Puttin' on the Ritz
April 22, 2011
Annette McLeod
Even among the world’s most recognizable luxury brands, there are but a few symbols that elicit murmurs of appreciation for their impeccable service and style. A pale blue Tiffany’s box. A Louis Vuitton bag. Chanel’s back-to-back intertwined C’s. The name Ritz-Carlton.
The newest addition to Toronto’s roster of luxury hotels, the Ritz-Carlton is a 53-storey modern building that, as it appears from the outside, could perhaps house a flotilla of nine-to-fivers
The newest addition to Toronto’s roster of luxury hotels, the Ritz-Carlton is a 53-storey modern building that, as it appears from the outside, could perhaps house a flotilla of nine-to-fivers like the CBC building next door. But inside, it’s pure Ritz: understated but luxurious, with upscale materials and finishes, and solicitous but never intrusive staffers hovering at the edge of your vision, ready to fulfill any request.
Specially commissioned or hand-picked Canadian art dots the walls, stands on pedestals, and is even embedded in the lobby floor. The pewter-topped bar at Toca (a mash-up of “Toronto†and “Canadaâ€) in the lobby’s northeast corner sports a crushed-ice mound where fresh lobster tails and oysters nestle. A stylized triptych, a Muskoka lakescape, hangs over the door of Deq, the hotel’s other restaurant. To its right, a gleaming statue stands sentinel. Near it is an unremarkable door that leads to a remarkable place: the Residences at the Ritz-Carlton on Wellington St. W.
The condominium comprise 159 suites built by Graywood Developments and designed by New York-based architects Kohn Pederson Fox and Toronto’s Page + Steele/IBI Group Architects. Of them, 80 per cent are already sold.
On Saturday, April 30, just for the day, a selection of the remaining units will be specially priced.
This event gives prospective buyers a chance to save up to $300,000 on suites ranging from the 1,397-square-foot, one-bedroom Chelsea B to the 3,418-square-foot Augusta, a three-bedroom suite with a library. (There aren’t any discounts on the $9,650,000, 6,020-square-foot Valencia.) There’s a moratorium on floor premiums that day too, with sale suites starting on the 34th floor. Maintenance fees are 79 cents per square foot.
From the residents’ lobby, it’s a quick elevator ride to the 22nd floor and a second lobby, where residents may either switch to a yet-more-private elevator to access their suites, or go down one flight to the 21st floor, which houses their amenities. They include a bar and lounge area, conference room, spacious landscaped terrace, games room, guest suites, well-equipped fitness room and decked-out personal screening room, perfect for upscale movie nights. And of course, the hotel’s amenities are just an elevator ride (or even a phone call) away: housekeeping, valet parking, room service, pool, spa, gym, tuck shop, yoga studio and those two gorgeous restaurants.
The Ritz-Carlton’s close proximity to King West’s dining and entertainment strip, major sports venues, trendy Queen West, Roy Thomson Hall, the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, the island airport and even several unexpected green spaces, collude for the ultimate urban lifestyle. It also offers direct access to the PATH, Toronto’s underground shopping complex that links just about the entire financial district. Residents who work on Bay St. could go indoors in the fall, not emerge until spring, and miss nothing.
“This is the place to live,†says Graywoods Developments COO Stephen Price as he conducts a recent tour, referring not just to the building but the neighbourhood, as well. “This is where the city’s moving.â€
The 1,600-square-foot Park Avenue suite will sell for $1.5 million on April 30, $155,000 off its regular price. The careful floor plan encourages you past twin closets in the entryway into the living/dining room and its wall of windows, and beyond to the gourmet kitchen, where top-of-the-line appliances include a wine cooler and a panel fridge undetectable from the surrounding cabinetry. Another wall of windows and another breathtaking view greet you in the bedroom.
The 3,200-square-foot Newbury suite has a private elevator that opens directly into the foyer. A second, rear entrance opens on a service corridor.
The suites — designed by 1212 Decor and Choices The Agency — manage to both radiate opulence yet not intimidate. Perhaps it’s the extravagance of light that pours through the floor-to-ceiling windows. In both directions, the views are astonishing. To the south, the lake, the island and, on a clear day, a glimpse of New York state. To the north, an urban landscape that stretches into the discernable distance.
At the end of the tour, he looks around, smiles, and raises his hands slightly to encompass it all. “This all started with an idea, a piece of land and a spreadsheet.â€
Registration for the one-day sale on April 30 is online at
www.ritzonedaysaleevent.com or by calling 416-591-1000. Prospective buyers will get an information package and an appointment to view 10 model suites, including two designed and fully furnished by hot New York firm 12/12.
Click here for pics http://www.yourhome.ca/homes/realestate/article/978357--puttin-on-the-ritz