Toronto Star

Bringing an urban vibe to Vaughan’s city core

Transit City condo building will be the first residentia­l developmen­t in a 100-acre project

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

A 55-storey, residentia­l tower that will be the tallest landmark on Vaughan’s emerging skyline, is being touted for bringing a distinctly urban vibe to that city’s ambitious downtown plans.

CentreCour­t Developmen­ts’ Transit City condos will be the first residentia­l building in SmartREIT’s 100-acre Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre developmen­t called SmartCentr­es Place.

One of the biggest mixed commercial-residentia­l projects in Canada, the master-planned community is bounded by Hwy. 400 on the west, Jane St. to the east, Portage Pkwy. on the north and Hwy. 7 to the south.

It’s an area roughly equivalent to downtown Toronto between University Ave. and Jarvis St., and Wellington and Richmond Sts.

The condos are part of a shift in the understand­ing of suburban and downtown lifestyles, said Andrew Hoffman, CEO of CentreCour­t Developmen­ts, which has built about 3,000 condos in downtown Toronto.

Transit City, scheduled for occupancy in 2020, is the company’s first 905-area project. It is also the first 905 location for downtown Toronto restaurant brand, Buca.

There will be a 1,500 sq. ft. Bar Buca providing refreshmen­ts morning through evening in the condo lobby and an adjacent 4,500 sq. ft. restaurant with Buca’s signature artisanal Italian menu.

The Buca name is a “huge signal” that Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre has downtown credibilit­y, said Mitchell Goldhar of SmartREIT, which bought the Vaughan property in 1996.

It is the TTC’s Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre subway stop, however, that is “a game changer,” he said.

“You hop on that subway and you are downtown at Union Station with certainty in 40 minutes,” Hoff- man said.

The condos will sit adjacent to the Viva/York Region bus terminal, a hub for the Viva rapid bus transit along Hwy. 7, which has tunnel access to the subway station.

“The beauty of (Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre) is, it is a blank slate in terms of planning,” Goldhar said.

“This is the ultimate opportunit­y to plan a city centre the way we all know great cities were planned, the ones we all travel great distances to go to. The opportunit­y to do that here is like none other in Canada,” he said. It is also an enormous civic responsibi­lity. That’s why the foundation of the developmen­t is a nine-acre park running east-west through the middle of the community.

It is the open spaces that make cities great, Goldhar said. So other aspects of the community are being planned around access to the park.

Condo residents will be able to access Vaughan’s new 100,000-sq.-ft. flagship YMCA, which will also adjoin a new library and a community centre.

The transit-, pedestrian-, bikefriend­ly infrastruc­ture, along with new KPMG and PwC offices, is the result of the province’s land-planning policies that are encouragin­g denser developmen­t, Goldhar said.

“There’s policy, there’s politics and there’s business. They are scarcely in sync. But when they are it can be a very powerful,” he said.

Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre appears poised for the kind of success that has eluded some other Toronto area downtowns, said Cherise Burda, executive director of the Ryerson City Building Institute.

The Scarboroug­h Town Centre, for example, hasn’t attracted the kind of commercial developmen­t that Toronto hopes a new planned subway extension will inspire. But the market likes Vaughan, Burda said.

“I think the subway is part of it,” she said. “The developers are building neighbourh­oods. They’re not building random buildings.”

The intensific­ation of housing in live-work-play neighbourh­oods that would once have been cast as traditiona­l suburbs, will make condo living a more common choice outside downtown Toronto, Hoffman said.

“The nature (of housing) is going to evolve over time and is going to be the trend toward larger size units,” he said.

Transit City, he said, “is a best-inclass designed building in a growing area of the GTA with the benefits of proximity to major transit infrastruc­ture, key amenities of the YMCA and the services of a top restaurant operator in Buca at the base of the building,” he said.

It’s a “forward-thinking, pioneering” developmen­t, said Peter Tsebelis of the King Street Food Company, Buca’s parent.

SmartREIT and CentreCour­t developmen­ts see restaurant­s as amenities that neighbourh­oods demand, he said.

“We’re not into the quick, we’re not into the cool and the happening and, the right-now. All of our concepts are long-term . . . that become go-to spots, staples in a community,” Tsebelis said.

“In terms of the menu, items will not change very much because, de- spite the connotatio­n of going to the ‘burbs, the sophistica­tion is there. The people know what they want. We see people will travel from the 905 to come down to King St. I don’t think we need to change the offering whatsoever,” he said.

Sales for the 550 Transit City condos will launch by June. Most will be in the 500- to 1,000-sq.-ft. range, larger than CentreCour­t traditiona­lly builds in the Toronto core. Prices haven’t been determined, said Hoffman. But he promises the quality of the constructi­on and design will be superior to many units being sold in the core and the cost will be 20 to 30 per cent lower.

He expects constructi­on to begin later this year or in early 2018 and occupancy is forecast for 2020.

 ?? CENTRECOUR­T DEVELOPMEN­TS ?? CentreCour­t’s Transit City condos is the first residentia­l tower being launched in SmartREIT’s Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre developmen­t. The 55-storey building will be the tallest landmark in Vaughan’s skyline.
CENTRECOUR­T DEVELOPMEN­TS CentreCour­t’s Transit City condos is the first residentia­l tower being launched in SmartREIT’s Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre developmen­t. The 55-storey building will be the tallest landmark in Vaughan’s skyline.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR ?? SMARTReit’s Mitchell Goldhar, left, with CentreCour­t’s Andrew Hoffman, says Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre is a “blank slate.”
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR SMARTReit’s Mitchell Goldhar, left, with CentreCour­t’s Andrew Hoffman, says Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre is a “blank slate.”
 ?? CENTRECOUR­T DEVELOPMEN­TS ?? The Buca name is a “huge signal” that Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre has downtown credibilit­y, SmartREIT’s Mitchell Goldhar said.
CENTRECOUR­T DEVELOPMEN­TS The Buca name is a “huge signal” that Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre has downtown credibilit­y, SmartREIT’s Mitchell Goldhar said.

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