Category: Featured Realestate
Auro Toronto Condominium – Tallest in Toronto
Posted by Alyson Monetti in Featured Realestate Saturday, 24 April 2010 21:16 No Comments

Aura Concierge Area - Toronto Condos. It is said that the 75th floor penthouse at Aura will boast stunning views from all directions and is priced at $17.5 million for 11,370 square feet.
Aura Construction Begins
Berardo Graziani is thrilled ground has at last been broken on Aura, the 75-storey skyscraper that will soon be the tallest condo tower in Canada.
“There’s a sense of relief,” says Graziani, a principal with Mississauga-based Graziani + Corazza Architects, the firm that designed the skyscraper, which had its official construction launch Friday.
Mayor David Miller and Councillor Kyle Rae joined Michael LaBrier, president of Aura’s developer Canderel Stoneridge, for festivities at the building site on the northwest corner of Yonge and Gerrard, currently home to a parking lot.
“For the last year and a half or so, all we were hearing from clients and people in the city was, ‘Is that thing ever going to go ahead?’ ” Graziani says. “We heard all kinds of rumours: that it was dead, that it was being sold. . .
“So for us to now say, it’s actually going ahead, that we’re digging at the site, it’s a great feeling and a great accomplishment for our firm.”
Indeed, with dirt having been officially turned, Aura has triumphed over a rival iconic super-condo, 1 Bloor, which was to be 80 storeys before the project failed last summer amid the economic maelstrom. (The Great Gulf Group recently launched a new One Bloor project, which will be 65 storeys.)
“I think (starting construction on Aura) is significant for the industry and the economy in general,” says Riz Dhanji, vice president of sales and marketing for Canderel Stoneridge. “It shows that big buildings can get built.”
And what a building it will be.
When completed in 2012, Aura — a 245-metre tower, the fifth tallest in Toronto — will boast over 1.1 million square feet of space, including 931 residential units and 180,000 square feet of retail offerings. The fifth floor will have a landscaped rooftop, with a fireside lounge and al fresco dining area.
There will be four levels of penthouses: 14 sub-penthouses and an 11,370-square-foot, $17.5 million top-floor unit.
The penthouse will have five bedrooms (with separate his and hers walk-in closets), six bathrooms (including separate his and hers master bathrooms), a sunroom with Jacuzzi, and a private art gallery.
It will also have 13-foot ceilings and floor-to-ceiling windows with — needless to say — 360-degree vistas. “It’s going to be the tallest condo in the city, so you’re not going to have anything obstructing your view,” Dhanji says.
The retail space will be housed within Aura’s four-storey glass podium, with primary access through the building’s north side along a resurrected stretch of Hayter St., which will serve as the pedestrian corridor.
“We located the main entrance to the retail at the corner of Hayter and Yonge because we think having the pedestrian traffic movement from that corner is key,” Graziani explains.
“The more knee-jerk approach would have been to put it at Yonge and Gerrard, but we moved it so all the main public spaces are along that northern edge.”
The retail will be anchored by a 50,000-square-foot Bed Bath & Beyond. Other tenants announced so far include BMO and Alice Fazooli’s and Canyon Creek restaurants.
“Yonge and Gerrard will be the next Yonge and Dundas for downtown shopping,” says Dhanji. “It’s going to become a mecca for people and completely change that corner, which is one of the last prime corners downtown.”
That’s welcome news to Rae. “The eradication of surface parking lots is my favourite pastime, and that’s a very large surface parking lot,” he says, referring to the site’s most recent use. “It’s an eyesore. It’s like a broken tooth on the smile of Yonge St.”
That unsightly gap will be filled in with what Graziani describes as “a tower made to be seen as a sculptural element in the city skyline. People will remember it when they see it.”
In designing the structure’s base, architects took cues from the old Eatons building at College Park. They adopted similar heights and scales for the Aura podium, and will build it using limestone and granite, materials found in the 80-year-old art deco landmark.
But Graziani stresses Aura won’t be a heritage-style building. “The detailing and design is 2010, not 1930,” he says. “It speaks to what we are today. It will stand the test of time because it’s not pegged to any one specific type of design or era.”
