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4 résultats trouvés

  1. Salut, j'ai cherché le thread sur les tour Lépines, mais je ne les ai pas trouvé, alors j'en fais un aute. Aujourd'hui je faisais des visites avec un de mes clients, et j'ai eu la chance de visiter des espaces à bureaux dans certaines tours du C-V. Notamment au 22ième étage de la Place du Canada(1010 de la Gauchetière), le 26ième étage de la Tour Scotia(1002 Sherbrooke), le 30ième étage de la Tour CIBC(1155 René-Lévesque) et quelques autres. Tout ça pour vous dire que les vues étaient assez impréssionantes et que j'en ai profité pour jeter un bon coup d'oeil aux Tour Lépines. Je trouve qu'elles paraissent beaucoup mieux que le Roc Fleuri. La Couleur du pre-fab s'intègre mieux et semble bien vieillir. Le Roc Fleuri est beaucoup trop Rose et semble encore plus "cheap". On dirait que les Tour Lépines ont vieillis depuis qu'elles ont été complétées il y a quelques mois. J'aurais juré que ces tours avaient 25 ans et non juste 24 mois!
  2. Tour de luxe au centre-ville Publié le 21 janvier 2009 à 09:20:19 à 10:22:40 Photo Robert Mailloux, La Presse Sophie Ouimet-Lamothe La Presse[/size] Projet : Le Roc Fleuri. Photo : http://galeriedephotos.montoit.ca/index.php?t=&a=158&m=mt Promoteur : Giotar. Architecte : DCYSA Architecture & Design. Nombre d'habitations : 140, dont 90% sont vendues. Superficie : de 1125 à 1962 pieds carrés pour les appartements, et jusqu'à 2797 pieds carrés pour les penthouses. Prix : de 595 000$ à 1,3 million, taxes incluses, une place de stationnement comprise. Penthouses : de 2,35 à 2,5 millions, taxes incluses, deux places de stationnement comprises. Livraison : immédiate. Arrondissement : Ville-Marie. Description : les 23 étages du Roc Fleuri se dressent au coin du boulevard De Maisonneuve et de la rue Drummond, dans le Golden Square Mile. Les trois derniers étages accueillent neuf luxueux penthouses. Avis aux intéressés : cinq d'entre eux sont toujours à vendre. La plupart des occupants ont déjà emménagé, puisque la construction est terminée depuis presque deux ans. Les propriétaires peuvent profiter de nombreux espaces communs, dont un luxueux hall, une salle d'exercice, un spa et une piscine intérieure, qui donne sur une terrasse privée. À cinq minutes : on trouve de tout ! Le Roc Fleuri est situé dans le Golden Square Mile, à quelques minutes des musées, restaurants, boutiques, cinémas et bars du centre-ville. Clientèle cible : variées mais clairement pas les premiers acheteurs. On aime : il s'agit d'un projet luxueux et glamour qui s'assume. On aime moins : les prix ne sont pas accessibles à toutes les bourses. Adresse et site internet : Le Roc Fleuri 2000, rue Drummond http://www.lerocfleuri.com
  3. CFurtado

