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All stories relating to Architecture

The Informer

Gimme Shelter

5 Comments

Office Space: $64 per square foot for Victorian grandeur in the historic Flatiron Building

ADDRESS: 49 Wellington Street East

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Church-Yonge Corridor

AGENT: Cushman and Wakefield

PRICE: $64 gross rent per square foot

THE PLACE: Stained glass windows, sumptuous hardwood floors, ominous vaults and the city’s first manually operated Otis elevator: the nearby bank towers seem so vanilla next to this historic red-brick building. Every space is rich with architectural detail, but each floor is somewhat unique: the first level, for example, offers fireplaces in nearly every office, while the fifth floor has gorgeous exposed rafters and a stunning view of St. Lawrence Market.

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The Informer

Gimme Shelter

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House of the Week: $349,000 for architect Rohan Walters’ colourful Coxwell tower

ADDRESS: 157 Coxwell Avenue

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Woodbine Corridor

AGENT: Jennifer Scaife, Royal LePage Estate Realty, Brokerage

PRICE: $349,000

THE PLACE: A narrow, towering box on stilts that attracts more gawkers than a Rob Ford weigh-in.

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The Goods

From the Print Edition

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Great Spaces: Four places of worship, born again (this time, as trendy condos)

There’s nothing sacrilegious about this city’s appetite for loft conversions, even when the raw space is a deconsecrated church

By Alex Bozikovic | Photography by Michael Graydon

A 1906 building formerly home to the Centennial Japanese United Church

1| A 1906 building formerly home to the Centennial Japanese United Church

A 1941 building, once home to a Slovenian Catholic congregation

2| A 1941 building, once home to a Slovenian Catholic congregation

A 1921 addition to the Riverdale Presbyterian Church

3| A 1921 addition to the Riverdale Presbyterian Church

A 1911 Methodist church, used by an Italian evangelical congregation since 2003

4| A 1911 Methodist church, used by an Italian evangelical congregation since 2003

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The Informer

Gimme Shelter

7 Comments

House of the Week: $1.2 million for a modern, eco-conscious home in Hillcrest Park

ADDRESS: 95 Ilford Road

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Wychwood

AGENT: Lorena Maria Romano, Royal LePage West, Brokerage

PRICE: $1,195,000

THE PLACE: This ultra-modern, green-minded home is in a different league than the rest of the traditional Arts and Crafts–style homes typical of the area. Built by Re-Vu Group Inc. (graduates of the Ryerson Architecture program), the house has clean lines and an open-concept layout that make the mere 23-foot-wide lot feel spacious.

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The Goods

From the Print Edition

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Great Spaces: a pair of German expat Canadaphiles build the house they had been dreaming about for 30 years

Great Spaces: Park Place

Georg and Petra Unger first came to Canada for a series of cross-country road trips in the early ’80s, eager to see the country’s expansive landscapes and modern residential architecture. As students in Germany—Petra studied interior design, Georg trained as a cabinetmaker—they had read about the Bridge House, a stone and glass box soaring over Stoney Lake in rural Ontario, by the architect Jim Strasman. “It was in all the architectural magazines at that time, and we thought Canada must be such a cool, design-forward place,” Petra says.

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The Informer

Gimme Shelter

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Condomonium: $2.3 million for a four-bedroom penthouse in the Spire

33 Lombard Street, Suite 4501

ADDRESS: 33 Lombard St., Suite 4501

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Church-Yonge Corridor

AGENT: Todd Sloan, Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc.

PRICE: $2,399,000

THE PLACE: Located in a historic quarter of downtown, sitting across the street from St. James Cathedral and steps away from St. Lawrence Market, this four-bedroom penthouse in the Spire is wrapped in terraces and windows providing a 360-degree bird’s eye view of Toronto.

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The Hype

From the Print Edition

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Why writer Tabatha Southey and artist-architect Philip Beesley are smitten with Toronto

The place: C5 at the ROM. The people: writer Tabatha Southey and artist–architect Philip Beesley. The subject: why they’re smitten

AN URBAN AFFAIR

Globe and Mail columnist Tabatha Southey is known for her quick wit, but her latest project was a slow burn. Ten years ago, her son Basil’s school asked parents to compose a valentine for their kids. Southey wrote a poem about the make-believe house she wanted to build for Basil, a burgeon­ing architecture fan. That poem is now a storybook, It Must Be As Tall As a Lighthouse, illustrated by starchitect Will Alsop and recently published by Parkdale’s new artisanal press The Book Bakery, which focuses on small print runs of beautiful, visually driven books. Think of it as the locavore movement for the lit set.) Artist and architect Philip Beesley is equally at home in the world of whimsy. An international figure in the trippy field of responsive architecture, he creates structures that change form, colour or shape depending on their environment. This month, he unleashes his hovering, undulating art installation, Sargasso, on the Brookfield Place atrium as part of the Luminato Festival. We brought the design-obsessed duo to one of the city’s most divisive architectural attractions, the ROM Crystal, sprang for lunch and listened in.

