My understanding was that Simcoe Place went ahead only because of WSIB.
AoD
My understanding is that when Simcoe Place was being proposed, due to overall market conditions at the time, it was not going to go forward as a spec building, but needed a pre-leasing commitment - a commitment that was provided by WSIB, as a result of the tender process ran by the WSIB when the end of their lease was coming up at 2 Bloor East. So in summary - Simcoe Place was not a spec building, but got the go ahead for construction when the leasing commitment for a sizeable tenant, WSIB came into place. In a sense, that Simcoe Place went ahead 'only' because of WSIB may be a bit out of context - Simcoe Place went ahead because the necessary pre-leasing commitment was achieved, which turned out to be due to the WSIB.
Further to the comments comparing the general office market situation in downtown Toronto from the 1990's slump to today - obviously, the fundamental cyclical nature of the economy and the commercial office space market remains, however much has changed over the past twenty years. The relative rebalancing of commercial office taxation rates between downtown and the suburbs has helped, as has the overall secular trend towards denser urbanization. But I feel Toronto is in a bit of a special situation. The economy here has become much more diversified, with more and stronger support pillars than ever before:
- huge education centre - not just the public school systems, but private schools, along with an increasingly large college and university sector, in part driven by the ongoing growth in international students
- large health care and associated medical research focus
- ongoing growth in Toronto's role as a global financial centre, with the associated impact on its supporting partners' Toronto operations - the legal, accounting, consulting, and technology firms working with the banks, insurance companies, investment firms, etc.
- growth of the entertainment industries - filming, post-production, animation, etc,
- emergence of Toronto as a technology hub, and now into the emerging field of Artificial Intelligence
All of this is fine and wonderful - but overlooks what I believe to be Toronto's greatest asset of all - its people. In terms of sheer diversity of its people, I believe Toronto is currently the best major city in the word. While other cities may have larger ethnic groups in terms of absolute numbers, I am not aware of any where else which has the diversity of mix, and the successful acceptance of people from so many cultures and origins, as Toronto. The same for individual gender and orientation. The relative lack of friction, the overall acceptance of people who are 'not like me' is great to see. I do not want to pretend that everything is perfect, or that there is no room for further improvement on such issues - but that relative to other places, Toronto compares pretty darn well, and is generally moving in the right direction.
So my overall theme is - yes, a cyclical downturn is going to come at some point, but relative to other cities, my thought is that Toronto may not be impacted to the same extent, and that coming out the other end, Toronto's momentum, relative to many other cities, should continue to show further gains.