Tag Archives: Fallingbrook Road
Where are Toronto’s prime real estate pockets?
Carolyn Ireland – The Globe and Mail
Toronto’s capricious spring real estate market has lots of people feeling perplexed.
Sales have been tumbling for months in a row but prices have held on or continued to climb.
Comment: We all know by now that sales have fallen 10-15% every month since the new mortgage rules came into play. Once we hit July and are comparing months with the same rules, suddenly sales will stop falling – or even rise. And this whole discussion will vanish. Prices have not just held on, they have risen 4-8% month after month, even with fewer sales.
Some houses draw 11 bids; others see their offer dates come and go.
Comment: More because the demand has dropped and too many people think too highly of their houses and expect to get bidding wars that do not materialize. People will only fight for something worth fighting for. It is not a comment on the market as a whole, just on some sellers and their agents.
Buyers question whether prices are finally on the verge of a decline, and they only have to look as far as Vancouver to see people who bought last year only to see their new house slide in value in 2013.
Comment: Seriously? Vancouver has NOTHING to do with Toronto, and their values have been dropping for years. People have called for Toronto prices to fall for a decade now – not going to happen. Prices will continue to rise as demand outstrips supply. With a constant flow of people moving to Toronto, they need somewhere to live. Investors will still buy condos when the vacancy rate is under 1% and there are multiple offers on rentals. Houses still get bidding wars. Every couple that buys a new condo will likely want a house for their family in the future. Mortgage rates will continue to stay low for the next few years. Where is the downward pressure coming from? Nowhere…
Move-up buyers don’t have it any easier: They may buy a grand new property and get caught in the uncomfortable squeeze of not being able to sell their current house or condo.
Comment: Not if they have anything decent and are realistic about their price.
So for people who want to buy or trade up now, one strategy that makes sense is to put a greater emphasis than ever on finding a stellar neighbourhood. These pockets tend to hold up better in a market slump and are likely to rise higher still if prices resume their climb.
Golden neighbourhoods have attributes that make them great places to live, regardless of what the market is doing.
Comment: Really? Not like real estate agents have been preaching “location, location, location” since, like, forever.
Their solid schools, good housing stock, desirable shopping and proximity to a pleasant park or a stretch of shoreline will make them comfortable places to ride out any potential downturn.
Republic of Rathnelly
A few choice streets make up the Republic of Rathnelly, which is a cossetted pocket west of Avenue Road and north of Dupont.
The rolling and curvy streets of Rathnelly Avenue, Poplar Plains Crescent, Cottingham Street and McMaster Avenue make up the counter-culture republic, which was founded on July 1, 1967. On a lark, a band of residents declared independence from the rest of Canada after helping to successfully stave off the Spadina Expressway. They still mark the anniversary with a street party.
These days, more earnest parents are eager to pack their kids off to Brown Junior Public School, which offers English and French immersion classes, and has a reputation for academic excellence. It’s also a platinum-certifited eco school that promotes “anything but car” days and litterless lunches.
The houses are mostly solid, but unpretentious, detached and semi-detached brick dwellings from the Victorian era.
Even the climate is rarified in parts of the republic: Houses built part way up the escarpment formed by the shoreline of the ancient Lake Iroquois have reverse ravine lots which benefit from a slightly warmer micro-climate that allows flowers to bloom a little bit earlier than they do in surrounding gardens.
Comment: Sure, but this is one of the most expensive and exclusive neighbourhoods in Toronto. Average prices are multi-million and listings are very rare. Kind of an odd one to suggest… This is above the pay grade of most people, and likely all first-time buyers.
Lansing
This little corner of the city is still quite bucolic considering how quickly one can hop onto Highway 401 from here.
The area is just above the highway, with Yonge Street to the east, Bathurst to the west, and Burnett Avenue running along the northern boundary. The Don River Valley cuts through the area and separates it from the well-known Earl Bales Park, where legions of kids have taken to the bunny hill for their first run on skis.
There’s still an abundance of greenery, despite the fact that many small bungalows have been torned down and replaced with newly built dwellings with main floor family rooms and cathedral ceilings. Some of the houses even have ravine lots.
