Toronto Loft Conversions

We know classic brick and beam lofts! From warehouses to factories to churches, Laurin and Natalie want to help you find your perfect new loft. More »

Modern Toronto Lofts

Not just converted lofts, we can help you find the latest cool and modern space. There are tons of new urban spaces across the city. More »

Unique Toronto Homes

Not just lofts, we can also help you find that perfect house. From the latest architectural marvel to a piece of Toronto\'s Victorian past, the best and most creative spaces abound. More »

Condos in Toronto

We started off selling mainly condos, helping first time buyers get a foothold in the Toronto real estate market. Now working with investors and helping empty nesters find that perfect luxury suite. More »

Toronto Real Estate

For all of your Toronto real estate needs, contact the Jeffrey Team. Laurin and Natalie are dedicated to helping you find that perfect and unique new home to call your own. More »

 

Tag Archives: queen and dovercourt

The unexpected merits of Toronto’s condo boom

Marcus Gee – Globe and Mail

The Queen West Triangle was one of the earliest and noisiest battlefields in the condo wars. When developers started buying up land in the old industrial area south of Queen Street and west of Dovercourt Road, local activists feared they would push out all the artists and ruin the character of the neighbourhood.

Something quite different has happened. The area is indeed changing, with construction cranes looming, condos popping up left and right, and gentrification in full swing. But far from being banished from what was supposed to become a bourgeois wasteland, the arts are thriving.

A deal approved this month will see a local developer build a 36,000-square-foot Art Hub in the lower floors of a new condo at Lisgar and Queen streets. Seven non-profit groups specializing in film, video, photography and animation will make up the Toronto Media Arts Cluster, occupying a dramatic new space that will feature a 200-seat cinema.

The artists, previously scattered around the city and often struggling to cover the rent, will get a permanent home worth millions. The developer, in exchange, will get to build a few extra floors on his condo. Cost to the city government: zero.

Comment: Man, do we ever need more of this. How hard is it for the developer to throw a few bones in – for the city, for the people? They are making tons of money, it realy does not cost them anything… but sure makes them look good. The city needs to enforce these sorts of trades, make developers pay for their buildings in ways other than money. Improve the social fabric of the city and we all benefit.

The Art Hub is just the latest of several arts-related amenities coming to the area. The old Carnegie Library on the south side of Queen Street will become a new theatre, built with money from a developer and help from the federal and provincial governments. An arts-themed park is going in behind the postal station next door. Yet another deal with the developer has already created 70 studios for artists in the Artscape Triangle Lofts, part of a separate condo.

All of this would have been hard to foresee a few years ago when the Triangle fight was at its peak. The area started gentrifying in 2004, when the dilapidated Drake Hotel reopened as a hipster bar and music venue. It was soon joined down the street by the Gladstone, another artsy makeover of an old hotel. Developers saw the potential and started moving in on the Triangle, a neglected wedge of land bounded by railway tracks.

A well-organized neighbourhood group, Active18, fought bitterly against the scale and design of development. The focus was the struggle to save an old building full of artists’ lofts at 48 Abell St. When they lost their case at the Ontario Municipal Board, bells of doom seemed to toll for the artistic character of the area.

But Active18 soon saw it could salvage something out of its defeat. Developers want their buildings to have as many units and as much height as they can get, the better to make money. The city often allows them to build beyond zoning limits if they agree to pay for some sort of community benefit. This so-called Section 37 money is creating new parkettes, redone sidewalks and new performing spaces across the city – a windfall from the condo boom.

Comment: So if we all stop fighting and talk things through, we can find solutions that make everyone happy. Heck, we might even find solutions that make things better than they were before.

In the Triangle, the result is a profusion of space where artists can live, work and display their creations. “For us, it was a reasonably straightforward business proposition,” says developer Alan Saskin, president of Urbancorp, which is building The Edge and The Epic condominiums and financing the Art Hub. “We got more density and we can use the money from that to subsidize these arts groups.”

Everyone wins. Active18, once the scourge of developers, now praises Mr. Saskin for being open to unorthodox concepts like sticking a bunch of video artists in a condo. Mr. Saskin praises the local councillor, Anna Bailao, for being bold enough to see how the synthesis of art and development could work. Even city hall gets marks for shepherding the deal through.

It’s not a perfect outcome. Active18 still thinks the development in the Triangle is too dense and the design often cheesy. But Charles Campbell, a lawyer who speaks for the group, concedes that something good is coming out of it all. “The character of the neighbourhood is changing but surviving, maybe even improving.”

The lesson of the whole experience is that developers and artists need not be enemies. Together, in the Queen West Triangle, they are creating a unique new neighbourhood that will be a draw for the whole city.

Comment: Bravo!

