TheKingEast
Senior Member
I found the video, wow.
[video=youtube;WYnP4Cs6rgE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYnP4Cs6rgE[/video]
WTF? That is awful. Awful!
Aren't builders supposed to have the building inspected prior to occupancy?
I found the video, wow.
[video=youtube;WYnP4Cs6rgE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYnP4Cs6rgE[/video]
WTF? That is awful. Awful!
Aren't builders supposed to have the building inspected prior to occupancy?
Their condo insurer apparently went bankrupt.I guess most people can recover the cost of furniture, TV computer etc, if they had bought home insurance. I think it covers up to $25,000 with most home insurance policies.
It looks like the building is new, then the building insurance which the condo corporation bought should cover most of the replacement cost, based on the apprasied value. The insurance company should first pay out the claims related to the building structure to condo corporation, then its up to them to sue the builder, or any other parties who hold the responsibility.
It might take months/years to get all these sorted out. There are tons of legal fees to be incurred before those poor condo owner get their money back
They were given an extra 15 minutes to get their stuff. Apparently, people basically ran around their condos and threw stuff out the window onto the snowbanks below to save time.I suspect that if I moved out of my home all of a sudden and wanted to go back to get the irreplaceables and to get my data off my computers, it would take days.
An interesting article from Saturday's National Post on one man's story in real estate investment/home ownership in Toronto over the past 30 years.
But the three main points house buyers must consider is whether they like the feel of the home, whether they like the neighbourhood and whether they can afford the mortgage payment even if rates rise considerably.
New Yorkers talking smack about Toronto.. figures..
In fact, builders can’t find enough lots to build homes on and developers can’t put condo buildings up fast enough in Toronto. In decent areas, the prices of condos have gone up from $400.00 per square foot to well over $1,000 per square foot and buyers are lining up.
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There are only handful of buildings in TO that command $1,000/sqf. They are all uber 5 star brand name properties. Using this as an example of why Toronto is facing its bubble burst is, to say the least, not true.
Bubble is on the other side of the market .... where "poor people" put 5% down and mortgage themselves to the bone, asuming that r/e prices always go up and interest rates will never go back to 7-8%.
That's exactly my contention. R/E market in TO is fragmented and each section behaves in its own way. There is GTA market, downtown and core downtown. Then there are high density developments in the downtown area or just on the edge of downtown market -- City Place, around Rogers Centre. Most of the units here are rental units purchased with, mostly, 5% down payment. Because at any time quite a few units are available for sale in these developments -- mainly, 1 bedroom or 1+1 -- prices rarely go up sharply. However, they do down considerably when TSE is down by, say, 150 points or there is a hint that interest rates might go up.
In other areas, especially core downtown, prices behave differently. A 2 bed 2 bath 830 sqft unit on 19th floor in RoCP1 was sold in June 2010 at $ 480,000. In January 2011, the same size unit on 28th floor was sold for $ 521,000 -- only $1,000 less than the asking prices. Talk about slow down in R/E market or a hint of interest increase or decrease in mortgage amortization period has no effect on this segment of the market.
2 bedroom in RoCP going for around half a million - bet you most of these are bought with downpayments of $100-200K and morgtgages of $300-400K. Not really a stable bullet proof segment .... Four Seasons, Shangri La and Trump I can see being different, although these atracted some gamblers, too.