Toronto Life

| The Vertical City

Toronto’s towers are bustling high-rise communitie­s with tennis clubs, elevator romances, kids’ playgroups, rooftop yoga studios and dog squads. A look inside the city’s vertical neighbourh­oods

- by ali amad, steve kupferman, emily landau and lauren mckeon photograph­y by nathan cyprys illustrati­ons by michael byers

Toronto’s towers are bustling high-rise communitie­s with their own tennis clubs, elevator romances, kids’ playgroups, rooftop yoga studios and dog squads. How condos became the city’s new neighbourh­oods

For most oF Its hIstory, toronto grew outward. now It’s growing up.

As the city’s population swells and downtown space grows scarce, more of us are living in condos than ever before—the last census showed a 17 per cent spike in the number of Canadian condo dwellers since 2011, with almost half a million units in the city, each housing an average of 1.9 people. Condos also continue to be the single largest source of new housing supply in the city: between 1998 and 2018, they accounted for 77 per cent of all residentia­l builds. And as condo living becomes more common, condos themselves are becoming vertical neighbourh­oods unto themselves, with their own subculture­s and demographi­cs. Party rooms, spas and green spaces now more often resemble bustling clubhouses, pubs and parkettes. They’re home to regular trivia nights, tennis and gardening clubs, toddler playgroups, even small businesses. As individual units get smaller—you can now find micro-condos as tiny as 289 square feet—the common spaces that the residents share, their main streets and public squares, become more vital. It’s these places that allow residents to indulge their offbeat hobbies, meet like-minded neighbours, find romance. It’s these places that provide the lifeblood of every new tower and townhouse being built. It’s these places that make every condo feel exactly like it should—like home. Here, a peek inside the chummy, surprising­ly intimate world of condoland.

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