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Tag Archives: garment factory

The Garment Factory — Authentic Live/Work Lofts

Atria Devel­op­ments intro­duced Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts, a new live/work indus­trial con­ver­sion that will revi­tal­ize a for­mer gar­ment fac­tory. Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts is located in the Queen Street East neigh­bor­hood, one that is under­go­ing an excit­ing resur­gence between Logan Avenue and Leslie Street to form a hip Down­town Toronto East.

This neigh­bour­hood is fast on its way to becom­ing an urban suc­cess story. Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts is just down the street from the Dis­tillery Dis­trict, and steps from Leslieville. In the vicin­ity are eater­ies such as Verveine and Gio Rana’s Really, Really Nice Restaurant.

Pop­u­lar nightspots include Bar­rio, where reg­u­lars sip mar­ti­nis and enjoy tapas-style treats while a DJ spins music on Sat­ur­day night. When the pro­posed changes to the Toronto Film Stu­dio suround­ings become real­ity, that entire area will be home to new retail, res­i­den­tial and live/work hous­ing, adding to the urban tapestry.

Designed by award-winning Core Archi­tects Inc., the eight-storey Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts meld the orig­i­nal brick façade of the ware­house with mod­ern steel and glass to cre­ate a strik­ing whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. The build­ing ter­races back begin at the third floor, and are dis­tin­guished by an acid green canopy that will grace the entry on Car­law and extend back into the lobby. Every loft offers a glazed bal­cony or spa­cious ter­race with amaz­ing views.

The Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts fea­tures 150 lofts com­prised of stu­dios, one-bedroom, one-bedroom plus den/workspace, two-bedroom, and two-bedroom plus den/workspace, and pent­houses with views of the lake. Priced from just $139,900, these lofts, will range in size from 525 to 1,303 square foot and offer the low­est price per square foot of any authen­tic loft in the city.

The spec­tac­u­lar model loft by Fleur-de-lis Inte­rior Design Inc. con­tains exam­ples of the building’s inter­est­ing archi­tec­tural details such as the orig­i­nal fluted columns, ceil­ings that soar up to almost 12 feet, and large win­dows. The model kitchen will fea­ture mod­ern Wenge-stained cab­i­netry, a stone back­splash and island with a stone top. This one-bedroom plus den/workspace also show­cases a gas stove, gas BBQ hookup, and an optional gas fireplace.

Atria Devel­op­ments is known as the cre­ator of i-Zone live/work lofts, located across the street from Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts. i-Zone was a major cat­a­lyst for change in the sur­round­ing neigh­bour­hood, and is now home to artists, film­mak­ers, pho­tog­ra­phers, and other cre­ative spir­its. The devel­op­ment of the Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts will bring a fur­ther green­ing to this for­mer indus­trial neigh­bour­hood with the inclu­sion of a par­kette that backs onto Boston Avenue.

Atria Devel­op­ments is a family-owned and oper­ated com­pany spe­cial­iz­ing in the revi­tal­iza­tion of for­mer indus­trial urban areas by renew­ing exist­ing sites.

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Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more information


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  • Garment Factory Lofts in Queen Street East

    Brand new on the scene in Toronto’s hip down­town east is Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts – Atria Devel­op­ments’ live/work indus­trial loft con­ver­sion that has won rave reviews. These lofts appeal to first-time buy­ers, empty nesters, cre­ative indi­vid­u­als (artists, pho­tog­ra­phers, etc.), and busi­ness pro­fes­sion­als seek­ing a live/work loft environment.

    Loca­tion is part of the rea­son. Atria coverted a for­mer gar­ment fac­tory in the Queen Street East neigh­bour­hood into one of the city’s hottest loft con­ver­sions. Res­i­dents will revel in these excit­ing sur­round­ings that include pop­u­lar nightspots such as Bar­rio, and the eater­ies Verveine and Gio Rana’s Really, Really Nice Restaurant.

    The Dis­tillery Dis­trict and Leslieville are just down the street, and even­tu­ally this vibrant area will encom­pass addi­tional retail, res­i­den­tial, and live/work hous­ing when the pro­posed changes to the Toronto Film Stu­dio envi­rons become reality.

