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Final Opportunity to Purchase a Trump Toronto Residence or Hotel Condominium at Pre-Construction Prices!
This is the final opportunity for you to purchase a spectacular Trump Toronto residence or hotel condominium suite at pre-construction prices!
Construction plans for Canada’s first historic Trump property will soon be announced. Now is the time to act if you want to maximize your investment potential. Prices have risen over 5% since June, and will rise considerably once construction begins.
The Residences start at 1,299 square feet and are currently priced from $1,025,000. Hotel condominiums from the upper $700,000′s (CAD).
This is the only Trump real estate investment opportunity in Canada and an opportunity I wouldn’t want you to miss. With over $200-million now sold at Trump Toronto, the window of opportunity for you to buy at pre-construction pricing will soon be closing.
Similar Trump International properties have historically had substantial equity growth – setting the pace of local price appreciation and often exceeding other investment vehicles.
Pre-construction buyers at Trump International Hotel & Tower, Chicago (now under construction) saw their initial purchase values rise over 90% in just 12 months. Currently, prices at Trump Chicago have appreciated to over $1,250 per square foot.
Located in the heart of downtown Toronto’s vibrant financial and entertainment districts, the 70-storey Trump International Hotel & Tower, Toronto will be the most luxurious residential building in Canada when completed.
Featuring unrivalled five-star quality, services and amenities that only a Trump property can deliver, this elegant building will become the place to live and stay in Canada’s premier city.
Managed by the Trump Organization, Trump International Hotel & Tower is one of the most highly regarded and awarded hotel brands in the world. Condé Nast Traveler and Travel + Leisure Magazines have consistently ranked my New York property #1 for business travelers in North America.
Whether your purchase is for personal or corporate use, or as an investment, you will become part of the prestigious ensemble of Trump properties – known throughout the world for exceptionally high standards of living. In fact, investors from over 20 countries have already purchased suites at Trump Toronto.
I am sure you will find Trump International Hotel & Tower, Toronto as fabulous as I do. I encourage you to contact the Trump Toronto sales office soon to take advantage of this spectacular opportunity to own a Trump property before pre-construction pricing ends.
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Park the car permanently
Get out of the traffic and into an easy-living, luxurious downtown condo
Canwest News Service
When the pace of life gets too hectic, some people head for the hills — but not Frank and Lori. This fortysomething couple will soon be shipping out of the picturesque village of Kleinburg and diving straight into the bustle and confusion of downtown Toronto.
For Frank and Lori (who asked that their last name not be used), the move makes perfect sense. He is a partner at an insurance and estate practice near York University, while she teaches school in Mississauga. They bought their current home — a 2,500-square-foot bungalow across from the celebrated McMichael Art Gallery — about 16 years ago. They like it just fine but admit they are rarely there. Instead, they spend an excessive amount of time in their cars, either commuting to work or scurrying downtown to take in their favourite restaurants, films or operas.
“Between business and pleasure, we drive into the city about three to five times a week,” Frank says. “We wanted a lifestyle change, and thought we should get out of our cars and into an area where we could walk to the action. So we started to search for something that could provide us our last move; a spot that would give us all the luxuries but in a setting that didn’t feel like a condo complex.”
Last year, they finally found their dream condo — a spacious 1,600-sq.-ft. unit at 77 Charles, Aspen Ridge Homes’s 15-storey, 47-unit project currently under construction in Yorkville. So much about it is right, says Frank, from the quaintness of the building to the proximity to the University of Toronto, his alma mater, and the many interesting areas to walk their cocker spaniel, Dixie.
There are an abundance of Franks and Loris waiting to put down elegant doormats at a luxury high-rise. Many have put last year’s monetary concerns behind them and are once again putting down hefty deposits in anticipation of their next big, luxurious move.
OK, it hasn’t all been rosy. Last year was a roller coaster ride for real estate, the gloom coinciding with the economy’s demise. “It was definitely challenging — for everyone,” says Howard Tikka, director of marketing, Trump International Hotel & Tower. “We continue to make sales, but at a much slower pace than we have been accustomed to. While the Canadian economy has fared better than most, even those with the capital to make luxury purchases and investments in luxury real estate have scaled back a bit as well,” he says.
