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Tag Archives: engineered hardwood flooring

Context King West will be transformative

Ryan Starr – Toronto Star

Context King West represents an innovative approach to urban development that could set a standard for building condos in Toronto’s built-up areas.

The 450-suite condo building — with four fronts and no back — will run 400 feet down the middle of a block bound by Adelaide, King, Portland and Bathurst Sts.

The site was created through the parceling together of two separate properties within a block that’s occupied by old warehouses, offices and a handful of vintage homes.

Context King West rises from 10 storeys along King and Adelaide to nearly double that height in the middle of the site, where the highest portion of the building will be 18 storeys.

“Normally you get a building that has a lot of frontage along the street, but this doesn’t,” notes Context Development president Howard Cohen. “It has about 100 feet on King and 120 feet on Adelaide.”

The project illustrates an important urban design principle, he says. “You put your highest component mid block. That’s the best way to intensify but not detract from the streetscapes. Then you don’t see (the taller portions of the building) from the street.”

The first phase of Context King West, dubbed The Lanes, goes on sale this month. It includes suites on the building’s first 13 floors, which range from 375-square-foot studios to 785-square-foot two-bedroom units. Prices start in the mid-$200,000s.

The condos, designed by Burdifilek, will have nine-foot ceilings and engineered hardwood flooring.

Kitchens come with stone countertops, back-painted glass backsplashes and undermount stainless steel sinks. Bathrooms will have a tiled floor-to-ceiling feature wall.

Context King West’s second phase, The Arches, will include larger upper level suites, many of which will have private terraces and green roofs. There will also be live-work townhouses at the ground-floor level.

The unique design of the building — with varying heights and a facade that moves in and out — means ultimately there will be 87 different varieties of suite types available. “The building changes, therefore the suites have to change,” says Craig Taylor, Context’s director of marketing and design.

Context King West will have 10,000 square feet of amenity space, including a two-storey gym, lounge, multi-purpose room, media room, party room and bar, and a second-floor terrace with barbecues. There will also be a rooftop terrace.

The project will generate considerable interest from local, end-user buyers, Cohen says. “In this location we think there’ll be a strong demand from people who bought a condo in King West a few years ago and want a bigger one, or they own a house in the west end and want to get into a condo.”

“A significant portion of the market that doesn’t want to live or buy in towers,” adds Taylor. “They want to live and buy in more of a midrise project in an established neighbourhood.”

Comprehensive block plan

Context’s team went to considerable lengths to work with the local neighbourhood association and the city on a master plan for the development of the entire block that surrounds Context King West, a strategy that focuses on enhancing the public realm.

To that end, a pair of brick laneways will traverse the Context King West site, leading pedestrians through a courtyard lined with shops, cafés and galleries. The developer is going for a Distillery District vibe.

Red brick arches will frame the storefronts and the two passageways that run through the base of the condo building. The red brick continues up the lower portions of the building, tying it in with the 19th century warehouses that characterize King West.

“We designed the ground floor before we designed anything above that, which was interesting for us,” says David Pontarini of Hariri Pontarini Architects. “We didn’t really start from the top down, or start from an idea of massing. It was about how this thing is going to fit into the neighbourhood.”

The upper parts of Context King West are clad in white precast concrete, with balconies and full-height windows that punch in and out of the exterior, giving the building a dynamic and distinct character.

With the moving facade and a variety of elevations throughout the structure, Context King West appears at first to be a series of five or six different buildings, Pontarini notes. “It’s not a contiguous facade. It’s broken into a series of vertical building forms joined by glass corridors.”

Precedent setting

Cohen thinks Context King West will set a precedent for the development of tricky urban sites such as these, areas where more density is called for but highrise condo towers are almost impossible to build.

“There are lots of old industrial blocks in Toronto that lend themselves to this urban design principle,” Cohen says. “Everybody recognizes that we need more people living in this neighbourhood, but people want to maintain the streetscape. So this is the way to do it.”

Urban planner Ken Greenberg, a long-time King West resident who is serving as a consultant on the project, has called Context King West “transformational.”

“This could really be a model for how development can occur that is more than just a piling up of condos.”