    Design shares the spot­light with loca­tion, and the spec­tac­u­lar model loft at Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts is the per­fect show­case. This one-bedroom plus den/workspace model by Fleur-de-lis Inte­rior Design Inc. con­tains exam­ples of the building’s inter­est­ing archi­tec­tural details such as the orig­i­nal flared columns, ceil­ings that soar up to almost 12 feet, and large win­dows. The model fea­tures Wenge-stained kitchen cab­i­netry, a stone back­splash and island with a stone top, a gas stove, gas BBQ tee, and an optional gas fireplace.

    The eight-storey Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts is designed by award-winning Core Archi­tects Inc. to meld the orig­i­nal brick ware­house facade with mod­ern steel and glass. Begin­ning at the third floor, the build­ing ter­races are striking.

    An acid green canopy adds panache to the entry on Car­law and extends back into the lobby. Every loft will offer a glazed bal­cony or a spa­cious ter­race with amaz­ing views.

    The Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts fea­tures 154 lofts com­prised of stu­dios, one-bedroom, one-bedroom plus den/workspace, two-bedroom, and two-bedroom plus den/workspace, plus pent­houses with views of the lake.

    Lofts range in size from 525 to 1,303 square feet and are priced from just $154,900 to the $380,000s (for a 1,286 square foot two-bedroom plan with a 167 square foot ter­race) – the low­est price per square foot of any authen­tic loft in the city. First occu­pan­cies are slated for win­ter 2006.

    Atria Devel­op­ments also cre­ated i-Zone live/work lofts, which is located across the street from Gar­ment Fac­tory Lofts, and is now home to artists, film­mak­ers, pho­tog­ra­phers, an opera singer, and other cre­ative spirits.

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    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more information


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  • Scale isn’t an issue for these condo architects

    Cramped Toronto laneway or Dubai mega-site, Core Architects puts its distinctive design stamp on projects big and small

    By Albert Warson – The Globe and Mail

    Some architects specializing in designing condos in the Greater Toronto Area prefer smaller projects with fewer than 100 suites, often on infill sites in urban nooks and crannies. For other architects, only developers of towering condo, multibuilding megaprojects need apply.

    Core Architects Inc. straddles the condo development spectrum. It has the critical professional mass of a 40-person office to handle the largest condo projects, but hasn’t forsaken the small condos that started the three partners off in 1996.

    They recently designed, for example, a 46-suite new loft building that Toronto real estate marketer Brad Lamb and developer/contractor Walter Harhay plan to shoe-horn into an impossibly tight 25-by-110-foot site in a lane off John Street near Queen Street West.

    In stark contrast, Core has been feverishly busy over the past 18 months designing high-rise, mid-rise and villa-style condos encompassing 36,000 units in Dubai Marina — the world’s largest real estate development, on the Persian Gulf in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    When asked if a Toronto firm could have the design intuitiveness that would appeal to Middle Eastern buyers, Deni Poletti, a Core partner, replied: “We developed a modern language that is subtly Arabic in flavour but balanced with a modernist sensibility, and from there our workload on the project took off.”

    While Core’s projects can leap from the modest to the monumental, there are several categories in between, such as the 45-storey Pantages Tower in downtown Toronto and the 37-storey Garden Residences of Avondale on Yonge Street near Highway 401.

    A glance at Core’s portfolio reveals that it hasn’t strayed too far from its first love of turning worn-out warehouses and factories in industrial neighbourhoods into sophisticated condo lofts — The Camden Lofts, The Chelsea Lofts, Queen West Vintage Lofts and Liberty Lofts, for example.

    Or designing new condos like Stewart Street; the Skyline Cosmopolitan condo/hotel (under construction behind the King Edward Hotel on a squeakily tight site); the 10-tower Emery Village, to be built around a 300-foot-high flagpole; and The Players Club, jammed in among a row of condos on the Etobicoke lakefront.

    Babak Eslahjou, a Core partner, explains: “Scale is not an issue. Young developer entrepreneurs are asking us to think of interesting ways of building condos on small lots for young urban dwellers who want to live downtown.”

