Luxury Living: Toronto’s condo builders are catering to increasingly sophisticated buyers

By: National Post
“Luxury is giving the homeowner something beyond their expectations,” says developer Sam Mizrahi, president of Mizrahi Developments, who has spent the past nine years building grand spaces for well-heeled clients. “It’s creating a ‘wow factor’ where we’re exceeding their expectations in terms of their environment and in terms of their home.”
In Mizrahi’s world, “wow” is a cocktail of extraordinary offerings. Think such five-star hotel services as 24/7 concierge, valet and security, matched with exceptional finishes and details that extend from the building’s exterior, lobby and amenities right into the living quarters. Or as he puts it, “from the hardware on the door to the soundproofing on the window, to the paint quality on the drywall, to the home automation system, to the way to the lobbies and the hallways and the elevators are kept, to the way the underground parking is finished. It’s really creating a ‘wow factor’ where every detail in the building is many notches above anything else.”
Judging by the numbers, there’s no shortage of buyers for luxury properties in Toronto. Mizrahi has sold out all of his firm’s luxury buildings within a year of launching sales — while coveted suites in Toronto’s tony Yorkville neighbourhood have skyrocketed from $800 per square foot a few years ago to close to $2,000 per square foot today.
Luxury resales and rentals are hot commodities, too. Re/Max reveals that sales of condo suites priced over $2 million rose 42 per cent in Toronto compared with the same period in 2015, driven mainly by demand from downsizers and the limited inventory of single-family homes. Urbanation reports almost 1,000 units renting for more than $3,000 per month so far this year — 17 per cent higher than for all of 2015 — and 121 units renting for more than $5,000 per month.
“In a lot of cases, when you look at the purchase price of a luxury condo now, it’s not that much less than the selling price of the (downsizer’s) home,” says Shaun Hildebrand, senior vice-president at property analysts Urbanation, which defines luxury as anything above $1,000 per sq. ft. “These units are quite pricey. The combination of strong financial gains in recent years, obviously huge amounts of home equity that have been accumulated, combined with a rapidly growing population of downsizers, particularly in areas such as Rosedale, are contributing to very strong high-end demand — not just for resales but for renting as well.”
This interest is music to developers’ ears and they’re certainly heeding the call, with brand-new projects on the market or in the works. They come in all shapes and sizes to cater to every taste and they all boast the grandeur and spaciousness craved by those who have come to expect nothing less.


“There’s an overwhelming demand in the city of Toronto right now,” says Joseph Feldman, development manager at Camrost-Felcorp. “Over the past 10 years, any condo project you looked at had a ton of shoebox condos. That’s the makeup of the majority of condominiums that you see being built today. The spacious large units? Maybe you’ll find a couple of penthouses like that, and there’s a 50-50 split between builders having large penthouses or carrying out the shoebox condos all the way up. But a full building of large, luxury, spacious units? That’s hard to come by. A project isn’t considered luxury if it’s like everything else.
“Then it’s average. A luxury project really needs to have some differentiators, and the spacious nature of these units is integral.”
That said, Feldman is excited about Camrost-Felcorp’s Yorkville Private Estates (superluxury yorkville.com), situated on the top 15 floors of the 40-storey Cumberland Tower located just south of where the ballroom of the old Four Seasons Hotel used to be. With suites averaging 2,500 square feet and $4 million, as well as the very best in finishes, appliances, hotel-like services and amenities, it’s bound to speak to buyers. Says Feldman: “The valet drives everything … It’s all about lifestyle in this calibre of product.”

A short drive north at Avenue Road and St. Clair Avenue West, Camrost-Felcorp has a full luxury product underway. Situated on the site of the former Deer Park United Church, The Foxbar Suite and Town Homes Collection comprises a 26-storey tower incorporating the front façade and side of the church to preserve its heritage (thefoxbar.ca). Condo suites range from 1,150 to over 2,000 sq. ft. and are priced from $899,900. There will also be six three-storey townhomes ranging from 2,600 to 2,985 sq. ft. complete with backyard terraces, full basement and car garage. Price tag: $2.48 million. Both offerings will have access to amenities at the neighbouring 20,000-sq.-ft. Imperial Club. It’s all part of the developer’s 2.9-acre master-planned community that has luxury at its core.

Mizrahi Developments isn’t offering preconceived suite sizes at 128 Hazelton Avenue Private Residences (128hazelton.com). Rather, those wanting in to the nine-storey boutique building can buy as much space as they want for what Sam Mizrahi calls “ultimate flexibility.” He expects suites to average about 3,500 sq. ft., so at $1,750 per square foot that’s about $6.1 million (“The fact that you have no limit on how to design your suite is something that’s very important,” he says). Among the attractions: 10-foot ceilings, Italian marble, custom wine cellars and private garages with elevator to the suite. It’s also the last property being developed on Hazelton Avenue due to heritage restrictions, says Mizrahi, meaning all suites will have unobstructed views “and nothing can be built around you.”

For some luxury seekers, the real spectacular views are only found in downtown highrises. That’s what Menkes Developments is banking on with its Harbour Plaza Penthouse Collection housed on the top two floors of two marquee towers, 66-and 70-storeys respectively. Suites range from 905 to 2,045 sq. ft. and start at $2 million. Just a stroll from the financial district, it’s not empty nesters buying up the suites but executives in their 40s and 50s looking for a weekday pied-à-terre for themselves and their university-age children (visit menkes.com).
“If a decade ago you said to someone … that somebody is going to pay $2 million to live in the south end of the financial district, they would say, ‘That’s not where a luxury buyer would be going. They’d be going to Yorkville or a boutique building in the Bridle Path,’” says Mimi Ng, Menkes’ vice-president of sales and marketing. “The idea of luxury has evolved. There’s a broadening of the demographic that’s looking for a luxury product. It’s not just an older buyer that’s retired, that just wants to be in a tony neighbourhood. Now … it’s a bit of a younger buyer.”
Jamie Johnston, broker/owner at Re/Max Condos Plus, says many luxury buyers are either non-residents of Canada or those who have recently moved here. They’re older folks who grew up in the culture of condos, Johnston says, rather than their Canadian-born adult kids who are “caught up in the detached-home mentality.” They live in the units they buy, he says, because “the economics don’t work for investors to buy luxury property” to hold as rentals.

For those swapping backyard for concierge, there’s no need to give up on greenery. Stafford Developments’ seven-storey Avenue & Park project next door to Pusateri’s Fine Foods at Avenue Road near Lawrence Avenue West, for example, is heavily terraced, with some suites boasting outdoor spaces as large as 3,000 sq. ft. (avenueandpark.ca). And being in a North Toronto residential neighbourhood rather than downtown, there are plenty of nearby parks. Buyers can put suites together at $1,000 to $1,400 per sq. ft.

The project launched this month, as did Stafford’s 205 luxury freehold-townhome project called Downsview Park Towns (downsviewparktowns.ca) at Keele Street and Shepherd Avenue; company president Jonathan Goldman says a luxury town product is still “a rarity in the city.”
Given all this activity, Toronto is obviously getting noticed. As Mizrahi observes, the city hasn’t delved into the high-end luxury market to such an extent until now “because we didn’t need to.”
But Toronto has become an international city, he says. “We’ve got immigration from around the world and with that is a very sophisticated homeowner who has lived in Asia and Europe and the Middle East and has seen old-world, timeless architecture. They know what luxury is. They’ve experienced it in world-class cities around the world. They’ve now immigrated to Canada, to Toronto, and their expectation is to live in a home that mirrors the high-end luxury cities they’re coming from. They have that experience, that knowledge, that touchpoint.”