—————————————————————————————————–
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
  • dovercourt queen development proposal
  • Model of Art and Soul

    You want artsy? This pad has sliding Japanese doors, a bedroom in a nook and a kitchen island on wheels made of steel

    Lisa Van de Ven, National Post

    Sometimes, it’s easiest to wow buyers with a large model suite in which to make a big impression. But at ART Condos – Triangle West Developments’ Queen West and Dovercourt project – the designers did the opposite. Opting for one of the smallest suites, they made it their mission to dazzle visitors with a combination of functionality and flourish. Purchasers can imagine what’s achievable, even if they don’t go for the largest unit in the building.

    “The space really illustrates a smart and effective layout,” says Arriz Hassam, a principal designer with 3rd Uncle Design, the team behind the model as well as the project’s interiors, “but the palette goes beyond that.”

    The 533-square-foot suite features sliding panels inspired from the shoji screens of Japanese tea houses, along with oak engineered floors and metal accents. The materials add visual texture while the proportions keep the unit functional.

    The bedroom is a highlight, hidden behind the shoji-style panels, which slide open to expose it to the living spaces, creating a loft-like effect when wanted. Combining translucent and transparent glass with wood veneer, the panels (when closed) become a form of art as well. In the bedroom, the 3rd Uncle team designed a platform bed to custom fit the space, with a dark brown leather headboard and an oak base. The nightstands are incorporated into the bed, with built-in lighting and flip-down tabletops.

    “You can flip them back up so you don’t have to have a lot of loose furniture in there, but if you’re reading a book or have a glass of water, you can still keep them by the bedside,” Mr. Hassam says.

    The bed fits snugly in the room, with storage drawers underneath and a closet in the corner. And next to the bedroom, the kitchen is just as thought out. It’s designed in a compact and contemporary European fashion, so that it’s both stylish and functional but doesn’t dominate the small space. The upper cabinetry is white, while below the cabinets are dark brown, a tone that extends up one side, panelling the front of the fridge.

    A custom-designed island – framed in steel – can be moved around at whim, though the designers have placed it underneath a Tom Dixon-designed pendant light fixture of spun brass; it’s black matte on the outside and has a hammered finish within. “It has a really nice light quality, and we like the object quality of it in the space,” Mr. Hassam says. “It’s very sculptural in its shape.”

    The design team uses functional items with sculptural appeal throughout the suite, adding to the artistic quality of the unit without cluttering it. In the living area, a wood stool combines an interesting shape with dual function: extra seating when needed, but doubling as an end table as well. The built-in media unit also acts as artwork, incorporating blackened-

    steel sliding panel doors that are beautiful in their own right but also serve to hide the television when it’s not in use.

    The living room sofa was inspired by a vintage mid-century Danish design and has been upholstered in natural linen-hued fabrics in two tones. It’s juxtaposed against a custom coffee table made out of raw planks of wood, which were oiled and then framed in steel.

    “We wanted to oscillate between things that are really refined and things that are still raw,” Mr. Hassam says.

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

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

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


    Incoming search terms
  • shoji screens toronto
  • oleson boulevard club
  • A Toronto neighbourhood without children

    The city and developers want breeders and their broods to start populating condo towers, but it’s an uphill battle

    Anna Mehler Paperny – Globe and Mail

    Carol Finlay’s friends and family think she’s crazy. A neglectful would-be mother. An urban masochist.

    Her audacious proposal? To move downtown to raise a family.

    “[They say,] ‘You can’t raise a family. … That would be neglectful to children … it’s not enough space to raise children, it’s dangerous.’ “

    Ms. Finlay, 29, and her husband Charlie are moving in August from North York to a loft near the corner of Queen and Dovercourt, which they hope to convert into a three-bedroom condo. “Ninety per cent of our friends are going in the opposite direction.

    “[But] our life is in Toronto and it didn’t make sense to us to spend so much of our time commuting,” Ms. Finlay says. “In North York we weren’t part of the community there as much as we would like to be. … We would like to start a family and that becomes even more important to us.”

    And the city of Toronto wishes there were thousands more like them.

    Surging demand for prized downtown real estate in a white-hot market has buyers snapping up new condos as fast as developers can build them – 951 high-rise units sold in January of this year, compared with 184 the year before and 508 during the market’s last peak in 2008.

    For the most part, the city is on board with the onset of a hyper-dense metropolis of vertical neighbourhoods. But the people buying those $600,000 condos are young singles and couples and, to a lesser extent, retirees. This migration upward coincides with an exodus of families from the downtown core. In the 2006 census, children under 15 made up only 8.4 per cent of Trinity-Spadina’s population, compared with 16.3 per cent in the rest of Toronto.

    The city is trying to change that. For months, Councillor Adam Vaughan has been working with developers on a social engineering project: to lure families into gleaming condominium boxes in the sky.

    The to-do list is deceptively simple – families need space and services with an affordable price tag attached. Achieving that in one of the priciest real-estate markets in Canada is another story altogether.

    It has been done elsewhere – notably Vancouver, which has seen its population of downtown children more than quintuple since 1986.

