unimaginative2
Senior Member
Very interesting. These three developers have very deep pockets and a fairly decent past track record. If they re-launch the project, we might see a much more interesting design.
Société Générale, faced with its own financial woes, sold off the loan to Berman's group for an undisclosed amount. The group is made up of representatives of three Canadian companies, Tricon Capital Group, the Minto Group and KingSett Capital.
Now, the group wants to be paid out, or to be allowed to buy the property with an eye to building a more modest project. Berman's group has offered $50.5 million as the opening bid of an auction they suggest take place soon.
If they do end up gaining control of the project, I suspect that we will end up with a standard Toronto box in the 40-50 storey range.
I find it slightly amusing that the date on the article is for tomorrow.
"The irony is that there are buyers out there and they’re real, not speculators, people who want and need a place to live,†says Jeanhy Shim, of Thinkbuild Consulting, a condo market research firm.
Most of what Lamb has to say should be taken with a boulder of salt. If you read between the lines in that article the message is that he personally has lost a fortune in this credit crisis because the easy money train left town before he could get his projects off the ground.
BradLamb said:But the banks have been unfair to those developers who were too slow/dumb/inexperienced enough to realize they should have locked down their financing during the most liquid/easy financing time in history by changing the rules half way through the game. Now they want more.â€
First Gulf / Great Gulf has NOW pruchased 1 Bloor
Now you will see some action! ED can go look eleswhere now!
First Gulf / Great Gulf has NOW pruchased 1 Bloor
Now you will see some action! ED can go look eleswhere now!
Now you will see some action! ED can go look eleswhere now!