    They also look to Core to be able squeeze as much profit out of those downtown infill sites. Older, perhaps less entrepreneurial developers are also beating a path to Core’s office door, in a renovated garment factory downtown.

    Nor was scale an issue when the three partners worked at Zeidler Roberts Partnership Architects (since reorganized as Zeidler Grinnell Partnership Architects) before the threesome set up Core. Their departure was a classic case of ambitious young professional colleagues daring to start their own enterprise.

    Their first design commission was the conversion of a warehouse at 29 Camden St. — part of a downtown Toronto industrial neighborhood — into a 48-unit condominium. One of their latest projects, directed by Core partner Charles Gane, is the John Street condo on Queen Street across from CITY-TV. Two others are the 114-suite “Zed Lofts” at Bathurst and Niagara Streets near the SkyDome, and The Argyle conversion on Dovercourt Road in the west end, both directed by Mr. Eslahjou.

    Mr. Gane likens the challenge to build 169 John St. on a typically narrow downtown lane to the 25-storey Skyline Cosmopolitan hotel/condo on Colborne Street, both of which will present some tricky jockeying of machinery, material and workers during about 20 months of construction.

    What’s new about the John Street loft? “There are a lot of different transparencies of glass and cogeneration [the building's mechanical system will generate enough electricity from surplus heat to satisfy the needs of the owners],” he says, and triple-parking stackers will hydraulically lower three cars at a time into the underground parking garage. No sweeping driveways, ample visitor surface parking or vast underground garages here. It will be the first system of its kind to be used in the GTA (Core’s design of the Skyline Cosmpolitan incorporates a single-car parking elevator).

    The site is zoned for one-time coverage, which Core is applying to have rezoned to seven times coverage (a volume of built space seven times the size of the site). “The planning department seems to be satisfied with our intention to respond to the city’s intensification strategy,” he says.

    Mr. Lamb describes Core’s design of the John Street condo as “cool, stylish and interesting architecturally, and which will also make money.”

    He is also the real estate broker for the 12-storey condo the developer, TASdesignbuild, calls Zed Lofts, at Bathurst and Niagara Streets. Mr. Eslahjou says Core’s design of Zed Lofts incorporates several live/work townhouses on Niagara Street and condo retail space on Bathurst Street. “This is the first downtown condo TAS has built and they wanted it to be dramatic,” he says. Core, which also designed Zed Lofts‘s lobby and other common spaces, as well as the marketing centre, has obliged. Construction is expected to begin this summer.

    Zed Lofts‘s street address is 38 Niagara, a close neighbour to the 22-suite, award-winning Twenty Niagara Lofts, built in 1998 on a compact site in that industrial neighbourhood. Ken Greenberg, who along with his wife was among the original owners of Twenty Niagara Lofts, is an urban planner with an illustrious background in the public and private sectors in Toronto. And for the past few years, he has had an even more illustrious career as a consultant on massive redevelopment projects in at least five U.S. cities.

    Apart from his professional interest, Mr. Greenberg is a member of the Wellington Place Neighborhood Association, which keeps an eye on proposed new developments in the area.

    “We had fruitful discussions with the developer about such issues as height, the treatment of street-level retail and the way garbage is handled,” he says. On the latter point, the amalgamation of the city brought suburban standards for garbage collection to downtown Toronto, he explains. These standards called for large garbage-collection areas, which he describes as “gaping spaces in tall buildings that become filled with litter, and which are unnecessary.” He says the association supports the developer’s intention of seeking a less obtrusive means of garbage collection at Zed Lofts, and is generally favourably disposed to the design and quality.

    While much of Core’s work involves new buildings, the firm also is actively renovating older downtown buildings. The 86-unit Argyle Authenic Lofts on Dovercourt Road between Queen and Dundas Streets, for example, was built nearly a century ago. Core is converting the nicely detailed, five-storey building into a loft with two new glass penthouse levels, and adding a few windows matching the original style.

    “It’s a condo loft in a warehouse building that’s already in a residential neighbourhood,” Mr. Eslahjou says. “We don’t have to wait for the neighbourhood to gradually change from a factory district into residential.” He hopes to get construction under way this summer.

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information


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