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Tag Archives: minto

55 & 69 storeys eyed for Green P site in Yorkville

Michelle Ervin – Post City

A local city councillor is raising the alarm over an application by development company Minto to plunk two massive condo towers down on a parcel of land in increasingly crowded Yorkville, currently occupied by a nine-level parking building.

Minto’s plan is to build 55- and 69-storey towers at the Green P at 37 Yorkville Ave. as well as an adjacent property.

Coun. Kristyn Wong-Tam said she has grave concerns about the proposal, ranging from density and shadowing impacts to how it will affect the pedestrian experience in “iconic” Yorkville. She has spoken with City of Toronto Planning staff to see if the application can be considered in the context of three other major applications in the area, including the 83 storeys proposed at Holt Renfrew.

“We’re also asking the crucial question, that is, ‘How do we make sure that we don’t overdevelop Yorkville [to the point] that we actually develop out the desirability of a neighbourhood that’s currently seen as one of the best neighbourhoods to live in?,’” Wong-Tam said.

A planner handling the file said that he has considered applications in tandem before, and that what Wong-Tam was requesting could be done. The site is designated as mixed use under the official plan, permitting a combination of commercial and residential uses.

The site is only zoned for up to 30 metres, however, which is roughly nine or 10 storeys. And the adjacent site is only zoned for 18 metres, or five to six storeys.

The proposed development would have an 11-storey base and contain 1,166 residential units. The first two floors would be dedicated to retail and floors three through nine would be allocated to a new 802-space Green P lot. The developer purchased the Green P from the city for a combination $44 million in cash and the $32 million replacement of the existing nine-level Toronto Parking Authority lot.

Residents of the development would be accommodated in three levels of underground parking containing 370 spaces.

The planner said a preliminary report is slated to go to Toronto and East York Community Council early this fall, which will trigger a community consultation meeting.

Minto could not be reached before press time.

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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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  • Has Toronto’s Condo Boom Gone Too Far?

    TheRedPin

    According to a story by blogTO, about a hundred residents at a recent public meeting expressed their frustration about Minto Freed’s proposed condo project in the Wellington and Niagara neighbourhood. They are concerned about the possible negative impact the proposed building will have on their historic neighbourhood as well as the traffic it will cause. The developer’s proposed project will be 81 meters high with over 600 units, adding over a 1,000 vehicles to the neighbourhood. There is also going be a series of retail units as part of the project.

    The meeting, also attended by the developer’s representatives and councillor Adam Vaughn, was a lively one with at times irate residents wanting to put a stop to this. One resident whose main concern was about the culture of the area, accused the developer saying: “just because it’s made of bricks doesn’t mean it’s Victorian.”

    Despite the rage from the citizens however, the main organizers’ goal wasn’t necessarily to put a stop to the development altogether. According to the Grid, they want “to work together with Minto Freed to build a sustainable community…. we think this is a great opportunity to have a lower-scale development that will fit with our area which is mixed use—it has a lot of beautiful old historical buildings”

    The question here is whether we have gone too far with the number of new condo projects being built around the city. Is there a fine line between Toronto the old and the Toronto that is the financial centre of the country trying to compete with larger metropolitans such as New York and Chicago? Leave us comments with your thoughts.

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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.

    ———————————————————————————————————————

    Developers transform Toronto’s fashion district

    Alison Gregor The New York Times

    Once a hodgepodge of textile factories and auto lots, Toronto’s fashion district here has rapidly evolved into upscale restaurants and boutiques in refurbished warehouses and residential units in sleek glass structures.

    The roughly 17-square-block area where most of the development is taking place is named for its link to the textile industry. Just west of Toronto’s downtown and theater district, the fashion district is bisected along King Street by the city’s most popular streetcar line. Development has been centered on the diminutive Victoria Memorial Park, which is surrounded by stylish midrise buildings and industrial brick structures given new life with trendy shops and restaurants.

    Even in a Canadian real estate market that has been on a bull run for a decade, the district’s robust sales and rapidly rising prices stand out.

    “This is the combination SoHo-Meatpacking District of Toronto, and its transformation has been just as amazing as the meatpacking district’s has been here,” said Francis J. Greenburger, the chairman of Time Equities Inc. of New York. The company has been involved in developing the district since 2004, when it joined with Freed Developments of Toronto to build an 85-unit condominium building called 66 Portland.

