families, Davisville Village is an attractive area in Midtown Toronto between St. Clair and Eglinton which offers an unprecedented array of condo options. Depending on what part of the neighbourhood you are in, you will see anything from smaller boutique buildings and converted office buildings, to walk-up townhouses and towering high-rises circa the 1970s. Look below to see what the choices offer.
Call Laurin at 416−388−1960 or or email him today if you are interested in any of these Davisville Village or Condos on Merton Street! Please be sure to let us know if you think a condo is missing.
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Domain – 319 Merton StreetIn the heart of pleasant Mt. Pleasant Village, Domain Condos is a condominium development of two buildings at 13 and 14 storeys. With a total of 241 units, available suites range in size from one bedrooms to two bedrooms with den. Balconies or terraces overlook the midtown Toronto skyline. Domain is conveniently located near the plethora of shops, restaurants, and cafes that make the area so charming. There are several amenities in the building, such as an indoor swimming pool, whirlpool, party room, and landscaped patio. There are also exercise facilities and a games lounge. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
Greenwich Terrace – 111 Merton StreetGreenwich Terrace is a true boutique building and one of the older condos on Merton Street. It started life as an office building, but was converted to residential condominium apartments in the mid-1990s. The suites offer high ceilings, great natural light, roomy terraces, Juliette balconies and well-thought-out floor plans. The condos range from studios up to two-bedroom-plus-dens, some with 3 bathrooms. Amenities include security system, exercise room/gym, party/meeting room, rooftop terrace with BBQs and guest parking. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Metro – 119 & 139 Merton StreetThe Metro at 119 Merton Street and 139 Merton Street offers a range of single storey condos and 2-storey soft lofts. The loft floor plans feature great natural light through floor-to-ceiling windows, soaring 18-foot ceilings. South-facing units offer wonderful views of the greenbelt and the downtown Toronto skyline, which will never be blocked because of Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Right on the Key Gardiner Beltline Trail, bikers and rollerbladers will love this location. Floor plans range from 1-bedroom to 2-bedroom-plus-den configurations. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
180 Merton Townhomes – 180 Merton StreetThese luxurious executive townhomes are located at 180 Merton Street. These Georgian-style towns are their own little gated community. Built by Curated Properties in 2001. They offer exquisite finishings, with marble, beautiful hardwood, crown mouldings, high ceilings, gas fireplaces, private rooftop sundecks with gas lines for BBQs and a gated driveway allowing access to individual built-in garages. Very low monthly maintenance fees, rarely offered for sale. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Rio – 35, 195, 225 & 253 Merton StreetTower 1 at 35 Merton Street was the first of four Rio projects built on Merton Street. The others are at 195, 225 and 253 Merton. Surprisingly, they are named The Rio II, The Rio III and The Rio IV. They are all similar in size and offer suites ranging in size from 1 bedroom, up to 3 bedrooms. Amenities include 24-hour concierge, security system, exercise room and gym, party room, visitor parking, sauna & whirlpool. They are know for their excellent amenities. Merton Street is a hot location, with restaurants, shopping and the subway literally at the end of the block. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Hampton Boutique – 260 Merton StreetThe Hampton Boutique is a small boutique Merton Street condo that features a variety of well laid out 1 and 2 bedroom suites, each offering a balcony or terrace. This intimate & elegant condo in Davisville also has penthouses with unobstructed views from open balconies overlooking gardens and the rose courtyard. Amenities include a common bike storage, party room with billiard table, big screen tv, kitchen and walkout to garden with lots of guest parking. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
151 Merton Townhomes – 151 Merton StreetSandwiched between Rio IV and The Metro, you will these lovely little towns. Set in a tranquil courtyard setting near the Mount Pleasant Cemetery, each of the 17 townhomes at 151 Merton Street boasts three-four bedrooms and three bathrooms. Near the subway, shops, restaurants, and the Beltline Trail, they’re great value for its size and location. The security of underground parking is available. Each unit also includes a private patio for outdoor entertaining. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Parkside – 245 Davisville AvenueIf you know the area, then you are familiar with the condo with the round balconies. The intimate lowrise condominium apartment building located on the South West corner of the intersection of Davisville & Mount Pleasant Road, offers suites in a wide range of shapes and sizes. The building overlooks the public green space, baseball, soccer, tennis & playground facilities in June Rowlands Park to the North. The condos range from one bedroom to two bedrooms with a den. The building has a security system, exercise room & gym, recreation room and a guest suite. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
