Loft conversions boost neighbourhoods
Creation of new communities is revitalizing when old areas are getting new residents
Excerpt from an article by Elvira Cordileone – Toronto Star
Have lofts become urban trailblazers for revitalization of older neighbourhoods?
Jeanhy Shim, president and editor of Urbanation, a publication that tracks the Toronto condo market, thinks so.
“Lofts helped lead the way in creating new neighbourhoods in downtown, east and west,” Shim says, adding they are also helping revitalize such areas as the Junction, Roncesvalles Village and Leslieville.
One such example is Bloorline Lofts.
Bloorline Lofts was once a mattress factory. In fact, when construction started, crews unearthed metal springs buried all around the building.
The Toronto real estate agent who did the marketing for the Bloorline Lofts, says the conversion was finished years ago and the building has been registered. Converting old buildings into lofts took off in cities such as New York and Chicago 50 years ago, but has become big business in Toronto over the past couple of decades.
The first legal loft conversion in Toronto (at the old Dominion Felt Works on 41 Shanly, near Dufferin and Bloor Sts.) didn’t take place until 1982 when the city finally realized older buildings were simply going to waste.
People who buy a loft in a converted building choose it because they want the character and uniqueness of the space, says Brdlik.
The larger marquee buildings, such as the Tip Top Tailors Lofts and the Toy Factory Lofts, have already been transformed, but he says the city still has a small supply of small to medium buildings ripe for conversion to lofts.
The Bloorline Lofts are hard lofts, units carved out of an existing, usually older building. (Hard lofts are considered renovations and aren’t covered by Tarion, the province’s new home warranty program.)
Once a mattress factory, the Bloorline Lofts project is helping to revitalize the Bloor Street West and Lansdowne Ave. neighbourhoods.
Shim says soft lofts – units in brand new buildings with the high ceilings, large windows and open-concept layouts of the genuine loft – came along after 1995, when the supply of authentic lofts was limited as the number of buildings that could be converted dwindled.
In general, lofts – both hard lofts and soft lofts – can cost twice as much per square foot as a typical Toronto condo unit. That’s because it costs more to convert an older building while maintaining its special character – which is its appeal – than it does to build from scratch, and the higher ceilings found in new soft lofts translates into fewer units than a comparable condo building, which drives up the per-unit price.
According to data provided by Shim, the GTA has a total of 230 new condo projects, with 48,000 units on the market. Loft developments (both hard lofts and soft lofts) account for only 10% of all projects.
But because they’re usually small with fewer units than the typical condo, lofts account for only 5% of available resale units.
“Lofts in conversion projects do phenomenally well. They speak to certain types of people – mainly young professionals -with their openness, high ceilings and a bit of funkiness,” Shim says.
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Contact Laurin Jeffrey for more information – 416-388-1960
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