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Tag Archives: solar

GTA waterfront properties in high demand

Suzanne Win­trob, National Post

Look­ing to own a piece of water­front? By the looks of it, devel­op­ers think every­one does and are eagerly pump­ing their high-rise and low-rise water­front prop­er­ties to any­one who will listen.

From Cobourg to down­town Toronto and all the way to Oakville and Burling­ton, the water­front is abuzz with activ­ity. Projects already on the mar­ket are push­ing their last remain­ing units, while new devel­op­ments are either await­ing final approval or are under con­struc­tion and set to launch.

Peo­ple every­where view water­front own­er­ship as a sound invest­ment, espe­cially in high demand areas,” says Marc Hewitt, pres­i­dent of Niche Devel­op­ment Ltd. build­ing Oakville’s Edge­mere Pri­vate Res­i­dences. “Water­front land is a com­mod­ity, and in urban areas such as the GTA, it’s a scarce com­mod­ity. That makes it a sound invest­ment and some­thing peo­ple take great pride in owning.”

While Muskoka chairs and pesky black flies may be miss­ing from this urban water­front equa­tion, it’s the idea of wak­ing up and gaz­ing out at the lake — or walk­ing the dog a block or two to it — that has pur­chasers hooked. Even the well-chosen names — among them Bluwa­ter, River City, South Beach and West­lake — con­jure up thoughts of sand cas­tles and seag­ulls in a bid to heighten sales.

The lifestyle is so desir­able that a decade ago the gov­ern­ments of Toronto, Ontario and Canada joined forces to cre­ate Water­front Toronto, charged with over­see­ing the renewal of Toronto’s water­front. Derek Gor­ing, direc­tor of devel­op­ment at Water­front Toronto, says the cor­po­ra­tion is tak­ing a “holis­tic” approach to water­front devel­op­ment by cre­at­ing people-focused neigh­bour­hoods with a mix of res­i­dences, com­mer­cial and retail space, pub­lic spaces, plus com­mu­nity neces­si­ties such as child­care, schools, com­mu­nity cen­tres, libraries and access to transit.

Ini­tially, 13,000 res­i­den­tial units are planned for Toronto’s East Bayfront and West Don Lands areas — 7,000 and 6,000 respec­tively — with another 27,000 units expected over the next decade in those ‘hoods plus North Keat­ing by the Don River. At least 20% will be afford­able hous­ing, says Mr. Gor­ing, and 20% will be rental. All will be LEED Gold-certified. One-quarter of res­i­den­tial design will be devoted to pub­lic green space, he adds. In fact, this sum­mer, Canada’s Sugar Beach at the foot of Jarvis Street and Sher­bourne Park at the foot of Sher­bourne Street will open in the East Bayfront area, with con­struc­tion start­ing later this fall on Under­pass Park and Don River Park in the West Don Lands.

What makes Toronto’s new water­front com­mu­ni­ties so appeal­ing is that, not only are they at the water’s edge, but they are also in the heart of the city,” says Mr. Gor­ing. “This water­front gives peo­ple the best of both worlds — the beauty and tran­quil­ity of life at the lake and the cul­ture and vital­ity of the urban experience.”

The first two devel­op­ers to sign up are Great Gulf Group devel­op­ing East Bayfront’s Park­side, a 540,000-square-foot project includ­ing a res­i­den­tial tower (launch date expected in 2011); and, Urban Cap­i­tal build­ing the West Don Lands’ River City, com­pris­ing 900 loft–style con­dos, pent­houses and town­homes over the next five to seven years. Phase 1 — two high-rises totalling 348 units — is now sell­ing at $239,900 to $750,000 with occu­pancy in late 2012.

Although River City is a Water­front Toronto ini­tia­tive, it is not tech­ni­cally “water­front” because it is not on Lake Ontario. But it will have beau­ti­ful views of the revi­tal­ized Don River and will sit on the new 18-acre Don River Park. Ben Rusonik, River City’s sales man­ager, says Phase 3 will be sit­u­ated closer the lake, so it will have actual lake views. But at this point, he says, River City’s slo­gan is “This is Where it Starts,” a ref­er­ence to it being the first pri­vate devel­op­ment on the Water­front Toronto property.

Down the road in Eto­bi­coke, sales at South Beach Con­dos + Lofts are brisk. When com­plete, the four-acre project will com­prise two 27-storey, 313-unit Art Deco-styled glass-and-steel tow­ers, 30,000 sq. ft. of ameni­ties includ­ing pool, squash courts hotel guest suites and a pet day­care, 16,000 sq. ft. of retail space, and reflec­tive rooftop solar pan­els to gen­er­ate energy. Tower 1 is sold out and Tower 2, with sum­mer 2012 occu­pancy, is more than 80% sold.