300 Balliol – 300 Balliol Street300 Balliol Street is a condo apartment building located at on the North West corner of Balliol Street and Mount Pleasant Road (one block south of Davisville Ave). This lowrise building offers floor plans ranging from ground floor suites with private walk-out gardens, up to penthouses featuring large private terraces. Smaller one bedrooms and large two-plus-dens, with everything in between. Features include security system, exercise room, recreation room, games room. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
Chaplin Place – 20 Glebe Road WestRarely available, Chaplin Place is a small boutique building In Midtown Toronto near Yonge and Davisville. The condos are large, some one one level and others on two. Expect solariums, fireplaces, parking and lockers. Each condo is large, with two bedrooms and two washrooms. Most do not have balconies, as they have solariums, so outdoor space is only available in the ground level units with walkout terraces. Condo fees are rather low considering the age and size of these condos. Commercial tenants are on the main floor and there are no amenities to speak of. Sizes range from around 600 square feet up to over 1,000 square feet. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Phoenix – 1901 Yonge StreetLocated on the South East corner of Yonge Street and Davisville Avenue, this building started life as an office tower, and was converted to condominium loft apartments in the mid-to-late 90s. The lofty suites at The Phoenix are very nicely laid out, offering high ceilings, lots of natural light and quality finishes. Amenities include 24-hour concierge, security system, exercise room, media/recreation room and a rooftop garden. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
The Radius Wide Lofts – 18 Merton StreetThe Radius Lofts are directly above the Ethan Allen shop at the corner of Yonge and Merton. The Radius is just around the corner from some of the finest upscale restaurants, cafes, shops, fresh food and flower markets, clubs, big-screen theatres and the Davisville subway station. There are a total of 80 soft lofts, all with 2–level loft layouts and 18 foot ceilings. All of the suites at 18 Merton have balconies, terraces or both. Amenities include a party room, workout facility – plus the garden terrace with BBQs. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
Le Corbu Lofts – 194 Merton StreetOriginally an office building, Le Corbu Lofts at 194 Merton Street is a rare and popular loft. Located in the south end of Davisville Village, this art-deco inspired building features 34 converted Toronto lofts. The rooftop deck is perfect for hosting your next barbecue, and the exercise room will keep you in shape. The lofts are meant for spacious open-concept living, homey touches such as wood laminate flooring and fireplaces in some suites allow you to take advantage of typical loft characteristics such as ten foot ceilings, while you enjoy all the comforts of home. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
Merton Yonge Condos – 25 Merton StreetMYC – Merton Yonge Condominiums are situated at the corner of Merton and Yonge streets, the 24-storey, glass and steel tower will have floor-to-ceiling windows and wraparound balconies overlooking tree-lined streets, Mount Pleasant Cemetery and the downtown skyline. Suites include 9-foot ceilings, floor to ceiling windows, designer kitchens, hardwood flooring in living areas, granite or caesar stone counter tops in kitchens, marble counter tops in bathrooms, ensuite laundry and stainless steel appliances. Contact us today if this condo interests you. ———- |
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Davisville Village is named for John Davis, who came to Canada from Staffordshire, England in 1840. John Davis was Davisville’s first postmaster and helped found the Davisville Public School. He also operated the Davis Pottery, originally located on Davisville Avenue, which became the Village’s largest employer. Neither the Pottery nor the wood and paper mills that used to be mainstays of the area, currently exist – they made way for residences, shops and businesses long ago. However, the two-storey building that was the site of the former Davisville Post Office is still standing on the north-east corner of Yonge & Davisville.
The south part of Davisville was subdivided in the 1860’s on land owned mostly by the Davis family. The north part of the Village belonged to the Church. This latter tract of land, known as the Davisville Glebe, remained undeveloped until 1911 when it was sold to the Dovercourt Land and Building Company, the same company that oversaw the development of the Lawrence Park neighbourhood.
