lordmandeep
Banned
our family real estate friend who try to get a unit at 1 bloor said this building is attracting many people as it much cheaper. Either expect prices to rise fast or to sell very quickly.
I do like the tall buildings - it’s the tiny, tiny apartments that will cause the problem. As more and more of them become rentals, the maintenance will slide big time and the area takes on a very different character. Remember St. James town?
...This is a recipe for disaster.
Yup, someone knocked the walls down in two or three suites near the top floor of one of the Radio City towers to create one megasuite.Or perhaps people will start buying multiple units adjacent to each other when prices and availability get to that point and just demo the walls separating them...
Though, is that even possible in buildings here? I know it's a very common practice right now in Hong Kong.
Yup, someone knocked the walls down in two or three suites near the top floor of one of the Radio City towers to create one megasuite.
Yup, someone knocked the walls down in two or three suites near the top floor of one of the Radio City towers to create one megasuite.
I've heard of buyers combining units in toronto, but i have no idea how common it is.
I'm pretty sure the city has minimum unit sizes, so if the developer meets the minimum sizes that's all the city can do.By the time the city wakes up and realizes its mistake - the developers will be sitting on a beach somewhere counting their millions - its not their problem, its Toronto's problem.
I wonder what they did with the extra hookups for kitchens and laundry rooms?We snuck up to that 3 or 4 unit suite in Radio City while it was still under construction. The partition walls were being framed, and I have to say the unit layout - and the views especially - were spectacular. But I couldn't live on such a high floor!
THREE suites!!?? Wow thats, like, 1500 square feet, according to Aura's standards. Some of these floorplans are downright depressing.