“From November ’08 to a couple of weeks into February, we would have weeks where nobody — not even a single soul — would come into the sales office, so that was pretty scary,” recalls Sam Crignano, president of Cityzen Development Group. “You had traffic in the order of 45 to 70 [visitors] a week down to nothing. Some support staff had to get cut. … We were preparing for the worst, and thank God it didn’t happen.”
The market eventually rebounded in spring 2009 and sales offices in the Greater Toronto Area started to see some action from both local and foreign buyers. Within weeks, sales were back on track and developers started feeling relief. In fact, last October Mr. Crignano began construction on three new luxury buildings that are selling fast: Pier 27, comprising 700 units in two towers at the foot of Yonge Street, priced up to $4.6-million; 58-floor L Tower a few blocks north, priced up to $2.6-million; and Oakville’s The Shores, 202 suites and nine town-homes priced to $2.6-million.
“Once people took a look around and realized the Canadian economy and our housing climate were very different from what was happening in the States, when they saw our market was very stable and had solid underpinnings, they were able to get comfortable with making purchasing decisions again and looking at properties and what their options were,” says Mimi Ng, vice-president of marketing for Menkes Development, one of three partners building the Four Seasons Hotel and Private Residences in Yorkville.
Boosting the buying frenzy are cranes and construction workers visibly busy behind the hoarding. Many luxury buildings and major hotel brands, such as Trump, Shangri-La and Four Seasons, used 2009 to tout their residences and have now broken ground, with The Ritz-Carlton already topped off and ready for its first occupants by summer.
“A lot of people are scrambling to get new products on the shelf for the early part of 2010 while the world is cautiously optimistic, and people will continue to buy,” predicts Mark Cohen, senior vice-president at The Condo Store Marketing Systems. “As long as borrowing rates remain low, prices remain competitive and the general economy seems to be healthy from a rebound standpoint, people will continue to buy new homes and condos. There’s a guarded sense of optimism for a very good 2010.”
One curiosity that has come to light since the recent boom is that local buyers are outpacing those from overseas. Christene De Gasparis, Aspen Ridge Homes’s marketing director, says many own properties in New York and Muskoka and are selling their large Toronto home for a smaller but equally luxurious pied-a-terre. Robbyn Hayden, sales manager for Living Shangri-La, is delighted by the local interest because “you don’t want to be in an investor-only building.”
Despite the bounce-back, luxury high-rise players are hopeful about 2010. Ben Myers, executive vice-president of Urbanation, says few projects launched in 2009 due to the economy, leaving plenty of inventory left to sell, and he does not expect many new projects to come to the market until the current units are sold. Mr. Myers says the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST), which kicks in this July, will not make a big impact on luxury buyers “because they are already spending a lot of money in this market.”
Julie Di Lorenzo, co-president of Diamante Development Corp. that is building The Florian, a 21-storey, 90-unit building in Upper Yorkville, says prices will certainly rise due to the dearth of units.
“There aren’t a lot of luxury two,-three-and four-bedroom units out there, period,” she says. “They simply have not been built. Inventory of high-end condos is not available. Yet there are still many, many couples who will be downsizing. That demographic is just starting to influence luxury sales. The first Baby Boomers are just hitting 65 and thinking about their luxury home without stairs to climb and eavestroughs to clean. And now many young families have substantial recreation properties and they prefer [to have] the home in the country and the condo in the city for lifestyle.”
Kind of like Frank and Lori. They may not own a cottage, but they want the lifestyle that goes with luxury high-rise living. Judging by the reactions of their family and long-time neighbours, they will have plenty of company at their new pad.
“One word: envy,” laughs Frank as he describes the reaction when he started telling people of the downtown move. “We’ll have a lot more friends and family coming to visit. We’ll be the cool aunt and uncle — and we’ll get to enjoy all the fun and frolic of Yorkville.”
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information - 416-388-1960
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Luxury Toronto Condo Living
New homes on the market include Victory Condos, which has limited availability
Suzanne Wintrob, National Post
Housing sales may be booming again, but judging by all the bulldozers and cranes popping up, it appears luxury condominiums are the talk of the town.