—————————————————————————————————–
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
The layout payout
How to decipher tricky floorplans
Lisa Van de Ven – National Post
In sales offices across the city, condo buyers are sifting through floorplans trying to imagine themselves living there long before the brick-and-mortar buildings actually exist. By now, Torontonians are used to making purchases based on suite layouts alone, but many of them still don’t know exactly what to look for — at least if you ask Ramsin Khachi.
“I think people owe it to themselves to understand a little more,” says the principal with Khachi Design Group. And he should know. As one of the judges for the Ontario Home Builders’ Association’s annual Awards of Distinction, it’s been his job for the past five years to help choose the “most outstanding” suite layout among the current high- and mid-rise crop.
To do so, he analyzes the submitted plans, trying to see which make the most out of the space allotted, but still stand out at the same time. “You’ve got to balance the funkiness aspect of it with the practicality,” Mr. Khachi says.
Last year, the winner was W2C, a 1,045-square-foot two-bedroom-plus-den unit at The Madison at Yonge and Eglinton by Madison Homes. The corner suite has a split-bedroom layout with a den off the front entry, windows in both bedrooms and a balcony that hugs one corner. “We pay very close attention all the way through to make the space feel as big as possible,” says Nelly Zadanski, Madison’s vice-president. “I think there are ways that you can do that and ways that you can destroy it, too.”
Getting the suite layouts right can mean happy residents and better word of mouth once the building is completed. But “good design takes work,” Mr. Khachi says. The folks behind Madison spent a year tweaking the floorplans to make sure they were “100% satisfied” before they got to market, Ms. Zadanski says. Developers consult architects, interior designers and even the sales team, who can tell them what buyers are looking for at any given moment.
They consider livability and efficiency, and they look at trends. After all, what makes a good layout today is different from what it was 10 years ago.
“We try to learn continuously from what the market is telling us,” says Mimi Ng, vice-president of marketing for Menkes, the developer of Fabrik Condos at Richmond and Spadina. “But there are certain things that are always a given, that we understand people generally look for. People want as much storage as possible. They really want functional spaces, and typically they want outdoor space, such as a balcony or a terrace, or if that’s not possible even a French balcony.”
But those are things buyers know to look for. Ms. Zadanski explains there are smaller key features purchasers might not even notice, until they’re already living in their suite. For instance, she notes the developer always makes sure there’s an appropriate wall for the TV in the living room, across from which there’s space for a sofa. Mr. Khachi, during his judging duties, looks out for bulkheads that jut against windows — making it difficult to hang curtains or blinds — and laundry areas that back on to a bedroom wall (a nuisance at night when you put a load in before bed). Walk-in closets should be at least 5×8-feet to work effectively, he adds, and “silly nooks and crannies” are a no-no.
In fact, in an age where suites are getting smaller, any waste of space, and that includes hallways, is frowned upon. “Every square foot of space should be useable,” says designer Jeff Schnitter of Seven Haus Design, who helped lay out the units at Streetcar Developments’ The Carlaw. “If we can save 10 square feet of space by eliminating the hallways, that makes the bedroom 10 square feet larger, which, when you’re talking about a bedroom that is condo-sized, makes a huge difference.”
As suite sizes shrink, there’s another danger too. Furniture needs to fit, says interior designer Elaine Cecconi of Cecconi Simone, which helped assemble the suite layouts for INDX, the Bay and Adelaide site by Lifetime Developments and CentreCourt Developments. Many developers include suggested furniture positioning in their layouts, but Ms. Cecconi goes a step further, always making sure the master bedrooms fit a queen-sized bed and that spaces are generous enough to take into consideration how people actually use furniture. “What we find is that sometimes you look at a floorplan and it looks great, but then you realize there’s no place to put your sofa or your bed doesn’t fit into the bedroom,” she says.
It all comes down to livability, explains Larry Blankenstein, president of Lash Group of Companies, the developer of Cloud9 Condominiums in Etobicoke. And as lifestyles change, suite layouts will as well. Today, buyers are looking for more natural light than ever, and want kitchens that are open to the living room, as open-concept living continues to be embraced. Dens are also becoming more popular, Mr. Blankenstein says, which are ideal as more people are working from home.
Developers learn from trends and from the successful suite layouts they’ve had in the past, but for Mr. Blankenstein, the litmus test for any layout comes down to one thing: Could he live there himself? “We always feel that what’s good for us would be good for our purchasers too,” he says.
