Dan416
Senior Member
In the last few months I've heard about H&M looking for a new spot somewhere in the area.
I've heard that too, and I'll leave it at that.
In the last few months I've heard about H&M looking for a new spot somewhere in the area.
Even with a high PSF, that would need a lot of condominiums sold to recoup the land acquisition costs. Given the small land area, it must be going tall -- maybe really tall.
300 million cost of land....what a joke. almost as funny as the vendor's comment that he sold the building to mizrahi - despite dozens of offers from a plethora of potential purchasers across the globe - because he liked Mizrahi the best. riiiiiiight.
300 million cost of land....what a joke. almost as funny as the vendor's comment that he sold the building to mizrahi - despite dozens of offers from a plethora of potential purchasers across the globe - because he liked Mizrahi the best. riiiiiiight.
Are you calling The Globe and Mail liars? Maybe you should interview the business owner and Mizrahi yourself and see if you can get some corrected information. Until then, I'll stick with this.
Do you have a better reference?read the article mate. the 300 reference is loose at best.
Geez I hope they didn't buy all of those properties. Am I the only one tired of seeing massive developments which take up the whole block? I find it much more interesting and attractive when there are multiple narrower buildings side by side, creating a more varied streetscape. Toronto has way too many mega-developments in my opinion. Cityplace is an extreme example (giant lot sold to single developer), but there are many others which are similar. One bloor east, while amazing, takes up the whole north-south length of it's block. The harbour plaza towers and one york take up a whole block. Ice, infinity...the list goes on. IMO one of the reasons many of our newer developments are failing on the ground is because they have way too much space to work with.
Geez I hope they didn't buy all of those properties. Am I the only one tired of seeing massive developments which take up the whole block? I find it much more interesting and attractive when there are multiple narrower buildings side by side, creating a more varied streetscape. Toronto has way too many mega-developments in my opinion. Cityplace is an extreme example (giant lot sold to single developer), but there are many others which are similar. One bloor east, while amazing, takes up the whole north-south length of it's block. The harbour plaza towers and one york take up a whole block. Ice, infinity...the list goes on. IMO one of the reasons many of our newer developments are failing on the ground is because they have way too much space to work with.
Geez I hope they didn't buy all of those properties. Am I the only one tired of seeing massive developments which take up the whole block? I find it much more interesting and attractive when there are multiple narrower buildings side by side, creating a more varied streetscape. Toronto has way too many mega-developments in my opinion. Cityplace is an extreme example (giant lot sold to single developer), but there are many others which are similar. One bloor east, while amazing, takes up the whole north-south length of it's block. The harbour plaza towers and one york take up a whole block. Ice, infinity...the list goes on. IMO one of the reasons many of our newer developments are failing on the ground is because they have way too much space to work with.
You've got to love Urban Toronto. Here we have the possibility of a very tall, iconic building that might very well be even better than One Bloor East across the street, and people are already whining about how they would prefer smaller, less ambitious projects at the corner of Bloor and Yonge.