National Post

Campeau chateau listed for $35 million

- Garry Marr Financial Post

• The late real estate developer Robert Campeau’s home hit the market again Tuesday and, while it has the most expensive price tag in Canada of currently publicly- listed properties, the agent who will be marketing it worldwide doesn’t think the province’s foreign buyer tax will impact a sale.

The house at 68 The Bridle Path is listed for $35 million, up from the $ 25 million it was priced at two years ago when a sale was not completed, but this time Ontario’s non-resident speculatio­n tax could hit an out- of- country buyer with an additional $5.25 million fee. At $35 million, the regular land transfer tax that everybody pays in the city of Toronto would be more than $1.7 million.

“I think the 15 per cent tax has proved to be the cost of doing business,” said Barry Cohen, a broker with Re/ Max Realtron, who has the listing.

Ontario brought in its foreign buyer tax in April as one of 16 measures to cool the housing market, a move that came in the wake of reports that would-be overseas buyers in Vancouver were eyeing the Toronto market after the British Columbia government brought its own 15 per cent additional land property transfer tax on foreigners in August 2016.

“I think when they put in the tax, the decision was let’s not buy Vancouver, let’s buy Toronto,” said Cohen. “But now it’s in Toronto, so the 15 per cent is just part of migrating to Canada.”

Campeau, who died in June, built one of Toronto’s most i conic homes in a tony suburban neighbourh­ood known as the Bridle Path. The French chateau, housed on f our acres of land, has more than 30,000 square feet of living area, and includes 10 bedrooms, 14 bathrooms, a state- of- the- art gourmet kitchen, an indoor, two- storey 50- foot s wimming pool with a structural floor that converts to a ballroom, a tennis court and formal manicured grounds.

The house was once blessed by Cardinal Gerald Emmett Carter, Toronto’s Archbishop between 1978 and 1990, and guests have included politician­s such as the late prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau and actor Jane Fonda. It has also been used in numerous film shoots.

The couple who have lived in the house, lawyer and venture capitalist Hal Springer and his wife Sari, who is the Canadian managing parter of Littler, the largest labour and employment law firm in the world, are empty nesters and need less space. They put the house on the market two years ago for $25 million and it had many offers, some acceptable, but couldn’t find another house they wanted to live in.

“It had fallen somewhat into disrepair as it was neglected after Robert Campeau left. It was a labour of love to restore a French Loire ( Valley) chateau,” said Hal Springer, about the house that was purchased in 2002. “It’s just time to pursue a new chapter in our lives. We may have multiple residences that require a little less time.”

The increase in price is just indicative of how much the market has gone up, said Cohen “The luxury market performed very well,” he said. “Past offers have been a mix of local and internatio­nal buyers. This time we are taking it to a higher level in the internatio­nal markets.”

 ?? BARRY COHEN HOMES ?? The home of the late real estate developer Robert Campeau is on the market again.
BARRY COHEN HOMES The home of the late real estate developer Robert Campeau is on the market again.

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