That being said, developing a complex building like this on such an awkward, mid-block site has created a bit of a headache for Cohen and his team. “It’s much easier to do a 40-storey tower, where every floor is the same, a simple straightforward building,” he says.

In the end, though, Context King West will be as large a development as many of those highrise condos and it will deliver just as much density, he points out.

“I realized the other day, looking at the model, that this is actually a tower on its side.”

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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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A high degree of difference

Ryan Starr – Yourhome.ca

Tarek Sobhi and Tyler Hershberg stroll down Beverley St., just north of Queen, coming to a stop at the site that will soon be home to their firm’s debut residential project: 12 Degrees.

As the late-afternoon sun bathes the area in a pleasant glow, the principals of BSäR Group of Companies explain the concept behind the 11-storey condo’s eye-catching design.

The building, a series of stacked glass cubes, will feature a cantilevered middle section that’s jogged 12 degrees off centre, providing the basis for the project’s name.

“We’ve taken the corner of the building and swung it open as if you’re opening a door to walk through the neigbourhood,” Sobhi says.

“This is the southern gateway to the Grange neighbourhood, and we wanted to signal to someone coming up Beverley that they’re entering a part of the city that has some very interesting buildings.”

Among those interesting buildings is the Ontario College of Art and Design’s Sharp Centre for Design, a four-storey box supported by 12 multi-coloured pillars that resembles a super-sized tabletop.

Then there’s the Art Gallery of Ontario’s 2004 overhaul, which was spearheaded by renowned Canadian architect Frank Gehry.

“Those buildings put ours in context,” says Hershberg.

The neighbourhood is characterized predominantly by traditional homes, and 12 Degrees, in spite of its off-kilter design, will aim to echo that heritage architecture at its base, which will include six townhomes.

“We addressed the Victorian townhouses to our north with our podium design,” says Charles Gane, a principal with CORE Architects.

“Our first four floors capture the Victorian rhythm of peaks and bay windows by using stone piers that duplicate the peaks and square bay windows that pop in and out.”

Instead of red brick, 12 Degrees’ podium will match the stone found in the foundations of the area’s Victorian homes.

But the throwbacks end there.

BSäR – whose name comes from the Norse word for growth – intends for the rest of 12 Degrees to tap the edgier spirit of what’s happening to the north of the site, as well as the artsy vibe of Queen West.

“It is an eclectic street, with trendsetting shops and a funkiness that we wanted to connect to the site,” Sobhi says. “So (12 Degrees) will represent a balance between the two areas.”

12 Degrees Condo

Three penthouses

In addition to the six, two-storey townhomes along Beverley, 12 Degrees will include 85 units, ranging from 450-square-foot studios to 1,700-square-foot suites – thirty-one of them will be two bedroom units and nine condos will have three bedrooms.

The top floor of 12 Degrees will include three penthouses, which have yet to be fully designed; buyers will be able to customize certain elements of these suites. One of the penthouses will have a “ridiculously large” 1,800-square-foot terrace, Sobhi says.

12 Degrees’ prices range from the mid-$300,000s for the smaller units to over $1 million for the penthouses.

All units will have nine-foot ceilings throughout, with engineered hardwood flooring and floor-to-ceiling glass. Some suites will also have large terraces.

In keeping with the project’s funky vibe, 12 Degrees’ kitchens have been designed by Munge Leung Design Associates, with natural stone countertops, glass tile backsplashes and appliances that will be hidden behind paneling.

“We’ve taken pains to integrate the appliances so you don’t see the kitchen,” Hershberg says.

“In spaces that are more constrained, you need to make sure that all of your spaces look attractive. Everyone wants open concept, so your kitchen has to fit in as seamlessly as possible.”

The building’s rooftop, which offers prime downtown views, will have a BBQ area, cabana lounge and outdoor pool.

“The idea for the pool was taken from a trend we saw with hotels in the city,” Sobhi says.

“A lot of them have started to open up their pools to the public and they’re jam packed in summer on the weekends. So clearly there’s a yearning in the city for a little summertime rooftop pool action.”

He admits the decision to have a pool was made “against the advice of many of the engineers and property managers” who were shocked that such prime real estate would be given up for this purpose.

Still, Sobhi thinks it was the right move.