FOLLOW THE CONVERSATION »

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The Informer

Cityscape

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Fusty columnist meets the listicle: the Star presents Toronto’s most beautiful buildings

At first glance, Toronto Star architecture columnist Christopher Hume isn’t who we’d expect to jump ship to the wild world of online media—and put forward a solid showing. But damned if he hasn’t done exactly that. His web videos have covered everything from Rob Ford killing Transit City to Toronto Hydro’s hidden pockets of infrastructure, and a now he’s presenting his picks for the city’s five most beautiful buildings. The first instalment is up today: the Pure Spirit condo buildings at Parliament Street and Mill Street.

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The Informer

Gimme Shelter

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House of the Week: $6 million for a Casa Loma car lover’s dream

ADDRESS: 64 Forest Hill Road

NEIGHBOURHOOD:  Casa Loma

AGENT: Jordan Grosman and Steven N. Wagman, Forest Hill Real Estate Inc., Brokerage

PRICE: $5,995,000

THE PLACE: From the outside, this Casa Loma mansion blends in with the traditional architecture of the neighbourhood, but the contemporary interiors look like something straight out of Dwell magazine: a stark black and white kitchen is warmed up by mocha-coloured hardwood floors; the marble-walled washroom is clean-lined and sumptuous.

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The Informer

Gimme Shelter

16 Comments

House of the Week: $3.75 million for a Victorian that’s Rosedale on the outside and wild on the inside

ADDRESS: 31 Dunbar Road

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Rosedale-Moore Park

AGENT: Sarah Giacomelli, Chestnut Park Realty, Brokerage

PRICE: $3,750,000

THE PLACE: From the outside, this four-bedroom blends seamlessly with its surroundings: very Toronto, very Rosedale, very Victorian. The red bricks, however, belie the funky downtown vibe of the interior. Awash in colours like bright orange, sea blue and lime green, this house rethinks all the luxe appointments of Rosedale castles. Witness the five-piece en suite washroom, the comic-book decor, the gourmet kitchen and a wet bar covered in faux alligator skin.

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The Goods

From the Print Edition

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Great Spaces: a 28-year-old architecture school grad brings a Dada-esque sensibility to a 700-square-foot Yorkville apartment

Alexander Josephson lived in Europe while completing a master’s degree in architecture. There, he was inspired by the work of Kurt Schwitters, a surrealist artist who created an almost unlivable space for himself in Weimar-era Germany. When Josephson moved back to his hometown of Toronto in 2009, he set out to design something equally bold: a raw space that rejects contemporary conventions about living.

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The Informer

Cityscape

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Sneak preview of Moshe Safdie’s forthcoming Parkside condo tower on the waterfront

The Parkside Project is coming to the shores of Lake Ontario (Image: Safdie Architects)

Moshe Safdie is one of Canada’s greatest architects. At 24, he designed the iconic Habitat ’67 in Montreal as his master’s thesis at McGill. He then went onto build, among other things, the National Gallery in Ottawa, the Yad Vashem Holocaust History Museum in Israel and this crazy hotel in Singapore. So, a few years ago when we heard he was working on a residential project in Toronto, we were excited—that is, until we saw it and thought it looked like a postmodern sand sculpture of a camel. To our great relief, an updated design has recently been revealed (thanks to UrbanToronto for posting it), reminding us that interesting condos don’t just get built in Mississauga. Particularly eye-catching on the new Safdie design are balconies that daringly cantilever out from the façade and the multiple terraced green spaces. Plus, the café-restaurant-retail strip facing Sherbourne Common looks so pleasant, it’s hard to believe that this will actually be a part of Toronto’s waterfront.

Great Gulf bringing Moshe Safdie to Toronto with Parkside Condos by the Harbour [Urban Toronto]
Parkside Project [Moshe Safdie Architects]

The Informer

Gimme Shelter

17 Comments

House of the Week: $2.1 million for a Wychwood Park stunner lived in by its architect

78 Wychwood Park

ADDRESS: 78 Wychwood Park

NEIGHBOURHOOD: Wychwood

AGENT: Nicole Weber, Schiavone Diamond Team, Prudential Town Centre Realty

PRICE: $2,100,000

THE PLACE: Built into the landscape, facing a pond and surrounded by lush greenery, this is basically Mole End writ large—only with the added benefits of central heating, electric lighting and an indoor garage (presumably to stop Toad from stealing the car). The exterior mimics the historic Arts and Crafts–style architecture of the neighbourhood, but the house was originally built in 1990 by architect Mel Mekinda, who has lived there ever since, so the interiors are sun filled, clean lined and contemporary (a painting in the dining room conceals a flat-screen TV).

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The Goods

From the Print Edition

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Great Spaces: a photographic tour of four former storefronts that evolved into civilized, citified homes

When looking for a place to live, most people would avoid a boarded-up convenience store brimming with junk, or a makeshift church overrun with mice. Other people—like the owners of these resolutely urbane houses—would consider themselves bestowed with a real estate blessing. These unique living spaces are all former commercial storefronts, with massive showroom windows smack dab at street level. The perks? Lots of space, lots of light and a reasonably priced downtown address. The catch? Waving at passersby from the breakfast table.

Start the tour »

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

6 Comments

Fun factory: a look inside Red Bull’s space-age new offices on Queen West

No surprise that Red Bull’s new offices resemble a space-age nightclub. They also prove that it’s OK—even beneficial—to mix business with pleasure

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