Tag Archives: new toronto lofts
Praise the loft
Windmill Developments plans to convert a red-brick, Neo-Gothic church at Perth Ave and Wallace Ave. into a condo that it has christened Union Lofts.
Ryan Starr – Toronto Star
Developer Alex Speigel strolls to the back of the vacant Perth Ave. church building and sits down in front of a massive old pipe organ. He pauses for a moment and then lays his hands on the keyboard, producing a few pleasant chords and a bluesy passage that resonates delightfully throughout the defunct house of worship.
His company, Ottawa-based Windmill Developments, plans to convert the red-brick, Neo-Gothic church at the northeast corner of Perth Ave and Wallace Ave. (near Dundas St. W. and Bloor St. W.) into a condo that it has christened Union Lofts. (“Praise the loft,” the project’s brochure implores. “Prepare to be converted.”)
The church, most recently occupied by a Seventh Day Adventist congregation, was designed by George Miller (of Gladstone Hotel fame) and built in 1913.
The old organ, manufactured in 1924 by Quebec’s Casavant Frères, a company that’s still around, sounds divine. But finding someone to take the impressive instrument — with 849 pipes, some which reach as high as 25 feet — off Windmill’s hands is proving to be a major challenge.
“We’re trying to find a home for it,” explains Speigel, the company’s Toronto-based managing partner, on a recent tour of the church building, which currently serves as the Union Lofts sales centre. “We’ve contacted all kinds of churches and theatres.”
So far, though, no takers.

Union Lofts – 243 Perth Ave
Fortunately Windmill hasn’t had as tough a time generating interest in Union Lofts.
Suites range from 550-square-foot one-bedroom units to 1,200-square-foot two-bedroom-plus den lofts. Prices start at $249,900 and go to $629,900.
The project, designed by Caricari Lee Architects, will comprise two sections.
The original church building will be preserved and reconfigured to house 24 units, each of them with unique layouts owing to the shape of the existing structure. The top floors will have two-storey townhouse-like units.
“It’s like building a building within a building,” Speigel explains. “It’s pretty complex. We have to add floors and use all the existing building openings, because (the city’s heritage preservation department) is concerned with keeping the look of the building.
“So the entire shell is being restored, and we’re also building up and into the roof.”
Indeed, one of the top-floor lofts will extend up into a large church turret.
“Units in the existing building will be kind of like a Rubik’s Cube,” Speigel says. “They go up and over the other, and they interlock.
“The church units are all quirky,” he adds. “And people really like that.”
Next door, where the church parking lot currently sits, a new 15-unit building — the Vestry — will be built, with four condos per floor.
The new addition will have brick that matches the church, but it will have a distinctly modern design, Speigel stresses. “When you mimic the old, it sort of cheapens it in a way. You want to see clearly what’s old and what’s new.
“So (the new building is) clearly of our time and the church is clearly of another time. But the materials and massing are sympathetic.”
Union Lofts’ open floor plans maximize natural daylight, with a sliding door system that enables efficient use of open spaces.
Suites at Union Lofts will have a private patio, terrace, balcony or Juliette balcony, with water hose bibs on the patios and terraces.
Kitchens come with custom Scavolini cabinetry, islands and Caeserstone countertops.
Speigel, previously director of development for Context Development, has been involved with several Toronto conversion condo projects in the past, including The Loretto, Tip Top Lofts and Kensington Lofts.
“It’s never the same thing twice,” he says. “That’s the good thing and the bad thing about them. It makes it very interesting but you just never know what you’re in for.”
“A lot of developers don’t like to do conversions,” he adds. “They would rather just tear down and build new. It’s simpler and there’s less risk involved.
“But for me it’s the challenge of working with an existing building and it’s just great to save and preserve them.”
Speaking of saving, one can only pray that the great old church organ finds a new congregation.
“Whether we find a home for it in a church is to be determined,” Speigel cautions. “It’ll be expensive to take apart, and most churches have an electronic organ now; they don’t have the room or the design for this much space.
“Still,” he says after noodling on the instrument for a few moments, “it’s quite fantastic.”