After years of build­ing up Mon­treal, Amexon Devel­op­ment Corp. decided to bring its exper­tise to Toronto’s water­front with this four-acre site con­jur­ing up thoughts of Miami’s funky Ocean Drive. Jason Shiff, Amexon’s exec­u­tive sales man­ager, says the com­pany had owned the land for a while but was wait­ing for the right moment to bring it to market.

We wanted some­thing that would enhance water­front liv­ing,” he says. “It’s really vacation-type liv­ing to the tee. It emu­lates South Beach and Ocean Drive. It gives you the exact same Art Deco features.”

Nearby, Vancouver-based Onni Group of Com­pa­nies is final­iz­ing plans for its sec­ond Toronto project after The Gar­ri­son, this one at Lake Shore Boule­vard and Park Lawn Road. West­lake — described by exec­u­tive vice-president Chris Evans as “an urban vil­lage” with inter­nal roads and store­fronts — will com­prise 1,300 units in three tow­ers, the tallest with 48 floors, plus 85,000 sq. ft. of retail includ­ing national gro­cery and drug stores, and 25,000 sq. ft. of ameni­ties. Units will range from 500 to 1,500 sq. ft., though pric­ing has not been announced.

Oakville’s cov­eted water­front is also see­ing some action. Daniels Corp.’s exec­u­tive vice-president, Niall Hag­gart, describes the 12-storey, 68-unit One Eleven Forsythe as “a quin­tes­sen­tial bou­tique con­do­minium nes­tled on the shores of 16 Mile Creek in down­town Oakville.” Only a hand­ful of suites remain, priced from $1.2-million to more than $2.5-million, with all suites on the east side of the build­ing over­look­ing the water.

In Oakville’s Bronte Vil­lage, The Pem­ber­ton Group has taken over an old piece of land that once housed a grand her­itage home. In its place will sprout Bluwa­ter Con­do­minium, with three eight-floor build­ings and 10,000 sq. ft. of ameni­ties infused with a well­ness theme. The 220 units will range from the low $400,000s for a 600-sq.-ft one bed­room to more than $1-million for a 3,200-sq.-ft. com­bined suite with wrap­around bal­cony. All pur­chasers will receive a one-year mem­ber­ship to the Oakville Club. The project will launch this fall, con­struc­tion will start next year, and occu­pancy is expected in 2013.

[This is one of] the most sought-after loca­tions in real estate,” says Christo­pher Invidi­ata, team leader at Re/Max Aboutowne Realty in Oakville who has worked the area’s real estate mar­ket for 25 years. “[Bluwa­ter] is also set in a resort-type set­ting, which ele­vates the liv­ing expe­ri­ence. The com­bi­na­tion of those two facts will drive a lot of buy­ers to our doorstep.”

In Burling­ton, Moli­naro Group is work­ing on a 21-storey, 186-unit tower called Strata Con­dos. It is 75% sold, with remain­ing units sell­ing for $265,000 to $900,000. Billed as “lux­ury condo liv­ing for the hip, fit and green,” com­pany pres­i­dent Vince Moli­naro says he expects Strata to receive at least LEED Sil­ver cer­ti­fi­ca­tion. Besides the oblig­a­tory fit­ness cen­tre, Strata will include a 5,600-sq.-ft. med­i­ta­tion gar­den, a 3,000-sq.ft, ground-level bicy­cle stor­age room to encour­age cycling, and a car share program.

But the real draw will be the water­front, says Mr. Moli­naro, even though the project is not right on the water’s edge.

With Burling­ton being close to down­town, the water­front is the focus,” he says. We have prob­a­bly one of the biggest parks that will not be devel­oped. … The down­town is all focused along the water­front — all the shops, all the restau­rants are [there]. That’s the big draw for most people.”

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  • Housing co-op trumps condos for architectural award

    Pug awards celebrate best in Toronto architecture and planning

    Cigdem Iltan – Globe and Mail

    Swank condos took up most of the spots on the list of residential architecture nominees at the Pug Awards this year, but it was Toronto’s first housing co-operative in 20 years that emerged on top.

    Housing co-op 60 Richmond East earned the prize of best new residential building at the awards ceremony Wednesday night at the Art Gallery of Ontario. The Pug Awards celebrate the best in Toronto’s architecture and planning as voted by Torontonians.

    The awards were established in 2004 to raise public awareness about architecture and design.

    Teeple Architects Inc. designed the 11-storey, 85-unit building at Richmond and Church streets for the Toronto Community Housing Corporation on land donated from the City of Toronto. Fifty-nine of its units are designated as Regent Park replacement housing. The building features a sixth-floor garden that is irrigated by storm water runoff. Organic waste from the in-house resident-owned-and-operated restaurant and training kitchen will be used for compost once the restaurant opens.

    The Royal Conservatory Telus Centre for Performance Learning took the award for best commercial and institutional building. Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects, lead by Marianne McKenna, designed the building as part of the final phase in the conservatory’s master plan to build a new home. Its features include a 1,135-seat concert hall and new media broadcast centre.

