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Tag Archives: environmental

Naturally sophisticated in Lawrence Park

Tasteful landscaping and parterre gardens will surround the Blythwood at Huntington condos

Tracy Hanes – Toronto Star

In contrast to the busy traffic on Bayview Ave., all is calm inside the sales centre for Blythwood at Huntington condos. There’s a sophisticated serenity about the foyer with its marble floor, subtly elegant tones and domed ceiling.

It’s the type of vibe that should appeal to the local Lawrence Park crowd who may be growing weary of the maintenance demands of their large homes and are looking for alternatives in the neighbourhood.

“And the ravine will be a big draw,” says Jim Ritchie, sales and marketing vice president for Tridel, which has partnered with Concert Properties on the project, to occupy the site of a former chiropractic college.

Oh yes – the ravine. The 120-unit condominium building will overlook the Sherwood Park ravine, a protected greenspace with stands of century and-a-half-old oak, elm and maple trees. The views from the sales office kitchen vignette hint at what condo dwellers can expect to see from their balconies: scenes of old-growth forest that change from verdant green in summer to a blazing palette of reds and golds in fall.

To take advantage of the views, the buildings (eventually there will be two) will not face Bayview Ave.; they’ll be perpendicular to the street to face the woodland, which will be just 15 metres away.

“The vast number of suites will face onto the ravine,” says Ritchie.

Blythwood at Huntington isn’t the first project Tridel and Concert have partnered on. “We’ve been building their luxury retirement buildings, including Tapestry in Etobicoke,” says Ritchie. “It was a natural fit.”

The eight-storey building in the first phase, designed by Kirkor Architects, is classical in style and will be reached from a tree-lined driveway and formal roundabout, surrounded by landscaping and parterre gardens. Wrought iron gates and clipped boxwood hedges will face Bayview Ave.

“Our targeted buyer in all likelihood moving down from a large home,” says Ritchie, but says the suites may also appeal to well-heeled younger professional couples. “There is a need for a luxury condo project in the area. We have created different sizes suites, different exposures, to appeal to various demographics.

“This is geared to the end users. It’s not an investor building,” he says.

Since its mid-May opening, more than 25% of the suites, which start at $550,000s and go to $2.5 million, have sold. (HST is included). All suites are two bedroom; some also include dens and/or family rooms. Sizes range from 920 to just under 3,000 square feet.

“But we are combining two suites together to make one large suite for one of our buyers,” says Ritchie.

Designer Alex Chapman of Chapman Design Group was recruited to design the interior spaces and common areas.

“This (type of project) is Alex’s niche,” says Ritchie. “What he did from a design perpective here is first class.”

Because the people who buy here are the type who enjoy entertaining, spaces are designed to accommodate gatherings. Suites will be outfitted with cornice mouldings, nine-foot ceilings, engineered hardwood, porcelain tiles and Irpinia kitchens with extended cabinets, convection ovens, granite countertops and Energy Star stainless steel appliances. The model kitchen is traditional with a modern sensibility.

Huge renderings of suite interior rooms show possible colour palettes, including some sophisticated schemes combining hits of mauve or red with grey-brown neutrals.

“One thing we pride ourselves on at Tridel is that we’re able to fully customize our colour selection,” says Ritchie. “We’ll move things around for buyers and we will put palettes together. People expect us to help them and lead them to the right choice. It’s timeless design. We find that people not only want to buy a new residence, but they’ll want to bring in all new furnishings too.”

The lobby will set the luxurious tone with its intricately patterned marble floor, domed ceiling and seating area with fireplace. Amenities include concierge service, party room with bar, guest suites and outdoor terrace as well as private dining room and service kitchen. The party can be divided into smaller rooms for intimate gatherings or opened up for larger celebrations. On the lower level will be an outfitted fitness, weight and yoga studio and swimming pool and steam rooms.

The building will be built to LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards, to offer energy savings and eco-friendly features to residents.

The condo’s location in Lawrence Park is within easy access to numerous amenities. The Canadian Institute for the Blind is across the street and Sunnybrook Health Centre is just north, as is York University’s Glendon campus. Also close by is a 24-hour grocery store, restaurants and boutique shopping.