    But developers shy away from the drastic measures and the minimum three-bedroom requirement Mr. Vaughan would like to see – they are skeptical as to whether this social-planning ploy will work.

    If you build a kid-friendly condo, will families buy it?

    Planning and growth

    The city’s official plan to house more people in the downtown core calls for increasing density to take eco-conscious advantage of scarce urban space. But if Toronto’s downtown neighbourhoods are going vertical, argues Mr. Vaughan, those 30-storey elevators should have kids inside.

    “You can’t sustain a city with a monoculture; you can’t segregate singles from families and seniors from young people. What we need when we build these buildings is to build vertical neighbourhoods, and that means we need to sustain economic diversity and social diversity.”

    In November, the city’s planning and growth committee proposed requiring large developments to devote at least 10 per cent of their units to three-bedroom condos. The report was branded as unrealistic and restrictive by the development community. So industry representatives and the city have spent the past four months trying to hammer out a compromise.

    Mr. Vaughan has high hopes for the finished product, which goes before committee next month. As well, he’d like to see more high-rises with family-oriented services such as daycares.

    Ed Sonshine remembers Mr. Vaughan pestering him to include family-friendly units in summer of 2008, when Mr. Sonshine was designing a property with Tribute Homes at the corner of Queen and Portland. And the RioCan chief executive officer did – about 10 per cent of the 90 condos on sale have three bedrooms. But there’s a catch: Less than 18 months before opening, “we haven’t sold any yet.”

    “They’re a little bigger, so as a result they’re more expensive,” he says. The three-bedroom units start at $600,000. “And, you know, I’m not sure that people necessarily have it in their heads yet here that bringing up kids in a downtown environment is a good thing to do.”

    The other 81 units, on the other hand, are almost all spoken for.

    It’s not that Mr. Sonshine thinks the push to move families back into the downtown core is a bad one. “I’m just not sure it’ll work.”

    For success stories, the city need look no further than Vancouver, which two decades ago began a push for family-friendly downtown condos: The city stipulated that all new developments had to be at least 25 per cent two-bedroom units or larger, and allowed them to build taller in exchange for parks, playgrounds and daycare facilities.

    The result? The peninsula’s under-18 population soared to more than 7,000 in 2009 from 1,365 in 1986.

    “It was a deliberate part of the vision from day one,” said city planning director Brent Toderian. He says Vancouver is the only North American city opening new elementary schools in its downtown core.

    “Don’t give up on families downtown. They do want to live downtown, and our surveys have shown that if you design it well, they will choose the downtown over other options.”

    Affordability IS key

    The catch is affordability: Vancouver’s Yaletown townhouses and False Creek condos aren’t cheap – and the families buying them can afford the higher price point. Mr. Toderian admits financial accessibility is something the city is still grappling with. If Toronto wants to make its downtown condos accessible to those that can’t afford half-a-million dollars, the city has its work cut out for it, says Stephen Deveaux, vice-president of land development for Tribute Communities. Mr. Deveaux has been working with the city on a family condo policy. It’s not crazy to try to move families downtown, he says. But it’s not easy.

    “Affordability is the main issue, and if that could somehow be solved, perhaps we could find more of a market,” he said.

    “What we build is market-driven. And if there were a market for three-bedroom units, we could deliver.”

    Mr. Vaughan would love to see third parties help to make the homes more affordable – pension funds, for example, that would come in and take out second mortgages on units to help lower the purchasing cost for would-be inhabitants.

    ‘Close living’

    David Michael Lamb considers himself a profoundly urban person: He works in the city. When he goes on vacations, he visits cities. As a CBC radio reporter and producer, he covers Canada’s largest. And living with his wife and daughter in a condo in west-end Liberty Village was an almost perfect fit.

    But it was a very, very snug one: The storage locker quickly filled with baby clothes; they had to shop for small furniture that didn’t turn their tiny condo into a cramped cave.

    “It’s close living,” Mr. Lamb said, but they made it work – until they were getting ready for a second child. Another, larger condo – one with a second storage locker, a third bedroom and a park nearby – would have been ideal. But they found nothing remotely suitable or affordable. The small Roncesvalles house where they’re living now is nice, he says, but he believes the city should take it upon itself to diversify a denser downtown core.

    “If the city doesn’t somehow make sure that families can live downtown, then they will move out. And it’s not a healthy city when only one kind of person lives there.”

    Ms. Finlay and her husband lucked out: As a saxophone player, he got a coveted loft at an Artscape development. The initiative provides affordable work and living space for the city’s artists. Five years from now, Ms. Finlay sees herself living in walking distance from parks, school and summer camps, and with a short commute. She’d rather not be the only one.

    “I’d like to see less of our friends move away because they thought [it] was their only option.”

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

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

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

    show
     
    close
    You want that dream home? Why you'll have to join the line in this thin housing market http://t.co/IRN3rvwxjE