Mr. Khachi agrees. Each year, as he judges a new collection of suites for the OHBA, he imagines himself settling down in each space.
“I honestly look at it as if I’m the average person, and [ask myself] how would I like living there,” he says.
—————————————————————————————————–
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
Related posts:
- What condo purchasers need to watch for By Terrence Belford – Globe and Mail Ask anyone who has...
- Toronto Site Seeing With all that Toronto condos have to offer, it's not...
- Checking the ‘same as rent’ claims The recent recession seems to have brought at least one...
- Toronto, the (un)affordable While some condominium prices are skyrocketing — a $17 million...
- Things will be great when you’re Downtown Located at the corner of King and Shaw St. —...
Such great hype
Until now, condominiums in Toronto have been marketed like cars or cigarettes, full of glitz and tits. Meet the new generation of web-savvy marketers, entrepreneurs and real estate agents who are cutting through the hype and changing the way we buy
By David Sax – Eye Weekly
On Jan. 10, just before noon, more than 100 real estate brokers descended on the corner of The Esplanade and Scott Street. They queued on a snow-and-ice crusted red carpet, shrugging their shoulders against the stiff breeze, chatting in Cantonese, Mandarin, Farsi, Arabic, Korean and even, occasionally, English.
These brokers were so-called VIPs, and each held a specially numbered card sent out by the developer Cityzen (and its partners Fernbrook Homes and Castlepoint Realty Partners) to enter the Living Room Condo Store, a new, high-tech sales centre for Backstage condominiums. Backstage is a modern, D-shaped tower that will one day rise 36 storeys into the skyline atop an awkward 20,000 square-foot parcel of land, right where Yonge Street meets the GO train bridge.
Once cleared by security, the brokers split into two groups: half of them headed to a small buffet in the back room, where, to the soundtrack of elevator jazz, they quickly demolished the immaculately arranged crudités and espresso glasses of butternut squash soup. The other half lined up along the futuristic-looking white walls, where a row of touch-screen displays allowed them to explore various aspects of the Backstage project by swiping through virtual floor plans, panning around suite renderings and testing 360-degree views from various floors.
At precisely 12:30pm, the broker Hunter Milborne, whose company Milborne Real Estate is representing the developers, took to the microphone in a double-breasted pinstriped navy suit, which wasn’t suprising, given his impressive mane of white hair and the Anglo creed of his name. His remarks were swift and to the point: Backstage would be built by April 2013, and it would feature 284 suites, mostly one– and two-bedrooms. “Most buildings have nine-foot ceilings and granite countertops,” he said, “but this has a difference: location, location, location.” That, and it would eventually feature direct access to the underground PATH system.
Within minutes of Milborne wrapping up, the crowd cleared out (floor plans and pricing in hand), the buffet was replenished, and a lone cleaning lady with a mop made an effort to wipe grey slush off the once gleaming white floors. She didn’t have much of an impact. The next round of agents arrived seconds later, tracking in snow, and starting the process all over again.
Some 18,000 new condominium units were completed in the Greater Toronto Area last year, according to the market research firm Urbanation. Another 17,000 will pop up this year, and 20,000 will rise next year—meaning Toronto will have more condo units for sale than any other city on the continent. Despite sluggish employment in the province and the threat of rising interest rates, condo sales are hitting a near-record pace, up 20% in 2010 from 2009.
From my window at Queen and Dovercourt, I can count four cranes, five newly or nearly completed towers, two sales centres and two billboards. In the month it took me to write this article, two buildings were demolished within two blocks of me, and even more cranes went up. If I were to walk 10 minutes in either direction, those numbers would quadruple, expanding infinitely if I were to drive around the city, where pockets of condos sprout like green glass-and-steel forests.
A few of these buildings are architectural gems (One 12 at 112 St. Clair West), some are eyesores (The Bohemian Embassy, aka the Bohemian Embarrassment, at Queen and Northcote), while most fade into a background of inoffensive mediocrity. What these condominium projects all share is the need to sell—largely before they are built.