From Lake Ontario to tony Yorkville and out to the suburbs, there is hardly a piece of land without a new condo building on it or one in the works. Famous hotel brands such as Trump, Four Seasons and Ritz-Carlton are well into construction, while local developers who held on to land during last year’s financial nightmare have rolled up their sleeves and are back in action.
All the excitement has given buyers and investors an assortment of interesting luxurious options. There are grand residences atop hotels, chic units and penthouses in tall towers, and a new crop of lower buildings boasting garden terraces. Those on the market are selling swiftly, while several new offerings are about to make their official debuts.
“We’re all a little surprised by how the market turned around very quickly,” admits Brian Brown, vice-president of Lifetime Developments and principal of sister company BLVD Developments. “It was almost like somebody turned off the faucet and then all of a sudden turned it back on. It’s as if there wasn’t a slowdown. There has been a lot of pent-up demand. For a period of time, people decided they wanted to sit on the sidelines to see how things were going to shake out. As soon as we heard some good news, everyone was jumping back in and trying to find great deals, great offers and great investment opportunities.”
Lifetime/BLVD is the perfect example of a builder offering something for everyone. While most of the company’s condo projects are situated in downtown Toronto, they come in all shapes and sizes and cater to a wide demographic.
For instance, Liberty Market Lofts in Liberty Village features live-work spaces, with only a handful of lofts and penthouses left and priced to $494,990. Near Spadina Avenue, the pricier 12-storey project Victory Condos on King has just a few suites available. Penthouses, boasting private rooftop patios that match the unit size, range from 800 to 2,500 sq. ft. and $706,900 to $2.2-
million. As an incentive, penthouse buyers will receive free stuff including: a locker, an underground parking space, an upgraded kitchen appliance package and rooftop built-in barbecue and sink. Lifetime is also a joint venture partner with Great Gulf Homes on the 42-storey X2 tower, and will launch three more towers in the fall including the 41-storey Bisha Hotel and Residences in Toronto’s entertainment district. In short, different strokes for different folks.
“There’s definitely a market for every type of product,” Mr. Brown explains. “People feel they’re getting something different, something that fits exactly what their expectations are without having to spend extra money to upgrade. It’s done very well for us.”
Ken Zuckerman, owner of Zinc Construction, shares that sentiment as he prepares to transform St. Basil’s Separate School in Yorkville into a six-storey, 25-unit tiered boutique condo building called Hazelton 36. It is unique to Toronto, he claims, because it will be small but splendid and situated on a residential tree-lined street. Average units will be approximately 1,800 to 2,200 sq. ft. and priced around $1-million, with penthouses as big as 6,000 sq. ft. Expected occupancy is September 2012.
“It’s for people who are independent and want their privacy and want to feel they’re somewhere special,” says Mr. Zuckerman, who plans several more boutique projects now that the market is back where he likes it.
Another newcomer to the luxury condo business, given the economic upswing, is Dunpar Homes. Mark Mintzer, vice-president of sales and marketing, says the company has built more than 2,000 luxury townhomes in South Etobicoke over the past 25 years but the time was right for its first condo highrise. The seven-storey Kingsway Terrace, at the corner of Prince Edward Drive and Dundas Street West, will go to market on April 10 with 80 units ranging from 700 to 2,900 sq. ft. and priced from $400,000 to more than $2-million. The suites are geared to upscale empty-nesters who live in The Kingsway and want to stay in the area.
“In building our townhomes, we always had a missing link for the person who wanted something all on one floor,” Mr. Mintzer says. “People always loved our finishes and designs but couldn’t do the stairs. We were missing a segment of the market we should have been looking at.”
Dunpar Homes has owned several pieces of land on that intersection for a decade but was waiting for the right opportunity. When the economy picked up, the company made its move. Kingsway Terrace is just one of three buildings the developer is planning for that corner over the next five years.