HOLY GREEN
Windmill Developments, which claims to be “Canada’s greenest developer,” is targeting LEED Platinum certification for Union Lofts.
All of Windmill’s past projects have achieved LEED Platinum, the top level of the system for measuring green buildings.
Preserving and re-using the existing church building will do much to help in this effort.
“You’re not sending all this material to landfill,” says Speigel. “It’s still got all the embodied energy that was in it.”
There will be a geothermal heating/cooling system installed under Union Loft’s new Vestry building.
Each unit at Union Lofts will have double-glazed argon-filled windows with low-e coatings, and come equipped with an ERV (energy recovery ventilator) system. An ERV supplies fresh air directly to individual suites, heating and cooling it using energy drawn from the outgoing air.
Appliances at Union Lofts are all Energy Star, including a stackable washer and dryer – and the suites come with Forest Stewardship Council-certified wood flooring in the main living areas and bedrooms.
Union Lofts
Location: 243 Perth Ave.
Developer: Windmill Developments Group, windmilldevelopments.com
Architect: Caricari Lee Architects, caricarilee.com
Size: 4 storeys; 2 buildings
Units: 40 units; 550 sq. ft. to 1,200 sq. ft.
Price: $249,900 to $629,900
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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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New in Toronto real estate: Volta Lofts
Robyn Urback – blogTO
Volta Lofts is “loft-inspired” living set to arrive at Annette and Runnymede. This project is modest in scale with fewer than 20 units, with its greatest amenity set outside its front door. Yes, fresh pies and specialties cheeses just steps from its entrance. While this condo will surely appeal to those backing low-rise living and west-end personality, its roomy suites are limited only to those with grandiose pocketbooks to match. Here is a closer look at Volta Lofts.
SPECS
Address: 588 Annette Street
Floors: 5
Total number of units: 19
Ground level retail units: 2
Elevators: 1
Types of units: One bedroom plus den, two bedroom plus den
Unit sizes (in square feet): 812-1,313
Ceiling heights: 9.0′
Prices from (available units): Mid-$500,00′s
Maintenance fees: $0.28
Developer: Terra Firma Homes
Amenities/building features: Computer entry access, rooftop solar panel system
Expected occupancy: 2014
THE GOOD
Annette Street is a little west end gem that’s not typically given the love it deserves. It has a charming almost small-town feel complete with people who actually smile to each other on the sidewalk, offering a nice alternative to the, “Hey buddy; stop leaning on my bike,” that you might find on, say, Richmond Street. Volta Lofts inhabitants will have everything country-chic at their doorstep, including a cheese shop and market food store, a place to pick up fresh pies, a mom & pop pizza shop, an organic butcher shop, and lots more. So, in terms of community, this address is great. Other location perks include proximity to High Park, Bloor West Village and the Junction, along with Runnymede subway station about a 15-minute walk away.
The building itself seems to do its best to not disrupt the delicate ecosystem of Annette. Space for two retail shops means it will offer something to the area beyond a handful of new neighbours, and while I don’t find the architecture to be particularly stunning, Volta Lofts does come off as fairly inoffensive. Now, the suites themselves do deliver in terms of dazzle, outfitted with walk-in closets, spacious terraces (some with a private master suite terrace), kitchen islands with double-basin sinks, and some with washrooms equipped with separate bathtubs and shower stalls. Naturally, however, you get what you pay for, and Volta Lofts is far from a $300,000 shoebox in the sky.
THE BAD
What is this – a kitchen for ants?! Okay, that’s not totally fair (buyers can customize their kitchen packages, after all), but Volta Lofts’ kitchen rendering looks as though developers took a regular-sized kitchen and scaled it down for Fisher Price size. I’d wager it’d be a huge hit for kids. In any case, the big drawback of Volta Lofts floorplans seems to be with its two-bedroom and two-bedroom-plus den units. In short, only one bedroom (the master) gets a window. The other (or others, in the case of an extra bedroom plus den) is typically relegated to a corner of the suite, blocked off from natural light and usually equipped with a simple sliding door. It’s not ideal, to say the least, for a buyer spending upwards of $750,000; at the very minimum, he or she should be guaranteed a window in every bedroom.