    Since then, Freed has completed five more projects, including one hotel, and has four others being marketed or under construction, frequently in partnership with Time Equities and other partners.

    Freed Developments also has plans for its biggest project, consisting of 1,200 units done in alliance with the Canadian development company Minto Group, said Bill Gairdner, Freed’s vice president of operations.

    “We’ve been pretty busy scooping up as many sites as we can, so there hasn’t been room for too many other developers to come in and compete, though we welcome that,” Gairdner said. “To have these bigger companies coming in and doing these projects is almost a tribute to what we’ve been doing here.”

    The surge of development has not gone unnoticed. In 2008, the Tridel Corp., one of the largest condo developers in Canada, bought an ailing Starwood Hotels project in the district that would have brought in Aloft and Element hotels. The parking garage had been excavated and poured, and Tridel built 305 condos in a 14-story glass building, calling it Reve.

    “We refer to this area as King West, which really is a hot spot for new condominium development in Toronto,” said James Ritchie, a senior vice president of sales and marketing at Tridel. “It’s the largest submarket in the city for condo development.” The King West area extends a few blocks west of Bathurst Street.

    In the last year, Tridel has sold more than 270 condos in Reve, with only the larger units remaining, Ritchie said. “It was very well received in the market,” he said.

    The recent wave of development in the area started in 1996, when Context Development began Twenty Niagara, a 24-unit glass condo building on the park. The city granted an experimental rezoning to residential from industrial, said Howard Cohen, the president of Context.

    “An opportunity came up for a really interesting site, because it was right on a park in this quasi-industrial area, but very close to Toronto’s core,” Cohen said. “We thought there might be some demand to live downtown in an area that had a lot of character, although it didn’t appeal to everybody because it was still full of old industrial buildings and parking lots.”

    It took about a year to sell the building’s units at prices of about $100 a square foot, he said, but it was successful enough for the city to rezone the district for residential development. Now, developments of hundreds of units sell out in a year, and prices in the fashion district have achieved $700 a square foot, much of that gain taking place in the last four years, Cohen said.

    The average price per square foot for condos in the greater Toronto area is $532, and $814 in Toronto’s core, according to the real estate information services company RealNet Canada.

    The most recent projects to be completed by Freed Developments are 550 Wellington West, with 336 condos, which is adjacent to a Thompson Hotel with 102 hotel rooms. The buildings share a rooftop pool and lounge, similar to the Gansevoort Hotel in New York, along with three restaurants, including a Scarpetta, which opened in New York’s meatpacking district in 2008. Freed Developments has increasingly been including retail space in its residential offerings, Gairdner said. In a 216-unit project called 75 Portland, with interiors designed by Philippe Starck, retail space is available to rent, and at 650 King, a 236-unit project currently on the market, plans are to include a high-end steakhouse, he said.

    At first buyers were mostly young singles, who have been joined recently by families and new immigrants. Many of the condos are owned by investors.

    While the fashion district continues to be an appealing neighborhood to investors and buyers who plan to live there, there are some concerns whether it could survive a bust in Canada’s residential real estate. Some real estate experts have estimated that homes in Canada are overvalued by 20 percent, even though banks do not lend to residential development projects that are not at least 65 percent to 70 percent presold.

    Also, under law, buyers must close once they have signed a purchase contract, and the interest on home loans is not tax-deductible. Recourse lending generally applies to developers and to homeowners, who, upon defaulting, are still responsible for any part of the loan the bank cannot recoup by selling the property. Under Canadian law, lenders must insure any mortgage for more than 80 percent of a property’s value.

    “Although there’s a lot of development going on, I wouldn’t call it a bubble because these are real buyers, with 20 percent deposits, who are responsible for the purchase even if the price goes down,” Cohen said.

    Even so, some experts said that low interest rates artificially stoked Canada’s housing market during the recession, which could result in higher foreclosure rates. At the same time, Canadian consumers have taken on increased debt in recent years, while the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., a government-established national housing agency, for a time stretched the amortization on home loans to 40 years from 25 and began insuring loans for which buyers made no down payment.

    “Pundits see ongoing demand of a very high number of units over a sustained period of time, but it seems we’ve experienced that in other markets, and suddenly something happens and markets turn out to be not quite as strong as we thought,” said Greenburger of Time Equities. “Toronto’s had a long run, but we know things don’t go in a straight line.”

    ———————————————————————————————————————
    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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