AlbertC
Superstar
http://www.thestar.com/living/reale...--chinese-developer-takes-interest-in-toronto
Chinese developer takes interest in Toronto
Published On Fri May 25 2012
Ryan Starr
Special to the Star
Chinese developer takes interest in Toronto
Published On Fri May 25 2012
Ryan Starr
Special to the Star
Fad is being developed by Tri-Win International Investment Group, the Toronto arm of a Chinese development giant, Wu Hua Real Estate.
In the past four years, the company has built 50 high-end residential towers in mainland China, “and they’re going to do another 20 in the next two to three years,†notes Kita Nakabayashi, Tri-Win’s Toronto-based vice president.
Lucia Li, the daughter of one of the company principals, attended university here, Nakabayashi explains. After graduating two years ago, she decided she wanted to get into the local development business.
“Instead of being a passive investor, buying a place and getting rental income, she wanted to be active and know the development process from start to finish.â€
So Li spent several years searching for the right site, eventually found it at 170 Spadina and convinced her folks to invest in a fine piece of Toronto real estate.
“Her parents came to Toronto and looked at various sites and they really liked the area itself — Chinatown, the fashion stuff, and Spadina is a nice huge wide street — and it appealed to them,†Nakabayashi says. “It seemed like a great place to be.â€
Li is now president of Tri-Win and Fad represents her first venture with the new company.
To help the process run more smoothly, the developer enlisted the local expertise of Wallman. But the first iteration of Fad — an all metal and glass structure — met with strong opposition.
“People felt it was stylistically not the right thing to do in that particular part of Spadina,†Wallman explains. “There was an opportunity to really reflect the existing heritage fabric (of the area), which everyone loves.â€
Wallman’s current design does much to express this connection.
The chunky brick and pre-cast building features charcoal-coloured masonry piers that run the full length of the facade right up to the cantilevered roof. There will be industrial-style windows and Wallman’s design has minimized the appearance of the balconies by insetting them into the facade.
“The whole appearance is much more of a traditional warehouse building,†he says, “which we think is the right way to go for this building.â€
There has been discussion of re-developing the space that runs between 170 Spadina and the adjacent six-storey building, turning it into an animated laneway that connects Spadina through to Cameron St.
“It would make it a much more active place, which we think would be very interesting,†Wallman says. “Beause right now the back of that site is pretty dismal.â€
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