The other drawback, of course, is price, with Volta figures sort of steep compared to other properties in the area. If you head a couple blocks north you can find three-bedroom detached homes priced in the $500,000 to $600,00 — options which, notably, come with a little bit of land and freedom from mandatory maintenance fees.
THE VERDICT
Great location. You’ll get more room, sunlight, (and potentially, return on your investment) with a house a few blocks north, but those private terraces and master bathrooms sure are purdy.
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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.
—————————————————————————————————–
Incoming search terms
New in Toronto real estate: 707 Lofts
Robyn Urback – blogTO
707 Lofts is a new Bloorcourt development that will replace a Dovercourt funeral home and a row of adjacent houses. In other words, not for the ghost-fearing condo buyer. Designed with loft living in mind (read: it’s a new structure), this project has seen much community input and developers have eventually settled on a plan of five floors instead of eight. Amenities are minimal and so too is unit square footage, but the location can’t be beat and the price is just about right. Here is a closer look at 707 Lofts.
SPECS
Address: 707 Dovercourt Road
Floors: 5
Total number of units: 77
Elevators: 2
Types of units: Studio, one bedroom, two bedroom, two-plus-den
Unit sizes (in square feet): 384 – 866
Ceiling heights: 9.0′-10.0′
Prices from: Low $300,000′s
Parking: Included
Locker: $4,500
Maintenance fees: $0.49
Developer: Enirox Group
Architect: Tact Architecture
Amenities: Party room, outdoor BBQ area
Expected occupancy: TBD (currently under construction)
THE GOOD
Excellent suite-to-elevator ratio. I’m consistently baffled when it comes to developers who try to get away with two elevators for a 300-unit building. Yes, elevator wells can’t rake in the same type of cash as 20 storeys of studio suites, but you would think some potential buyers would be deterred by the perpetual wait that comes with too few elevators serving too many people. In any case, 707 Lofts clearly won’t have this problem.
Location, naturally, is the big draw for this project. Steps to Bloor and walking distance to both Ossington and Dufferin Stations, this area has a heavy residential presence with plenty of independent restaurants, shops and cafes within a few minutes of the loft site. Dufferin Grove Park is also less than five minutes away, offering potential residents the opportunity the shop its farmers’ market every Thursday afternoon. The five-storey structure will certainly stand out from the semis and detached homes presently blanketing the area, but it shouldn’t be such a stark contract as to upset the family-community vibe. In other words – could be worse? A compelling reason to laud a condo, indeed.
Pricing is, perhaps, a more persuasive point. Maintenance fees are starting off low, and with any luck, they will remain low due to 707 Lofts’ relatively few building amenities. Most suites can be purchased for somewhere in the $550-per-square-foot range, which is probably right where it should be for this address in Bloorcourt Village. However, since many of 707′s units have already been snatched up, you may have to fork over a little more if your floor plan of choice is being offered by a third party.
THE BAD
Believe it or not, Enirox, some one-bedroom units are given 600 square feet of living space. But here, you’ve assigned 609 square feet (and, granted, a 224 square foot terrace) to a two-bedroom unit with one bathroom. That’s almost as bad at the 384 square-foot bachelor, and the collection of one-bedroom condos wherein the unit bedrooms don’t have windows. Poor show.
This project is symptomatic of the developer trap of trying to cram as many units as possible into a single structure (“trap”) resulting in floors of narrow units with little by way of natural light. Some of the smaller one-bedroom layouts also don’t lend themselves to any sort of dining setup, meaning you’ll either have to eat on the couch or over that single under mounted stainless steel sink. If you can spring for one of the two-bed, two-bath, fifth floor suites you’ll be all set, but otherwise, you’re left with slim pickings in terms of livability.
THE VERDICT
Good idea, poor execution. Not for the superstitious.
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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.
—————————————————————————————————–
Incoming search terms

















