Toronto

Former Toronto church converted to luxury lofts amid housing supply push

A former church in Toronto's Harbord Village neighbourhood has been converted into seven boutique units and has officially hit the market. Experts say missing middle housing is sorely needed in the city.

City councillor says part of its housing plan is making different types of housing easier to build

Real estate developer says recent church conversion an example of 'missing middle housing'

11 days ago
Duration 2:53
A former church in Toronto's Harbord Village neighbourhood has been converted into seven boutique condo units and has officially hit the market. Experts say "missing middle housing" is sorely needed in the city. CBC's Talia Ricci has the details.

A building that sits at the corner of Sussex Street and Brunswick Avenue has had many lives over the last century — being a church, a school and offices. Now it's set to become housing, at a time when the city sorely needs it. 

Dubbed The Brunswick Lofts, the 225 Brunswick project has been six years in the making, real estate developer Jeff Kopas told CBC News. 

"It's missing middle housing...it's not a house renovation and it's not a 10-storey condo building, it's something in between," Kopas said. The goal, he said, was to create something unique but also suit the feel of the neighbourhood.

"Missing middle" housing typically refers to buildings that have a higher density than a single-family house and a lower density than a high-rise, according to the city.

"It's seven luxury units that are all two-stories and each one has its own front door and its own connection to the street," Kopas said. "I think it's beautiful and it adds a real home to the neighbourhood versus a box in the sky."

But with one listing priced at $1.7 million, Kopas recognizes the homes aren't geared toward affordability. Still, he believes Toronto needs more such housing to make it more vibrant and livable. 

And he's not alone.

City 'looking at every opportunity' for more housing

Gord Perks, city councillor and chair of the housing committee, says the city has been working to create more missing middle infill housing as part of its housing plan.

"This is a form of housing, it's not affordable housing. But at the city, we're working on what we call expanding housing options, giving people more choices within neighbourhoods," he said.

According to the city, there are 298 low-rise projects, 388 mid-rise projects and 1,051 high-rise projects that propose residential development in the development pipeline, meaning projects with any development activity over the last five years.

"The city really is looking at every opportunity. We're putting in the permissions to build apartment buildings where they didn't use to exist," Perks said.

"Those sort of low-rise, four to six-storey apartment buildings, they are harder to shoehorn in."

A June 2024 study aims to accelerate the supply of housing through removing policy and zoning barriers to support the goal of achieving (or exceeding) the provincial housing target of 285,000 new homes over the next 10 years.

According to the study, the plan seeks to advance infill housing (or missing middle housing) in the city's apartment neighbourhoods through establishing best practices and developing new tools to simplify and streamline the approval process for infill housing on existing apartment sites. 

'Extreme highrises and single-family sprawl'

Ken Greenberg, principal of Greenberg Consultants, says to address the housing crisis, the city needs a mix of diverse housing and government intervention.

"Missing middle housing is entirely useful and we need it in the older neighbourhoods," Greenberg said, adding Toronto used to have many more low and mid-rise housing decades ago than it does today.

"We have shifted to extreme highrises and single-family sprawl."

However, Greenberg says missing middle housing isn't the panacea for affordability. 

He says in the 1970s and 1980s, other affordable housing options included co-ops and non-profit housing, initiatives led by the federal government.

"I think if you combine government involvement and the missing middle, that's the ideal solution."