Thanks to Canada’s conservative bank policies, developers cannot receive construction loans until 70% to 80% of units are already spoken for with deposits. The industry lives and dies on pre-construction sales. This means that developers are selling nothing more than the promise of a building, based on a few computer-generated renderings, floor plans and a whole lot of hype. Condos are marketed like cars or cigarettes, full of glitz and tits, which seems like a stupid way to sell a home. But so far it has worked, and developers, being a generally cautious bunch, have been loath to try anything new. Buyers’ mass commitment—sight virtually unseen—has left the city with many poorly designed buildings and dissatisfied owners.
Now, that’s poised to change. A new generation of web-savvy marketers, entrepreneurs and real estate agents is cutting past the hype and reshaping the way condominiums are sold in this city. They are working to democratize the sales process and make it more transparent, giving the public more of a say in how condos are designed, developed and marketed, and helping average buyers access the premium pricing reserved for so-called VIPs months before anyone else can even look at a floor plan. Until now, the developers have had all the control, but thanks to the power of social media, some of it is being wrestled back into the public’s hands. Backstage is a cautious but early experiment in how this future could play out.
Sam Crignano, president of Cityzen, fondly remembers selling during Toronto’s last big condo boom in the ’80s. Developers would take out ads in local papers and blanket neighbourhoods with flyers, advertising the launch of a sales centre. “On opening day, usually a Saturday, you’d corral potential buyers into an office,” says Crignano, the 51-year-old son of an immigrant carpenter from Italy. “We had a speaker built into the wall that would belt out ‘Unit #3 Sold!’ or ‘Unit #20 Sold!’” The developers would then shuttle buyers into a second room he called “the bullpen,” where agents would close the deal. “It was quite the rush,” says Crignano, who is now one of the larger high-rise developers in the city, and one of the most open to taking risks. Cityzen is building the Absolute towers in Mississauga, which are arguably the most architecturally bold apartments built in Canada since Habitat 67, and Crignano picked the winning design, by a small Beijing firm, through a public competition.
Today, the process unfolds in many stages, and with much more noise. Once a developer acquires a site, it usually goes to a handful of local architecture and marketing firms, who create a design and a branding campaign based on what has previously sold nearby. That’s how you get cookie-cutter towers around certain neighborhoods, with similar, toss-away names like California Condos and Beyond the Sea. A handful of real estate ad agencies, most notably LA Inc. and Montana Steele, whip up marketing campaigns that hit all major media, built around slogans promising something vague (“Your Unique Lifestyle” or “Where You Belong”), packaged with identical stock photography (a young couple on a Vespa, an old couple at a dining room table), with an estimated price attached (“From the 300s” or “From 1.4 million”), imploring buyers to “Register Now!” for exclusive access.
“I found the Toronto marketing materials to be very formulaic and frankly insulting,” says David Allison, head of the Vancouver-based real estate marketing firm BraunAllison, which has clients around the world. “I saw two to three projects that all had some version of ‘Luxury has a New Address’ or ‘Luxury Redefined,’ with an elegantly dressed woman pouting at the bottom of a staircase. You could have taken the brand name, the slogan, the photo and shuffled them all around without any difference.”
The campaigns can be as superficial as any liquor or cosmetic advertisement. Case in point is Bisha, a hotel/condominium developed by the nightclub impresario Charles Khabouth and Lifetime Developments, packaged with a glossy Montana Steele campaign: the billboard features the face of a beautiful woman with black lipstick, blindfolded with a silk scarf, her mouth open in anticipation as she awaits whatever perversions Master has in store for her. The slogan below says, “Ready or Not.” Bisha’s website is filled with floating nouns (Style, Freedom, Presence) and a trailer resembling a fragrance ad, featuring a boy-meets-celebrity love story that culminates on Bisha’s rooftop lounge. Buy here, it all says in no uncertain terms, and beautiful creatures will fuck you in ways you cannot imagine. The project has sold incredibly well.
With Backstage, Cityzen has decided to go in a different direction, hiring an upstart 12-person ad firm called Blackjet to sell the project. “Most of the real estate marketing out there is shlock,” says Robert Galletta, the 35-year-old head of Blackjet, from his small, airy office on Eglinton West. An ad man since he was still in high school, the slender, fast-talking Galletta is trying to redefine how real estate is sold in the city. In a blog post on the company’s website last spring, Galletta told real estate marketers that the “jig is up,” because their methods had become “white noise,” and even released a viral video mocking the current process. It was a shot across the industry’s bow, but it caught the attention of developers.