Some builders are enticing buyers with nostalgia. The Nicholas near York-ville is a throwback to the 1960s, with floors, fixtures and furniture in the 29-storey, 255-unit building designed as an ode to Mad Men. Mark Reeve, a partner at developer Urban Capital Property Group, describes the building as “affordable luxury” given the “first-class” finishes and Cecconi Simone-designed kitchens. The ’60s theme is so ingrained in marketing the property that “one advertising executive wanted to call it the Sterling Cooper building [like on the TV show] but we said that was going a bit too far,” Mr. Reeve quips.
Then there’s the “something different” category. Concord Adex’s 1,800-unit Parade project, covering two city blocks in downtown Toronto, comprises two 38-storey towers linked by a two-storey bridge at the 28 to 30 levels. Parade II – the phase now under construction – boasts two Mike Niven-designed Sky Suites situated within the bridge. Each 4,000-sq.-ft. Sky Suite has three levels, with the living room and dining room located on the bridge and the bedrooms in the tower. There is a walkout from the master bedroom to a private garden on the bridge’s roof deck. Cost of ownership: $6-million.
“Our target is the typical rich and famous, the type of personality that only looks at properties that are one of a kind,” says Brian Fong, senior manager of project marketing at Concord Adex.
The company has never offered such exclusive suites at any of their other projects around the world, he says. They are being sold through a select group of real estate agents.
For those looking for single-family luxury, only three bungalows remain at The Bungalows at Kilgour Estates, ranging from $1.7-million to $2-
million. Simona Annibale, vice-president of marketing at Daniels Corp., says they offer “something very unique in today’s marketplace that even nearby Lawrence Park or Rosedale do not: an intimate connection to the Kilgour Club – an all-encompassing fitness, social and recreational oasis designed by Brian Gluckstein.” Buyers can move in this year.
Condo/hotels are doing brisk business, too, with the big-name brands coming together nicely. The 60-storey Trump Toronto is almost halfway up (“We’re averaging about a floor every week and a half,” says spokesman Howard Tikka) and the first stage of the granite-and-glass curtain wall is complete. The residences are 60% sold but the remaining are exquisite, ranging from a 36th-floor, 1,310-sq.-ft. suite from $2.1-million to a 51st-floor 3,275-sq.-ft. suite from $5.8-million. Hotel condominiums start at $900,000. Trump’s people are hoping for a February 2011 hotel opening, with residence and condo occupancy following that fall.
The 53-storey Ritz-Carlton Toronto is also making inroads, with the building now topped off and 80% of the 159 residences sold. As incentive, buyers will receive a $150,000 gift card they can use at any Ritz-Carlton properties around the world.
“Most of our buyers have stayed at a Ritz-Carlton hotel or resort across the world,” explains Tina Amato, senior vice-president at Baker Real Estate. “They are very familiar with the brand, they know the service and they know what they’re going to get by living above a Ritz-Carlton Hotel. The gift card … is a really special incentive for them to buy.”
Not to be outdone, the 55-storey Four Seasons is now at the ninth floor and the glass curtain wall is going in. The complete project comprises two towers – a 55-floor tower housing the hotel plus exquisite residences beginning on the 24th floor, and a 26-storey tower made up entirely of residences. Both will be completed at the same time, with residence occupancy in mid-2012. The residences are also 80% sold.
Of particular note is the 55th-floor penthouse. At 9,032 sq. ft., it takes up the entire floor and includes 12-ft. ceilings, floor-to-ceiling glass on every wall, four terraces, and a separate 680-sq.-ft. staff suite. The lucky owner gets four private parking spaces and a Four Seasons address. Price tag: $30-million.
“Ninety to 100% of our buyers own residences elsewhere in the world, but most have some Canadian [connection] – maybe they used to live here, or they still live here, or they have kids who go to school here, or they have family or business here,” says Janice Fox, director of sales for Four Seasons Private Residences. “Much less than the majority will live here full-time … so [owners] are never going to have to wait long for an elevator.”
With so much activity, 2010 is shaping up to be a busy year for developers – and a luxuriously satisfying one for those seeking the finest in condominium living.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information - 416-388-1960
————————————————————————————————————
Incoming search terms
Related posts:
- Luxury Living: Pick your palace The Regency Yorkville is but one of countless condominiums, townhouses...
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