Toronto Star

Landmark cube homes will be taken down

Developers plan to build condos and may auction off building

- MICHAEL LEWIS BUSINESS REPORTER

One of Toronto’s more curious experiment­s in modern architectu­re, the modular green “cube” homes nestled beside the Don Valley Parkway at 1 Sumach St., have been sold for redevelopm­ent.

“We haven’t made any formal submission­s,” commercial real estate profession­al Taso Boussoulas said, noting he acquired the structure on 8,700 square feet of land with real estate developer Jeff Craig for $2,750,000.

The deal closed in May and Boussoulas foresees significan­t demand for condo units.

He said in an interview Sunday that the property is designated mixed use, “so it’s sort of approved. The plan is to rezone it to build condos.”

The number of units is to be determined and the full approval process could take as long as two years, Boussoulas added.

In the meantime, the two tenants of the three-unit property on the wedgeshape­d lot off Eastern Ave., just north of the Distillery District, will be given notice to leave, and the cube cluster will be taken down and could possibly be relocated.

“Two people reached out to me saying we are interested in buying,” Boussoulas said, adding that his preference is to auction off the buildings or donate the structure to the city for relocation on city land.

Rather than have the units demolished, he said, “my preference is to auction and give the money to charity. Maybe it should go to the homeless.”

Boussoulas said it is a question of what the city will ultimately approve, adding that he and his partner have met with municipal staff.

They appeared amendable to redevelopi­ng the property with three cubes that are actually three multi-storey apartments — each contained in its own cube and each suspended above the ground by a large metal pole, he said, adding it takes 84 steps to reach the top, and there is no elevator.

Built in 1996 based on Dutch architect Piet Blom’s cube homes in Rotterdam, Toronto’s tri-cube structure has had a colourful past. The modular house was built by architect Ben Kutner and his partner Jeff Brown with the hopes of one day incorporat­ing it into a larger community called UniTri, but that didn’t happen.

In 2002, the property was purchased for $265,000 by the founder of the Coffee Time franchise, Tom Michalopou­los, who briefly used the cubes as billboards for Coffee Time.

 ??  ?? Tenants of the cube homes will be given notice to leave and the cluster will be dismantled, according to one of the developers.
Tenants of the cube homes will be given notice to leave and the cluster will be dismantled, according to one of the developers.

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