For Blackjet, social media is an opportunity to give potential buyers a real sense of ownership in a project. For Cityzen, Galletta engineered a “Name Our Condo” contest over the summer for what would eventually become Backstage. With a grand prize of $5,000, and runner-up prizes of iPads, gift certificates and other enticements, the contest drew 140,000 visitors to the site, 50,000 Facebook posts, 12,000 tweets, and 3,300 name suggestions (including Union House, Pop Can Towers, Nakatomi Towers and, inevitably, Stephen Colbert Towers). Every person who entered registered their personal information with Cityzen, and brokers will contact all of them when public sales begin shortly.
With tens of millions of dollars on the line, a developer’s objective is to sell as many units as possible, in as little time as possible. The way that’s typically done is by selling off buildings in tiers, with the price increasing at each tier. First come the Super VIP or Platinum brokers, who have access to foreign and local investors looking to park their cash in what amounts to a share in a building. About a dozen of these brokers were each given a floor of Backstage to sell back in the fall, months before the sales centre was even designed. Next come the VIP brokers (described at the beginning of this story), who have sold units with the developer before, and can often bring in one or two buyers each. They submit requests for units on behalf of buyers a few days following the event, and receive their answers via a lottery.
A few weeks later come the general brokers, a larger crowd, typically newer and younger and slightly lower down the ladder, with less access to investor capital. Then, when those sales peter out after a month or two, the developer contacts those who registered, including the thousands who entered the Name Our Condo contest. Finally, when those sales slow down, the sales centre opens to the general public. At each step, as units sell, prices rise, and by the time most of us average Joes get a chance to buy—or even see—these places, they’ve been picked over by every VIP and their mother. It’s a system that favours a small circle of brokers and those with connections, and is not one built for people who actually care about these places as a “home.”
Because of this system, developers are notoriously stingy when it comes to releasing information about floor plans, prices and other essential facts until every last opportunity to sell to select buyers has run out. Buyers are forced to request them, and generally they’ll only receive answers once sales centres finally open to the public.
But that’s changed with the recent proliferation of real estate websites. Suddenly, buyers are armed with more information than ever before. Floor plans for Backstage were uploaded to UrbanToronto.ca (a discussion forum for real estate in the city), back in October, months before the public was supposed to see them. In the past, if buyers wanted to find out about new condominiums, they had to scan the newspaper for ads or drive around the city, looking for sandwich boards and sales centres. Now, they’ll go straight to sites like BuzzBuzzHome.com.
BuzzBuzzHome was the first site to aggregate all information about new real estate for sale in the city (and in other Canadian markets), and put it in an easily navigable map, broken down by price, neighbourhood, developer. Buyers can compare floor plans, maintenance prices, ceiling heights and neighbourhood amenities, as well as read development news, or discuss a project and a developer’s reputation on the site’s open forums.
“If you’re spending $300,000 for a condo, you need to do your due diligence,” says co-founder Matthew Slutsky. Launched two years ago, BuzzBuzzHome now draws over 65,000 visitors a month. “People feel entitled to information. If they see an ad for a condo, the first thing they’re going to do is Google it.”
A new generation of brokers is blogging about projects they like, developers they don’t, and their analyses of projects for potential buyers. Agent Mark Savel, who posts at SavelBlogs.com, tries to enlighten buyers to the fundamentals of a project. “You need to look at it as if there were no marketing,” says the 25-year-old Savel (he’s been an agent since he was 20). Savel is close with fellow broker Roy Bhandari, a slickly dressed 26-year-old British immigrant of Indian descent, who recently launched the site TalkCondo.com with his brother Amit, to help investors cut through developers’ bullshit.
Up to 70% of pre-construction sales in Toronto go to investors, and more often than not, Bhandari’s clients are buying units without even setting foot in a sales centre. “I don’t care if they’re living in it eventually or not,” said Bhandari, “but anyone who buys pre-construction is an investor.” They want to know how much the price is per square foot, what the developer’s reputation is, and what are the prospects for growth. Amit and Roy put all of that information on TalkCondo.com. On their page for Backstage, they break down the building’s costs (approxiately $600/sq. ft.) and potential monthly rents ($3/sq. ft.) compared to others in the neighbourhood, and recommend it as a solid, longer-term investment, with a higher cost of entry than others, but one that’s less prone to flipping and volatility.