    Victorian flatiron form-inspired Pure Spirit at the Distillery and the Arc on Bayview Avenue earned honourable mentions in the residential category. Pure Spirit is the historic Distillery District’s first condominium tower, one of a trio in the area designed by firm architectsAlliance. The marine-inspired Arc building designed by Daniels Corp. has 450 suites and is next door to Bayview station.

    The RBC Centre and Bloorview Kids Rehab received honourable mentions in the commercial and institutional category. The RBC Centre’s computer-controlled solar shading, sun-sensor controlled lighting and raised flooring infrastructure earned it the title of Canada’s first LEED gold certified office tower building. Bloorview Kids Rehab architect Vertechs Design Inc. used floor-to-ceiling windows and a nearby ravine to create a non-institutional environment at the hospital.

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  • Behind the typical facade, this is a green house worthy of 2010

    Technology and a new ecological consciousness are transforming the innards of some new houses

    John Bentley Mays – Globe and Mail

    Driving or walking along the leafy streets in the Governor’s Bridge district of Rosedale, you might never notice the house I’m writing about this week. It’s new, but it fits without a glitch into the quiet urban streetscape of similarly new, stylistically old-fashioned homes.

    What counts about this 3,400-square-foot dwelling is not its architecture, which is hardly daring or inventive, but its exceptional efficiency. Using some of the most advanced energy systems now available in the marketplace, Toronto designer Richard C. Brightling has created a house that looks forward into the future of construction, when all new residences will be required to perform much better than they do now. With clients demanding greener solutions to their need for housing, and architects increasingly adept at coming up with such solutions, that future is not far off.

    Energy-saving features of the Governor’s Bridge house include a high-performance building envelope that is insulated to a standard considerably beyond what is now required by city construction codes. The atmosphere inside this tight skin is kept fresh and clean by an exchanger that replaces and filters the air every four hours.

    Heating and cooling is accomplished with a $70,000 geothermal system. Six fluid-carrying tubes have been sunk 200 feet into the ground, where the temperature is a steady 14.4 C. Pumped up to the surface and into a control room in the basement – this tightly packed, high-tech facility resembles what I imagine a submarine interior to look like – the fluid is then used to modify the temperature of fan-forced air. Geo-thermal energy is not free; electricity is needed to run the pumps and raise the temperature from its base level of 14.4C to something more comfortable. Nevertheless, Mr. Brightling told me, his clients’ annual savings on air conditioning come in at 30 to 40%.

    Hot water for showers, dishwashing and so forth is generated by solar thermal panels installed on the roof. Glycol (which does not freeze in winter) circulates through the panels, gathering heat from the sun that, in turn, heats water in the tank. I was surprised to find that the tap water was very hot indeed – on a cool spring day, with little or no help from hydro. This $8,000 system works efficiently in our northern climate for most of the year, Mr. Brightling said, taking notable strain off the electricity grid (and hence lightening the electric bill).

    Being a confirmed apartment-dweller, I don’t have a lawn, nor do I understand the North American obsession with having lawns. But if one must keep a green patch out front and back of the house, it should pull its weight, environmentally speaking. It does so here. Mr. Brightling has installed a 4,500-litre tank under the back yard of this project that effectively catches rain water running off the roofs of the main house and the garden shed and makes this water available for irrigating the lawns. This uncomplicated plumbing arrangement is an example of good ecological stewardship, especially in a city that wastes far too much water.

    Back inside the house, Mr. Brightling has introduced a few other smaller features that also enhance the pleasure and sense of security in living there. There are the ceiling sprinklers, for instance – nearly invisible fixtures intended to deploy individually when the air around them reaches 100 C. And there is the lighting, equipped with low-wattage LED and halogen bulbs to further enhance the energy efficiency of the house.

    These, then, are the major and minor systems at work in Mr. Brightling’s technical outfitting – some complex, others simple, all suitable for comfortable living in a sustainable, environmentally responsible manner. Nor is the cost of these green measures, as a percentage of total expenditure, really prohibitive. Of the $1.8-million it took to build the Governor’s Bridge house, only $150,000 was invested in green technologies – all of which will bring cost savings down the line.

    Now, to marry such advanced thinking about the environment to contemporary good design! Like the passion for lawns, the desire for a 2010 house that looks like it was done in the 1920s escapes me. Windows were small back in those days, interiors were chopped up into small rooms, the middle of the building was always dark. To be fair, Mr. Brightling has opened up the rear of the Governor’s Bridge house to the light, but the front façade is as fusty and serious as anything in Rosedale from 80 years ago. The architectural taste of Rosedale residents, it appears, has some catching up to do, if it’s to stay abreast of the technological advances taking root in their dignified old neighbourhood.

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