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

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  • Tiny homes are attracting the thrifty and the green

    More people are deciding that a modest house is better for their quality of life than a mansion in the burbs

    Craig Saunders – Globe and Mail

    Sasha McIntyre lives in a house smaller than some suburban living rooms. And she loves it.

    The Toronto animator shares a 480-square-foot house in eastern Toronto with her husband, John Lei.

    Open the front door and you walk not into a vestibule, but the couple’s bedroom, with a double bed, tall cabinets and a miniature ceiling fan. Beside the bedroom is a bright, six-foot-square bathroom.

    The living room has two loveseats, shelving and cabinets, and a fold-down table for dining.

    The 96-square-foot kitchen is newly renovated and features an apartment-sized fridge, a 24-inch stove and an oversized sink. In the unfinished, 5-feet-10-inch-high basement is another bathroom and a small office.

    “After 10 years in a basement apartment I didn’t need anything bigger,” says Ms. McIntyre, who works from home. “I don’t want to clean it.”

    Like a growing number of people, the couple have decided that a modest house is better for their quality of life than a mansion in the burbs. On the extreme end of the trend are people who live in minuscule houses, sometimes not much bigger than a typical suburban bathroom. Motivated by environmental concerns, convenience and tight finances, they are saying goodbye to 1990s-style monster homes.

    The shift got its start in the United States, with the launch of companies such as Tiny Texas Homes and Tumbleweed Tiny Homes, which offer pre-built houses and DIY plans. Today, there are dozens of websites and blogs featuring designs for houses as small as 65 square feet (including kitchen and bathroom), and the stories of people who live in them.

    In addition to being low-maintenance, smaller houses cost less. A popular design in tiny-homes circles is the Tarleton from Tumbleweed Tiny Homes. Built on a trailer chassis, the house kit is 117 square feet, including a kitchen and bathroom. It sells for about $47,000 (U.S.) ready-made.

    Will Pederson lives in a Tarleton he built on a communal farm outside Abbotsford, B.C., where he grows organic salad greens.

    “I like the idea of only having the space you need, the efficiency of it,” he says. “It’s really efficient for heating. I’ve always been kind of a minimalist thinker and trying to reduce my number of possessions.”

    Living in a space that small does require some lifestyle changes. Home electronics mean a laptop and a boom box rather than a big-screen television. Digital audio files and e-books replace most CDs and books.

    Mr. Pedersen has a table that folds away to give him space for yoga, and has an unheated shed for storage. The entire space is heated with one plug-in radiator. Because it’s essentially an insulated one-room house, every activity, be it cooking, working on the computer or exercising, helps to heat it, Mr. Pederson says.

    His wife, Alyson, lives nearby in a 300-square-foot house that she recently sold. In October, the couple will pack up his house and tow it to New Brunswick, where they have bought a 45-acre farm. They plan also to ship Alyson’s goats, start a dairy and live in the farm’s 900-square foot house, using Mr. Pederson’s tiny house for guests or seasonal labourers.

    “There’s something nice about a small space. It’s comforting,” he says.

    John Gower is another fan of smaller homes. The Victoria architect is one of only a handful who sells plans for houses under 800 square feet.

    “The whole idea of the small-house focus started because I was in Nelson [B.C.], where there are all these small houses with nice, timeless lines to them and they’ve proven to be good dwellings over the decades. That was the inspiration for our whole design thrust,” he says.

    The movement is a mixture of people trying to get into the housing market, environmentalists and empty-nesters, he says.

    “There’s still the phenomenon of the empty-nesters building a home larger than they had during their child-rearing years because they can. It’s hard to understand,” he says. “That was in the 1990s. Today, they want to lighten their load and spend more time travelling and with their grandkids and in the garden.”

    But tiny homes aren’t for everyone, he acknowledges. Only about 20 of his smallest homes have been built, mostly in rural British Columbia.

