Tag Archives: toronto hard lofts
Five industrial lofts for less than $1 million
Toronto Life
The number of so-called “hard lofts” in Toronto has ballooned since the early 2000s as developers wised up to the moneymaking potential of turning old factories and warehouses into residential units. True loft conversions have an artsy vibe that’s nearly impossible to imitate, and some buyers feel they’re a smarter investment than new builds because supply is, in theory, limited by the number of available buildings to convert. Even would-be loft owners with sub-$1 million budgets can find a range of options: some units maintain the original raw, industrial feel, while the rough edges on others have been smoothed away (some re-purposed buildings are even packed with luxury amenities). Below, five recently-listed hard lofts from across the city.
Comment: I still get people asking me for “raw” space that they can convert. Something 2,000 square feet or so, for like $200,000. I wish… truly I wish I could find something like that.
The Merchandise Lofts
Address: 155 Dalhousie Street, Unit 1015
Listed price: $449,900
Sold for: $441,000 after 18 days on the market
Building fees and amenities: $466.40. Concierge; rooftop garden with dog walking area; lap pool; barbecue terrace; half-basketball court; yoga studio; Metro grocery store at street level
The take: This one-bedroom unit in the former Sears warehouse near Ryerson is a roomy 889 square feet, and has a sunken living area, a raised master bedroom with a sliding barn door, and a wall of factory-style windows. Despite those features, however, a sense of the building’s early 20th-century Chicago School architecture feels sadly absent.
Comment: Such a great location, but such a huge builing turns a lot of people off. Some concrete columns, but otherwise you would be hard pressed to notice you were in an old building. Great amenities, best roof top patio in Toronto.

The Merchandise Lofts – 155 Dalhousie
The Boiler Factory Lofts
Address: 189 Queen Street East, Unit 5
Listed price: $469,900
Sold for: $470,000 after 170 days on the market
Building fees and amenities: $330.19. None
The take: The Boiler Factory is an intimate, 11-unit building in the heart of Moss Park, an area undergoing change with new developments but currently still known for its housing projects and homeless shelters. The 900-square-foot unit has one bedroom (plus office), exposed brick walls and a stainless steel-accented kitchen that compliments the industrial exterior. Best of all: a private rooftop terrace with views of the city.
Comment: Amazing, the last 2 units to sell recently went in 15 and 27 days. Some agents are easier to work with, I guess…

The Boiler Factory Lofts – 189 Queen Street East
The Brock Lofts
Address: 27 Brock Avenue, Unit 212
Listed price: $499,000
Sold for: $580,000 after three days on the market
Building fees and amenities: $698.46. None
The take: Spend $110,000 more and you’ll get a two-bedroom loft spanning 1173 square feet and two levels. A pair of open-tread metal staircases lead to the master bedroom and a private rooftop terrace (which has an excellent view of the line-up at Electric Mud BBQ). Maintenance fees are a tad steep considering the building lacks costly amenities like a concierge or fitness centre.
Comment: I am going to have one coming up soon, next door to this one. Sometime in early July likely, I will be listing unit 210. Let me know if you want to be notified when it comes up. One of the very few lofts in Parkdale – you would expect more. But this is one of 3, and they all sell fast fast fast.

The Brock Lofts – 27–31 Brock Avenue
The Broadview Lofts
Address: 68 Broadview Avenue, Unit 428
Listed price: $589,900
Sold for: $601,000 after four days on the market
Building fees and amenities: $494.49. Concierge; party room; rooftop patio
The take: With 152 units, the former Rexall Pharmacy warehouse just east of the Don Valley Parkway feels a little less exclusive than some of the other conversions. The split-level suite, however, is spectacular, with a huge open-concept kitchen and living area, and a master suite with a full wall of built-in closets.
Comment: I love it. This should be the set for any movie or TV show shot in a loft. All the classic brick and wood, just awesome. Ceilings are a little low, though. But it used to be a drug warehouse, you just don’t need that much room for all those little bottles, I guess.

The Broadview Lofts – 68 Broadview Avenue
The Robert Watson Lofts
Address: 363 Sorauren Avenue, Unit 116
List Price: $775,000
Sold for: Still on the market
Building fees and amenities: $843.72. Courtyard; rooftop garden
The take: This six-storey former candy factory in Roncesvalles is generally considered one of the city’s best conversions. A two-bedroom, ground-floor unit juxtaposes gritty industrial features like exposed brick, wood beams, open ductwork and rounded windows with a sleek contemporary kitchen and minimalist bathrooms. The bedrooms are set off by curtains, not walls, which could make for some privacy issues.
Comment: Trivia – Robert Watson’s old house on St. George Avenue is also a loft! This is another of the best conversions in Toronto, easily in the top 5 or 10. If you can get one, buy it, you will not regret it.

Robert Watson Lofts – 363 Sorauren Avenue
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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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Condo of the Week: 363 Sorauren Avenue
Sarah Ratchford – blogTO
The Robert Watson Lofts at 363 Sorauren Avenue offer some seriously swanky loft living in a small, close-knit neighbourhood environment. It’s a classic two-storey hard loft in a heritage property with modern updates in the kitchen and bath, but all the character of a century-old structure. The energy of the building can even be felt from the serene, tree-lined sidewalk outside.
Built in 1907 for Robert Watson, a candy manufacturer, the factory space is sprawling and largely open-concept. It features a mother load of exposed brick and gorgeous arched windows. You can’t deny the aesthetic pull of this property, unless (and with due cause) you want to dwell on the largely unattainable price point.

Robert Watson Lofts – 363 Sorauren Avenue
SPECS
Address: 363 Sorauren Ave.
Price: $795,000
Square Footage: 1,700
Bedrooms: 2+1
Bathrooms: 2
Storeys: Two
Parking Spaces: 1
Fireplaces: No
Monthly Maintenance: $844.00
Building Amenities: Meeting room, visitor parking, enter phone system
NOTABLE FEATURES
Exposed brick throughout
14-foot exposed beam ceilings
Granite countertops
West-facing patio
Two storeys
18-foot ceilings
GOOD FOR
I have to admit that I have a serious and unhealthy love for exposed brick and the integrity of heritage elements. Its magnitude borders on an obsession, actually. Given this fetish and my resulting bias, I have to say that this property is good for living happily ever after in an authentic cocoon of wonderful. Also, the neighbourhood is quiet and charming — the kind of place where your neighbours are friendly and actually say ‘Hi.’
MOVE ON IF
You can’t afford the $795,000 it costs to live in heaven. Or if you hate friendly neighbours and/or children and/or puppies. Or, really, if you have no taste.
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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
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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Incoming search terms

