Standing above them all, yelling as loud as he can, is David Fleming, the take-no-prisoners voice behind TorontoRealtyBlog.com. A broker with Bosley, Fleming is a fearless, tireless thorn in the side of many condo developers. He calls it like he sees it, sarcastically documenting, in hilarious videos and blog posts, his disdain for sex-driven marketing: (“I don’t concern myself with things like ‘return on investment’ when smooth legs and boobs are thrust in my face!” he wrote); murky purchase agreements (“You may have thought you were getting a sleek glass tower, but they’re going to build it out of mud and sticks instead”); shoddy construction (“This development is an embarrassment to builders everywhere”); and poor planning, as evidenced by perennial whipping boy CityPlace (“It’s so loud, it’s so awful. There’s the Gardiner, there’s the lakeshore, and there’s nothing but condo after condo”).
With Backstage, Blackjet has moved the goalpost a little, hinting at future ways that condominiums could be sold in Toronto. The cornerstone of their marketing strategy was the “Virtual Broker” program, where users compete to get their friends to register with Backstage. “Brokers” win prizes as they hit benchmarks for registrants (iPads, gift certificates, etc.), and if a referral actually buys a condo in Backstage, you nab a $2,500 commission. Virtual Broker, like the Name Your Condo contest, was meant to build a database of potential buyers for Backstage. Galetta envisioned the Virtual Broker system as a way of levelling the playing field, cutting past the brokers, the events with the engineered crowds, and the flaming hoops and diversions to put interested buyers directly in touch with the developer. But in the end, insiders still got first dibs, and it proved to be more lipstick on a pig than a game changer.
“All this talk of ‘VIP Pricing,’ ‘Register Now!,’ ‘Last Chance Pre-Construction pricing!,’ this is the kind of shit you see now,” says Galletta, in frustration. “People go and register for the VIP events, and the developer will sell every last fucking unit to a broker, before a shmuck like you or I ever get hold of a floor plan.”
Still, Galletta knows this is the way things will eventually turn. He is already selling developers on a more collaborative process, where developers purchase land, then facilitate a conversation with potential buyers about architecture, design and amenities online. Think of it as a sort of crowd-sourced WikiDevelopment, where future residents shape their home’s look and feel, and then buy into it. You wouldn’t need renderings of pool orgies or million-dollar sales centres—buildings would sell on their fundamentals, and would be better fits for their communities. That’s the goal, anyway.
The night after the VIP broker mob scene, a more exclusive cast of players gathers at the Backstage sales office for Friends and Family night. The muzak soundtrack has been replaced by a live jazz duo, and the food, by caterer Toben Food by Design, is stratospheres above the snacks served the day before: ahi tuna tacos, lamb burger sliders, panko-crusted chicken lollipops. The crowd is decidedly well-heeled in rich leather, supple cashmere and real fur, and sales agents are back at the touchscreens, explaining the views to one family.
Over at a corner table, Sam Crignano and Hunter Milborne huddle together, discussing the pace of sales activity. Over their shoulder, a young Chinese woman and her mother sit with a broker, filling out paperwork as her father, giant gold Rolex dangling, Louis Vuitton fanny pack wrapped around an impressive gut, calculates the cost on his iPhone. Hunter Milborne’s second-in-command, a large man with slicked hair, broad shoulders and a Bluetooth earpiece comes over, leans in, and sotto voce tells Milborne and Crignano, “our numbers are looking really good.”
———————————————————————————————————————
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
Related posts:
- Don’t believe the Great Depression hype Canada is entering 2009 with nearly the lowest unemployment rate…
- Things will be great when you’re Downtown Located at the corner of King and Shaw St. —…
- Fabulous facades Whether low to the ground or soaring into the sky,…
- Things will be great when you’re downtown When complete strangers buy into a condo building, they’re in…
- GTA new home sales still ahead despite slip in August Greater Toronto Area new home sales continue to run 28%…

















