Tag Archives: unit condominium
Beaches condo project threatens nearby ravine
Renata D’Aliesio – Globe and Mail
This strip of busy Kingston Road in the Upper Beaches needs redeveloping. Four buildings shrouded mostly with beige clapboard sit empty, their windows boarded up with plywood, their exteriors dirty and worn.
A developer wants to transform the derelict stretch into a six-storey, 47-unit condominium, but the proposal would mean carving into a small ravine that is already choked with development – a scenario that a growing band of opponents argues is environmentally unacceptable.
Toronto is home to one of the world’s biggest network of ravines and the city should do a better job of protecting them, said Geoff Cape, executive director of an environmental charity and the brains behind Evergreen Brick Works, a ravine restoration project in the Don Valley.
“It’s easy to say, ‘Oh, we’ve had incremental development already so what’s wrong with a little bit more incremental development of the ravine system?’ But if you play that story out, you end up with nothing at a certain point,” Mr. Cape said.
The battle over the condominium on Kingston near Main is before the Ontario Municipal Board. If a settlement between the developer and opponents can’t be reached, a hearing will take place, likely in September.
Lawyer Amber Stewart, representing the project’s proponent, Kingston Road Development Corp., said the developer believes the site is appropriate for a multi-storey condo, noting the location is near transit and next door to an eight-storey apartment building.
The developer has proposed shifting the building closer to Kingston Road in response to concerns. The small Toronto firm also intends to create a ravine stewardship plan, which would include removing invasive plant species and replanting.
“We think we’ve done everything we can to minimize the footprint in terms of the ravine,” Ms. Stewart said. “The province has directed municipalities to intensify where intensification is appropriate and in our view this site is an ideal location.”
But several residents who live below the proposed condo believe this type of intensification will degrade Glen Davis Ravine. They’re also worried the large building, which would include an underground garage, will block sunlight from their houses, whose backyards are part of the ravine. They would rather see townhouses built.
“We’re not against development. It desperately needs development. It’s very scruffy,” said resident Jennifer Brass, who is part of Friends of Glen Davis Ravine. “But this is not sensitive to the ravine. This literally digs it up, excavates it and trucks it away.”
Residents opposing the proposal have garnered the support of their councillor, Mary-Margaret McMahon, and local provincial and federal NDP politicians. A fundraiser is being held Thursday to raise money for the Ontario Municipal Board challenge.
“Every citizen group deserves the right to be heard,” said MPP Michael Prue, who shares concerns about the project’s impact on the environment.
Ultimately, the decision rests with the Ontario Municipal Board. Earlier this year, Toronto and East York Community Council directed city staff to appear before the board in support of the developer’s application, as long as 43 conditions for improving the building were met.
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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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Burgers bow to condos in the Beaches
Peter Kuitenbrouwer – National Post
Carl, a mechanic with Black & McDonald waiting in line at Toronto’s original Licks Homeburgers/Ice Cream Friday, expressed shock when he learned more condos are coming to the Beaches.
“I didn’t think they would put a condo in the Beaches,” Carl says. “I thought this was sacred.”
Not any more. Carl hadn’t noticed the big colour sign on the front of Licks: Developers plan to knock the restaurant down and build a six-storey, 29-unit condominium unit, with 27 underground parking spaces.
A red banner on the front of Licks — an institution on the corner of Kenilworth Avenue and Queen Street East since 1985 — promises, “Our homeburgers are getting a new home. New Beach location coming soon.”
Shane Fenton, 28, who with his father, Shelley Fenton, does business as Reserve Properties, bought this site two years ago. Mr. Fenton vows, “Licks is not leaving the neighbourhood. We are working with them to find a new site.”
The Beaches, or The Beach, as some prefer to call it, is among Toronto’s original genteel old-money residential neighbourhoods, a redoubt of gardeners and sailors and studied elegance: mobbed by tourists in summer and braved by dog-walkers in winter. But lately a new group has shown up: developers, buying single-family homes to assemble parcels of land, and turn them into condo projects. Many locals are not amused.
“The downtown core is expanding into these established neighbourhoods,” says Bill Burrows, owner of a business that helps people find companies via the Internet. He has lived on Kippendavie Avenue for 10 years; his front yard is Garden of Eden, resplendent with a koi-stocked pond, six varieties of Japanese maple, a twisted baby locust, rhododendrons and Japanese carpet junipers.
Recently a developer bought six houses next to Mr. Burrows and proposed an 83-unit, six-storey condominium building with an underground garage.
“Many of us understand and appreciate the need to intensify,” Mr. Burrows says. “It should be done according to the neighbourhood. The character of the Beach will change: ‘Kippendavie got it, so why can’t Beach Avenue or Silver Birch Avenue?’ ”
After a long battle, most members of the Kew Beach Residents’ Association have nearly settled with the developer, in exchange for a reduction to 60 units and the developer’s agreement to name adjacent homeowners as co-insured on its policy.
On Monday, two hold-out residents at No. 60 Kippendavie will face the developer at the Ontario Municipal Board, and Mr. Burrows notes, “We haven’t formally settled. We agreed to pospone the OMB hearing for a week so our water expert can review the city’s water report.” Basement flooding is a huge problem here.
Also Monday, Beaches residents gather at 7 p.m. at the Beaches Recreation Centre, 6 Williamson Rd., for a public meeting about the Licks condo plan.
“We expect a full house,” says Councillor Mary-Margaret McMahon (Beaches-East York). “We’re going to get development. We just want to get smart development and want to attract ethical developers who care about the neighbourhood. … We need something more small-townish feel down on the Beach.”
Even so, the Fenton family has made friends with its modest plan to leave standing the Bellefair Methodist Church (1922), at 2000 Queen E., and repurpose it into 23 condos and six townhomes, complete with parking stackers, a kind of elevator for residents’ cars. The developers have converted the sanctuary into a sales centre.
“If you come in with the right attitude and the right approach and work with the community, it can work,” says Shane Fenton, dressed casually in a checked purple shirt with the top two buttons undone, and bell-bottomed jeans. Both Ms. McMahon and Mr. Burrows say they like the Fenton approach, though Ms. McMahon wonders whether six storeys at the Licks site — where adjacent buildings are one and two stories — may be too high.
A few blocks west, there is a standoff. Queen Street East Properties has assembled all the addresses but one on the north side of Queen between Rainsford Road and Woodbine Avenue. The house at 1878 Queen St. East, home to Barber Cuts and Design Wardrobe and, in back, the Pooran family, has held out. Ruth Pooran, who lives here with her son Anthony, says the developers have approached the family “many, many, many times,” to sell the house, built in 1901, but her father refuses.
On Friday, a backhoe pawed at the rubble that was her neighbour’s house to the west (future home of a condo tower). A sign indicates the builder plans more condos to the east.
“It’s rather troublesome,” says Anthony. “I try to study and there’s constantly dust flying.”
“I’ve been to all the meetings,” says Ms. Pooran. “They are all against all the condos because it is ruining the entire Beach. This has always been this way and it shouldn’t change.”
Still, she admits, “ask me in a year when they are digging an 80-foot hole beside my house.”
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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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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.”
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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

















