Tag Archives: construction crews
RealNet says GTA is the North American housing market champion
George Carras – Yourhome.ca
If building new homes in North America were like playing hockey, Toronto’s home-building industry could be considered the continent’s repeat Stanley Cup champions. (Sadly, anyone in this city who knows what it’s like to have a perennial championship team would have had to have been alive in the 1960s.)
Building new homes and communities is certainly not a game. But as U.S. housing markets have declined in recent years, and steady Canadian markets – Toronto in particular – have risen in the standings, being ranked No. 1 has become a regular occurrence for the GTA home-building industry.
If you look at the top 25 markets in North America based on new home starts, the GTA ranked first in 2008, 2010 and 2011; and our market looks poised to take the top spot again in 2012, with 23,418 units having been started as of the midway point of the year.
Five other Canadian markets are also on the North American Top 25 list: Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. But as U.S. markets begin to improve in 2012, the ranking of those other Canadian markets appears to be dropping – with the exception of Toronto.
The composition of the starts in Toronto has been changing, of course. The GTA market was once dominated by lowrise homes. But with the implementation of a pro-intensification growth plan for the region, there has been an increasing number of highrise starts in recent years.
What exactly is a “start”? A start means a builder has commenced construction of a new home unit, and this data is often used as an indicator of related economic activity (materials are purchased, construction crews are hired, etc.).
Given the highly conservative nature of the Canadian and GTA home-building industries, a start typically cannot take place until there is financing in place for construction. And financing for construction usually can’t be secured until there is a sale of that new home to a pre-qualified purchaser.
So, a new home sale precedes a new home start, and that’s why sales are a considered a leading indicator of economic activity. If you monitor sales, you can, to a degree, predict starts.
In a market where lowrise homes are the predominant form of housing, a builder typically builds homes incrementally as they are sold. Therefore the starts are fewer but more frequent, typically three to 10 at a time.
Contrast this with a market where highrise homes are the predominant form of housing. A builder cannot build a 300-unit project incrementally as the individual units are sold. The developer must build all 300 units at the same time, or not build the project at all. Typically construction does not start until at least 70 to 80% of the project has been sold.
So, in a housing market that has been shifting toward highrise housing, there is a lot more volatility in the start data.
How did starts break down for North America’s housing market champ? In 2011, the GTA had a total of 39,745 starts, of which 44% were lowrise and 56% were highrise. So far in 2012, the GTA has had a total of 23,418 starts, of which 25% were lowrise and 75% were highrise. The higher starts this year are a result higher sales in 2011.
As the GTA market continues to intensify, it’s important to keep in mind two things: first, monthly start data will become more volatile. Second, there will be greater pressure on the highrise segment to deliver new homes across the region.
And with a significant number of labour contracts up for negotiation in 2013, perhaps there are some useful lessons from the NHL experience that could prove helpful for the new-home industry as it looks to become the champion for yet another year.
Just remember: housing is something we’re all in together.
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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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Cash tight for T.O. condo market
Myke Thomas – Calgary Sun
The purse strings are being drawn tighter for some new condominium developments in Toronto, just two months after Finance Minister Jim Flaherty expressed concerns about apartments in Canada’s biggest city.
According to canadianrealestatemagazine.ca, lenders are no longer rolling out the red carpet for Toronto condo developers; they’re rolling it up and “locking the vault when individual condo investors come to call.”
Comment: Well, no… Some projects are not getting financing. Anything from a new builder or a questionable development, they might have trouble getting money from the bank. But Concord-Adex, Tridel or Monarch can still get what they need because of their name and track record.
Recently, Equitable Trust reported a $63 million drop in originations for its commercial division because its appetite for Toronto condo development is virtually nonexistent.
There is a great fear, and not just in the finance minister’s office, the GTA is on the verge of a market correction — meaning prices will fall with an oversupply of units, as has happened in the Vancouver area, which has seen a drop in sales volume and prices.
Comment: But we do not know for sure that Vancouver prices are dropping because of an oversupply of condos. Since house prices are also dropping there, it is safe to assume it is something else. And their prices were 35% higher than ours – with different demographics, housing stock and market motivators. Comparing it to Toronto is as bad as comparing Canada to the US – like apples to Audis… not the same. And Toronto is NOT oversupplied. With 28,000 condos coming online and 100,000+ people moving here every year, housing is still in short supply. That is why decent houses have been getting 10 offers each for years now.
Financing a condo development in the GTA has already been restricted — many developers have had to meet pre-sale targets between 70% and 80% in order to get the cash to bring in construction crews. Just a few years ago, the standard for pre-sales was 50% of units available in a project.
