How didn't Bazis have their ducks in a row? They had financing and the building was mostly sold. They have another tower under construction practically across the street. There was no reason to believe that the development wouldn't go ahead.
This project's financing has included:
a) a company whose risk management practices were so awful that the company no longer exists,
b) a French bank that saw this loan as such a toxic investment that it was sold to:
c) a consortium of local businesses who are now attempting to force the land into receivership and will likely succeed unless the day can be saved by:
d) a nationalized Kazakh bank who are currently under investigation for a massive money laundering scheme and who are said to likely be unable to even come up with the money needed in order for this project to move forward.
Please correct me if I'm wrong (and apologies if I am) but I don't believe there have been any confirmed hotel or retail partners for this project. I'm sure it's not for lack of effort on Bazis' part. I believe at one point Apple was rumoured to be interested, but it seems that any company with a solid reputation to protect and a financial headache to avoid wants absolutely nothing to do with this project. For comparison's sake, we all knew who the hotel and retail partners were for MLS before the shovels hit the ground.
There has been a succession of excuses from Bazis executives over the past year or so with regards to the lack of progress, including slow permit processing time, lane closures and road construction issues on Bloor, the Lehman Bros issue (which they initially attempted to play off as a technicality regarding the name on the property's deed). The problems did not start with the financial meltdown, but the recent economic troubles seem to be doing a good job of exposing the dirt on this one.
I really don't know if the moderately-sized and, if those weird artistic cutouts on the podium's concrete make it to the final product, potentially hilariously ugly building across the street is a good indicator that this is a secure project either. We could just as easily point to their project up in North York that seems to be having a bit of a rough ride as an example of their work, and I really don't think that shows them as being overly competent either. I really do hope something gets done at this corner, as it's a damned shame what has happened there, but I think that the sooner the project is out of Bazis' hands at this point, the better.