“If I’m on the second floor and I’m overlooking Beverley, it’s a shame to think that just up on the roof someone has an amazing view and I don’t get a piece of it.”

“Part of it had to do with a consideration of the demographic we’re targeting,” Hershberg adds. “We’re looking at people who have choices: they can move out to the suburbs or they can choose not to drive for two hours.

“And one of the things they might be thinking they have to sacrifice for this lifestyle is outdoor space. So we want to offer them a bit of the experience they would have in the suburbs, to the extent that we can.”

12 Degrees will have a communal kitchen that residents can use for entertaining, along with a private dining room and lounge.

There will be three levels of underground parking, comprising 70 resident parking spots and six visitor spots.

Sales are underway and construction is slated to begin in May 2011.

Pushing the limits

It’s been suggested that CORE Architects’ stepped-back, stacked cube design for 12 Degrees pushes the limits of what’s acceptable in such a traditional-looking neighbourhood.

Indeed, the project initially met with a fair share of challenges from those who want to preserve the area’s heritage-architecture flavour.

That the building’s design is seen as daring “indicates a real problem with respect to the cityscape we’re dealing with today in Toronto,” Sobhi says.

“Have a look at the city, and it’s no secret most of the architecture is mediocre and safe. When (12 Degrees) is said to be pushing the limits, perhaps it is in the context of the rest of the city, but by no means is it pushing the limits from a global perspective.”

Architect Gane agrees.

“You see what’s going on in Europe and Asia, and it’s like at every corner they’re trying to spin and twist,” he says. “Most of the buildings we’ve been doing in Toronto have been rectangular or orthogonal…

“But with this one we had the ability to play with it a little bit and that kind of freed us up. If we were going to do something a little off kilter and wacko, this was the place to do it.”

And while 12 Degrees will have elements in its podium that give a nod to the area’s heritage architecture, Gane stresses that the rest of the building signals where the neighbourhood is headed.

“We’re moving toward modernism,” he says, “not away from it.”

Project details

Address: 15 Beverley St.

Architect:
CORE Architects Inc.

Developer: BSäR Group of Cos.

Interiors: Munge Leung Design Associates

Size: 11 storeys; 85 units (ranging from 450 sq. ft. to 1,600 sq. ft.); three penthouses; six townhomes.

Price: From $350,000 to over $1 million

Amenities: Rooftop terrace with pool and cabana lounge; party room with kitchen. Three levels of underground parking; 70 resident parking spots and six visitor spots.

Neighbourhood:
Queen West, The Grange.

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

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  • Trinity Lofs is a new boutique condo near the St. Lawrence Market

    Suites include nine-foot exposed concrete ceilings, pre-finished engineered hardwood flooring, and granite or quartz kitchen and bathroom countertops

    Lisa Van de Ven, National Post

    With just 81 loft units and two townhouses, Trinity Lofts is a new boutique loft by Streetcar Developments. Surrounded by the east-end neighbourhoods of Corktown, the Distillery District and the West Don Lands, the project is close to the St. Lawrence Market, George Brown College, the Don Valley Parkway and the Gardiner Expressway. The King Street streetcar is a block away.

    Trinity Lofs is a new boutique loft

    Trinity Lofs is a new boutique loft

    Builder/developer: Streetcar Developments

    Location: Trinity Street and Eastern Avenue

    Building: Eight storeys

    Suites: One-bedroom, one-bedroom-plus-den and two-bedroom-plus-den layouts

    Size: 509 to 1,697 square feet

    Occupancy:
    July 2012

    Target market: First-time buyers, move-up purchasers and investors

    Features: Suites include nine-foot exposed concrete ceilings, pre-finished engineered hardwood flooring, granite or quartz kitchen and bathroom countertops, under-cabinet kitchen lighting, porcelain subway tile backsplashes, stainless steel kitchen appliances and Energy Star appliances.

    Amenities: The building will have an exercise room, a furnished terrace with barbecues, a dog-wash room, a resident bike-share program and on-site auto share.

    Standouts:
    There are two new parks under construction in the area, including the two-and-a-half acre Underpass Park to the east and the 18-acre Don River Park in the West Don Lands.

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

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