SHIFT IN LIFESTYLE
Aura originally was envisioned as two smaller towers, but ultimately it was decided to combine the over 1 million square feet of space into a single super-structure. “This really fits the model of intensification,” Graziani says, noting that Aura will be built above the College TTC subway station, helping to “reinforce transit use in the city.”
Rae sees Aura as emblematic of a shift in Torontonians’ lifestyle preferences, a project that speaks to a renaissance of the city’s core.
“People are deciding to pull up stakes in the suburbs and come back downtown,” he says. “And I think Aura is a good example of an optimal location for people who’ve decided they’d rather walk to work; or if they’ve left work, they want to enjoy where they live and not be in constant traffic and turmoil.
“It’s about quality of life,” he adds, “and Aura will provide that in abundance.”
The greatest challenge in designing Aura was integrating the structure with what’s currently at ground level and below-grade on the site, including planning for a future PATH walkway connection and tying in with the existing retail concourse at College Park.
Designers went to great lengths to incorporate Barbara Ann Scott Park, an under-utilized urban refuge. “All the other buildings on this block basically turn their backs to the park,” says Graziani. “There aren’t eyes on the park at the pedestrian level, so it’s not a very comfortable space to be in, from a security perspective.”
When Graziani’s firm planned the first two towers of Residences at College Park along Bay St., “we designed townhouses that front onto the park, with access to them from the park,” he notes.
Similarly, Aura’s lobby area — which is to be fronted by a large glass-enclosed public art gallery — will overlook the three-acre park, and Hayter St. will serve as the main pedestrian gateway to it. “It’s going to announce the park on Yonge and make a comfortable and inviting entry,” says Graziani.
[mappress]
With construction now underway, attention shifts from Aura’s base to the tower itself — and how to actually pull off a structure of this magnitude. “As we go up,” he says, “that’s when the challenges really begin.
“Architects can all create beautiful renderings, but to actually see it fulfilled and constructed and to achieve what our vision initially was — that’s going to be the true reward.”
“But that’s when we pull it off,” he cautions. “We’re not going to have any parades right now.”
Once Aura is completed, though, and Graziani’s firm can lay claim to having designed the tallest condo in the nation, he admits it will be a pretty big trip.
“To say it doesn’t affect you personally would be a lie,” he says. “It’s quite a feat. And we’re a fairly young firm, so it feels good to be a part of a development of this stature. It’s a nice feather to have in our cap.”
The big question, though: How long will Aura remain the tallest? “I think it’ll probably last quite a while,” Graziani says. “But who knows. Records are made to be broken.”
Miracle At Yonge Tower 2
Posted by Alyson Monetti in Condos, Featured Realestate, Toronto Condos, Toronto Houses for Sale Saturday, 30 January 2010 20:58 No Comments
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Toronto Condominium pricing – A Perfect Storm ?
Posted by Alyson Monetti in Estate Homes, Featured Realestate, Toronto Condos Thursday, 28 January 2010 20:44 No Comments
By Trevor Weir,
Toronto Condos and Estate homes decided this week to most ignorantly ignore the North American house pricing trend and in a dramatic reversal have simply decided to arbitrarily increase their value. That’s the headline and if it wasn’t for the implication that houses have minds of their own, it would almost be believable since the reality of the situation really isn’t far off from this headline.
Unless you have been living under a rock ( and a pretty big one at that ) it would have been hard to ignore the financial crisis of 2009 that caused the G8 to morph to the G20 and which finally exposed the toxic nature of the US Mortgage situation.
Btw, the G8 is trying to figure out what its new role is since the G20 now appears to have taken over much of what the G8 group of countries use to hold as their exclusive domain. The breakdown, as many of you know know, was primarily caused by 2nd and third tier lending institutions in the United States who basically gave mortgages to nearly anyone with a pulse.
There were large families with little income to support their loan applications who got not one nor two but sometimes as many as 3 mortgage loans approved. Like I said, you really only needed a pulse and a valid drivers license and some would dispute whether you needed the latter at all.
So house sales went through the roof in a 10 year upward climb in which a 200,000 condominium climbed to 275,000 then to 325,000 et al until 8 years later it was being remortgaged at 600,000 while a fleet of Cadillacs and expensive SUV’s lined the driveway.