Residents can walk to bustling Yonge and Sheppard to eat, shop and yawp at the construction of fast-rising condo towers.
Schools include the private Little Owl Preschool Elementary, University Preparatory Academy, Don Valley Preparatory Academy, the Toronto Cheder and Cameron Public School.
Comment: My sister-in-law’s family lives here, nice spot!
Dufferin Grove
Dufferin Grove Park and the nearby Dufferin Mall had a pretty nefarious reputation in decades past but they’ve long since undergone remarkable transformations. But even while the park was the site of sketchy activity and the mall was rather tattered, the imposing Victorian and Edwardian houses to the east tended to attract upstanding urbanites who liked the lovely, leafy streets and the proximity to College Street.
For years the solid housing stock drew writers and university professors who could afford property values that lagged behind those of the Annex and High Park. Today, hordes of young families are attracted by more moderate prices around the $600,000 mark.
It’s still a great investment, it’s a very good neighbourhood. Meanwhile, the hippest boutiques, galleries and cafes of have migrated farther west and now sit just a short stroll away. Those sections of Bloor, College and Dundas are gentrifying and changing so much.
Comment: No news here, this stretch has been getting more and more popular for years now. Ever since residents took the park back for families, with farmers’ markets and more. Check out dufferinpark.ca for more.
The sweet spot of Leslieville
For people who crave French brioche, vintage coffee tables and the softly poached eggs of free-run chickens on Sundays, Leslieville is neighbourhood gold and the intersection of Queen and Carlaw is at the centre.
Streets running north and east of the intersection of Queen and Carlaw are considered the most desirable. Avenues such as Boston, Brooklyn, Bertmount and Coady provide quick access to a stool at the window of Te Aro Coffee Roasters. Parents can stop in after the daily run to Morse Street Junior Public School.
Comment: I have been preaching the gospel of Carlaw Avenue for years now, I love the east end. I grew up on Broadview, so this is my home turf.
Allenby
Allenby Junior Public School is a big draw here. According to the Toronto District School Board, the documented history of this slice of Toronto dates back to the 1400s when a tribe of Huron Iroquois settled in a longhouse village. The school is popular for its French Immersion program for kids in Grades 3 through 6.
If you stand on the northwest corner of Avenue Road and Eglinton, then venture into the mannerly blocks north and west, you’re in Allenby, where families vie to buy Tudor-style houses on such streets as Briar Hill Avenue, Roselawn Avenue, Willowbank Avenue and Castle Knock Road.
Many of the houses have been enlarged but the neighbourhood retains a traditional feel.
The shopping strip along Eglinton West is packed with upscale boutiques.
Comment: Another very high end location, between Wanless Park and Lawrence Park. You best be ready to spend a million or more to get into this neighbourhood.
Fallingbrook
Sitting atop the Scarborough Bluffs, Fallingbrook is a niche within the neighbourhood of Birch Cliff, which is in turn a pocket within Scarborough. This area is replete with curving streets named Fallingbrook: If you’re invited to dinner there, either rely on the GPS or leave extra time to distinguish between Fallingbrook Road, Drive, Woods and Crescent.
Fallingbrook Road runs just west of the rolling golf greens of the Toronto Hunt Club and south of Kingston Road.
The houses lining the promontory above Lake Ontario range from gracious 100-year-old mansions to renovated mid-century dwellings and newly built architectural wonders. Houses on streets such as Courcelette, Blantyre and any of the Fallingbrooks are highly sought-after.
In many ways, the neighbourhood seems like an extension of The Beaches, just the other side of Victoria Park. Residents of this area have quick access to Queen Street East shopping but fewer day-trippers to contend with on the weekends.
Comment: Staying north of Kingston Road here cuts your price almost in half. And there are still bargains to be had on Courcelette or Blantyre, even south of Kingston. I still kick myself over a semi I was literally a couple hours too late on… could have bought it on Blantyre for $380k – worth a couple hundred grand more now. Always one that got away…
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Contact Laurin Jeffrey for more information – 416-388-1960
Laurin Jeffrey is a Toronto Realtor with Century 21 Regal Realty. He did not
write these articles, he just reproduces them here for people who are
interested in Toronto real estate. He does not work for any builders.
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