    “I don’t know where these tiny houses fit in the spectrum. There’s a place for them,” he says. “As a culture we’re going to have to find many more models for housing as we face the limits of sustainability. If there’s a lot of belt-tightening going on, these might seem more attractive and less fringe. Right now, it takes a special individual to live in a space that small.”

    Ms. McIntyre is happy in her little house, which is bright and welcoming inside. She acknowledges she’d like to be able to have more books, but the tiny house’s tiny price tag meant she and Mr. Lei could afford to buy a property of their own.

    Before moving into the house, they shared an 880-square-foot condo downtown for 18 months. Still, after shedding duplicate possessions, their new home feels comparatively “spacious,” Ms. McIntyre says. Indeed, a family of four lived in the house before them.

    “I like it. We picked happy, bright colours to paint it,” she says. “It’s cheap and easy to maintain, and we’ve already paid the mortgage off.”

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

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  • Location, location, transportation

    The idea of not having to use a vehicle to commute or go shopping is becoming more and more attractive

    By Barbara Lawlor – Toronto Sun

    Location is always at the top of people’s lists when looking for a new home or condominium. And as many of you know, the new wave in Toronto is to leave the car at home and take the subway.

    With the increasing sensibility toward leaving less of a carbon footprint on the environment, many buyers — condominium in particular — are choosing to live close to public transportation and amenities. The idea of not having to use a vehicle to commute or go shopping is attractive. In fact, many urban condo dwellers do not even own cars anymore.

    The benefits to decreased vehicle use include fewer greenhouse gas emissions, and there are many pluses for the residents themselves. For one thing, they get more exercise by bicycling or walking to local shops and subway and bus stops.

    For another, they save thousands on the cost of a vehicle, gas, licence, maintenance and repairs — all money they can put toward their mortgage to build equity. This is especially helpful for first-time buyers, who can save more easily for a down payment if they don’t have a car payment and the other expenses that come along with vehicle ownership to worry about.

    Quality of life

    Today’s condominium builders in the GTA are coming through with wonderful buildings that are on or close to subway and/or bus lines. This practice is in line with Ontario’s Places to Grow legislation, which has the double goal of sustainability for communities and a higher quality of life for those who live and work in them.

    Certainly, building a condominium close to the subway is a great example of using the existing infrastructure efficiently, which is also part of Places to Grow.

    Spectacular examples of new condominiums that are situated near the subway include FIVE — Condos at 5 St. Joseph and One Bloor Condominiums, both at the dynamic intersection of Toronto’s Yonge and Bloor Streets. Merci Le Condominium and The Bayview are in the multi-award-winning NY Towers community at Bayview and Sheppard, and are steps from public transit. Pears on the Avenue, at Avenue and Davenport Roads, is only a few minutes’ walk to the subway. The Palm at Yonge and Finch is so handy to public transportation, that commuting downtown is a breeze from this locale.

    And Emerald City at Sheppard Avenue and Don Mills Road in North York even offers direct access to the Sheppard subway and an underground pathway to the fabulously revamped Fairview Mall. Response to all of these condominiums has been enthusiastic. What is amazing today is the number of condominiums that are coming to market with a full one-third of the suites not available with parking. Five years ago, we would not have dreamed of offering less than 95% of the suites with a spot attached to them. Nowadays, this is not considered a negative, even for resale, because of the consciousness-raising that has gone on in the public regarding environmental responsibility.

    Alternatives to driving

    People are realizing that there is an alternative to driving a car, sitting in gridlock much of the day and spending thousands each year for the privilege of doing so. A bit of exercise walking to the subway is good for the heart and the waistline.

    Plus, taking public transportation is easier in the winter and allows for reading and doing paperwork on the way to and from work. And when you consider the fact that in 2009, the Toronto Transit Commission accommodated 471,233,000 passenger trips via bus, streetcar, subway and RT, the implications for the environment are obvious.

    The great news is that if living near public transportation is important to you as a condo shopper, you will find an array of gorgeous buildings to choose from in Toronto and the 905 municipalities.

    To help achieve intensification, builders are clustering buildings around transportation hubs in these areas that connect with the city’s system. It’s good for everyone involved, and will help to create a sustainable future for us all.

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

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