Comment: NO. It was not. It has ALWAYS been 70%. That is simply wrong. Some projects are at 80% now, if they are on the bubble. And downpayments must be in the 15–25% range, depending on the lender and how much the builder has in the bank. That is one of the reasons our condo market is solid. If a project launches with 300 units, the average price is around $360,000 (which is a resale number, new is likely higher). So they need say 75% of units sold with 20% down – that is $16,200,000 paid out by buyers before the crane goes up. If it is $400k per unit, with 80% sold at 25% down then the vote of confidence is in the $24,000,000 range. Then the bank – notoriously stingy – funds the rest. With 140 some-odd projects on the go right now, that is $3–3.5 billion in cash laid out to get these projects off the ground. That is a lot of money propping up the Toronto condo market – and it is not going away any time soon.
By slowing the flow of the dough, banks, other lenders and investors hope to reduce the size of the correction they have no doubt is coming due to the market creating more rental units than can be absorbed and a glut of units for sale — both new and resale — that can only bring down prices.
Comment: Show me a mechanism for this correction. No one can. But I have 10–15 solid reasons why we have the current market situtation and why it will continue.
Luxury hotel condos are part of the financing dilemma.
By the end of this summer Toronto will have four towers in a city where a red-hot market has brought rising concern about a real estate bubble.
Comment: There is no bubble. Price growth in the 2–5% annual range after inflation is NOT a bubble. The 127% in 15 months back at the end of the 1980s, now THAT was a bubble.
The granite-and-glass towers, including two of Canada’s tallest residential buildings, are opening in quick succession, adding hundreds of hotel rooms and more than a thousand condominiums just as Canadian housing hype hits a fever pitch.
None of the four projects has sold out and the push by developers to sell their remaining units before a resale market kicks in has the feel of a ticking time bomb.
Comment: That is just bad timing, flooding the market with a lot of units that have a small client base. It has nothing to do with a correction or bubble.
The business structure means buyers of the units are subject to commercial tax rates rather than lower residential rates, and the bar for financing is higher.
Comment: And the folly of condo/hotel combos is a whole other story. Look how well that went at 1 King West…
“There were some units that had $20,000 (annual) property taxes for an $800,000, or 1,500 square foot unit because it was zoned commercial. So lenders wouldn’t touch it,” said Callum Ross mortgage consultant Jason Friesen.
Comment: And I have heard tell of larger units with $80,000 property tax bills – and condo fees half as much.
Bankers and investors from across the country will be closely watching the scene in Toronto — new financing models there will no doubt make their way across the country.
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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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Incoming search terms
Trump Toronto Progress
Trump International Hotel & Tower Toronto taking shape — inside and out.
Work well underway on 27th floor of the Tower. Several crews now onsite working on concrete pours, curtain wall installation and drywalling.
We are very pleased with the progress being made as construction continues steadily on Trump International Hotel & Tower Toronto. Crews are now diligently working on many aspects of the tower concurrently, including pouring a new floor every six days, anchoring the curtain wall and installing drywall in the interior of the building.
The hotel floors of the tower are almost complete with the crews currently working on level 27. While more floors are poured and the tower climbs higher, the granite and glass curtain wall is being installed. Work is also focusing on placing the exterior panels on the twelfth floor and installation is gathering pace. In fact, curtain wall installers are able to finish each floor in approximately four days. In addition, the interior drywalling of the eighth, ninth and tenth floors consecutively, is now under way.
“We continue to be thrilled about the recent developments on the site and look forward to construction starting on the residential floors in the coming weeks,” says Alex Shnaider, Chairman of Talon International Development Inc., the building’s developer. “The personality and character of the building is starting to show, and that’s a really exciting development.”
Construction crews are able to work speedily and effectively on all aspects of the building. In fact, the site of the tower is a hub of activity for up to 22 hours each day, with some shifts beginning onsite at 3:00am and other shifts finishing at 1:00am.
“With the installation of the curtain wall underway, the tower is really beginning to come into its own on Bay Street, truly taking shape as a classic, yet modern landmark in the city of Toronto,” says Val Levitan, President and CEO of Talon. “I am continually impressed at the speed in which the panels are being fastened into place and, more importantly, the look and feel of the shining, green glass walls. The exterior exudes pure luxury, and this will be like no other residential tower on the market.”
Construction work will soon be focused on completion of the hotel floors and starting the development of the mechanical floors on levels 30, 31 and 32.
Currently available hotel condominiums are priced from $900,000; luxury residences from $2.1-million (CAD).
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information - 416-388-1960
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