The mortgages were bundled into fixed asset allocations and resold from the original third tier lender to second tier lenders who bundled in some better backed mortgages and then on to first tier lenders who repackaged them, mixed in a few more securities and whom then resold them internationally.
This isn’t quite the definition of a Ponzi scheme but to when a European bank finally called the bluff and demanded payment the entire house of cards started to fall. I know I said it wasn’t exactly a Ponzi scheme but to those losing their homes as prices and home values plummeted below the very high remaining mortgages the effects were the same. They simply lost everything.
Controversial action on the part of the US Govt coupled with European, Japanese and then G8 emergency action managed to stave off a what was a pretty certain collapse of the banking system but so far as everyone was concerned both consumer confidence and existing home pricing had collapsed dramatically.
Yet here we are, just 3 measly months later looking at the real-estate picture and realizing that there are at least 3 really bright real-estate communities in the US in which house pricing not only didn’t collapse but have held steady. Not surprisingly, these communities tend to have regional banks with different lending policies and or have gone through massive but painful manufacturer restructuring in the near past.
Surprisingly Canada has its own exception, Toronto. Toronto’s Condominium and Estate Homes ( those over 600,000 ) have not only NOT collapsed but are inching skyward month over month. If the UK bookies were betting on this, they would probably give you strong odds that this quiet market will stop inching upwards and take a fantastic little leap in the very near future.
People more educated than myself have taken a half dozen educated guesses as to why this might be happening and most of them might be right on the money.
Here are a few of the reasons postulated :
Canada’s banking system was only in danger because no banking system is an island but having said that overall Canadian banks had very minor exposure to toxic loans and a smart group of investors moved quickly to organize and mitigate the risk that was exposed.
Canadian immigration which has a large and growing number of professional middle class families stayed steady, serves to push the housing market strongly at all ends.
Ontario’s premier has decided he needs more taxes and introduced a harmonized provincial/federal tax structure whose only real goal is to tax additional items that were not being taxed before. No, this isn’t what the premier is saying out loud but if the revenue to the province were to decrease would he have done this? Sometimes, one needs to only look at which culprit benefits in order to see the true motive.
In any case, this new HST which comes into affect just before summer will additionally tax Condominiums and Estate homes with those over 400,000 taking the brunt of the blow.
The upsell of this, is that ahead of the HST implementation and because of the pent up demand while potential buyers were waiting out the 2009 financial storm the supply and demand equation has shifted positively for those whom are supplying and less virtuously for those wishing to buy.
So, do I hear the phrase “perfect storm” yet? Uhmm maybe but there is more good/bad news so hold your horses. Like many other western countries, Canada’s interest rates are at all time historic lows. I am not going to say that its a 60 year low but it has to be pretty close to it.
For those without their thinking caps on, low interest rates make your monthly carrying charge on your home significantly lower, so being able to afford 1500 in carrying charges may get you a 500,000 dollar home instead of a 275,000 dollar home. Which one of these would you prefer ?
The bank of Canada would love to start nudging the rates back up but the currency speculators
who historically dabbled infrequently in the Canadian dollar/US Dollar exchange rate are now camped aggressively in broad daylight – just watching to see what will happen here.
Again for those not in the know, higher interest rates attract more foreign currency particularly when the Banking system offering the higher rates is one of the strongest in terms of stability in the world.
Do I hear you quietly mouthing the words “perfect storm”. But ( and dear Mrs Richards, my former english teacher, told me never to start a sentence with ‘But’ ) there is more good/bad news for Toronto Condominium sales pricing.
A good part of southern Ontario’s manufacturing output is closely tired to the car industry. The car industry has regained some of its lost ground and GM and Toyota are once again adding additional shifts and substantially increasing production. This isn’t something that is going to happen, it has in fact happened within the past 3-4 weeks.
And lastly, it appears as if Toronto is currently running out of available Condominium space that will be availabe in the next 12-18 months. The inventory levels are getting lower and as they move towards some critical point its hard not to see a mass rush for units occurring.
Ok, you can say it out loud now – “A perfect Storm”
Bravo Boutique Condominiums
Posted by Alyson Monetti in Featured Realestate, Toronto Condos Tuesday, 19 January 2010 20:58 No Comments
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