    Condo buffet

    Les projects Altoria et Waldorf Astoria Hotel sont mentionne dans cette article,que j'ai trouver tres interessante. MONTREAL – On the gutted eighth storey of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Andrew Torriani walks across white marble floors turned grey from dust. But despite the renovations under way, Torriani, president and CEO of the historic Ritz-Carlton Montreal, can imagine the hardwood floors, glass walls and marble finishes to come. After being delayed a year, and suffering $30 million in extra costs, he says, the Ritz's über-luxury residence and 130-room hotel project - when complete - will stand above the city's array of existing high-end condominiums. "It's the details - details you wouldn't have believed existed," Torriani said while touting the benefits of Ritz ownership to a reporter this week. The Ritz's 46-unit residence - to open about winter 2011 - follows the injection of nearly 280 other high-end condo units into the city since 2007. Plus, Monit Investments insists its plans for a $200-million downtown Waldorf Astoria Hotel & Residence, with 100 condos and 225 hotel rooms, will go ahead near the corner of Sherbrooke and Guy Sts. These condos, which can cost millions of dollars per apartment, are developers' response to a robust market, aging demographics and rock-bottom interest rates that have incited buyers to upgrade their homes. Some hail the trend as a boon for Montreal as it lures the elite back to the city. Former SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. CEO Guy Saint-Pierre bought one downtown, while Bombardier Inc. Chairman Laurent Beaudoin was considering a condo at the posh Sir George Simpson. But several real estate agents, brokers and developers interviewed by The Gazette question how many luxury condos Montreal can sustain above the key $500 a square foot price point. "We really believe there is a limit in Montreal to the sale of condos over $500,000," said Richard Hylands, president of Kevric Real Estate Corp. which is building the more modest 115-condo Altoria project near Old Montreal. "Basically we're offering a very good product. We're not selling indoor golf or an indoor theatre. The people we are selling to want quality but not high condo fees." Real estate observers say the proof is in the for-sale signs. Despite offering striking views, private terrasses and hotel-style amenities, half of the 10 penthouses at Le Roc Fleuri on Drummond St. are empty - even though most of the 140-unit building is sold out. Meanwhile, five of the 31 condos at the Sir George Simpson building are for sale. Since late 2008, the Ritz project has sold 17 of its 46 units. "I think there is an over-supply of high-end condos in Montreal," said Pierre Laliberté, a specialist in condos with the real estate consulting firm Altus Group Ltd. "When you try to sell a condo for $1 million for more, there aren't a lot of buyers." Veteran real estate agent, JJ Jacobs, president of JJ Jacobs Realty Inc., agreed: "The $1,000 a square foot market is a high market for Montreal," she said. "There have been some very big sales, but it's only so deep. "Personally I don't know how many more the city can hold." Condo prices haven't dropped, however, because Montreal developers tend to have deep enough pockets to absorb the cost of the empty units, Laliberté said. Recently, Montreal's high-end condo market has exploded with a handful of new buildings going up between 2006 and last year. Many were bought by aging empty nesters eager to exchange their houses for the convenience of a condo. "There's going to be a portion of those buyers who are going to enjoy the downtown and they have the resources to do it," said Alan Marcovitz, president and chairman of the Westcliff Group of Companies, which built the sold-out Beaux arts condominiums on Sherbrooke St. Even during a time of economic crisis, Montreal's resilient real estate market coupled with low interest rates, also motivated third and fourth time buyers to upgrade, Marcovitz said. And with the economy improving, demand hasn't dwindled despite plans to slowly raise interest rates, he said. "Your typical buyer is in a significantly better position today than a year ago." But most developers agree that few buyers of ultra high-end condos worry about interest rates. "The challenge is finding the right buyers," said Daniel Lalonde, sales and marketing director for Le Roc Fleuri. "We have a limited pool." In Montreal, wealthy buyers have a wide choice of homes - either condos or houses. "They (high-end condos) sell, but you must really satisfy the buyers and this is a very discriminating clientèle," said Normand Lépine, vice-president of Groupe Lépine, which built Sir George Simpson, among other high-end buildings. "The developer shouldn't under-estimate the amount of effort required. You must really have the right project." Among the basics, high-end condo buildings feature a 24-hour doorman, indoor pool, and spa or massage room. Residents of the Ritz, the Crystal de la Montagne, and the Roc Fleuri's penthouses, have the added option of ordering in room service, getting their dry cleaning delivered, or even having a light bulb changed. The Ritz project - which will cost up to $150 million including key indirect expenses - offers residents a private concierge. It also has a back-up power system able to run the building at virtually full capacity in the event of a electricity failure, said Torriani, whose Monaco Luxury Hotel Management Co. is a risk-sharing partner in the Ritz project. But sales at the Ritz - which closed as a hotel in 2008 - started slowly as the recession discouraged prospective customers. Both the Roc Fleuri and the Ritz have attracted a significant number of foreigners - and these buyers feared for their stock portfolios and the future of Montreal's real estate market. "They postponed their plans," said the Roc Fleuri's Lalonde. "It reduced the amount of visits I got from out of town buyers." Faced with the recession and unexpected construction problems - workers discovered asbestos deep within the Ritz's walls - Torriani decided to revamp his plans on a more grandiose scale. To boost sales he brought in Liza Kaufman, a star real estate agent and managing director of Sotheby's International Realty Québec. While 2009 started off slowly, Kaufman said business at the Ritz has picked up. "If the building was already constructed I would have sold out yesterday," she said. Kaufman, who has sold countless multi-million dollar homes said Montreal is more attractive to foreign buyers than locals realize. "I think the market is evolving," she said. "We have to understand that our city has a lot to offer." Torriani said he isn't worried about a lack of local buyers with the financial means to live at the Ritz, which has an 8,000 square foot penthouse listed for $12 million. Indeed, Torriani left his job as Air Canada's director of human resources, to run the Ritz, where he once worked summer jobs as a dishwasher and waiter. His family, including veteran hotelier Marco Torriani, has a vast stake in the project's success. Before leaving the Ritz's construction site this week, Torriani passes by a swathe of blue and cream brocade wallpaper and wood panelling outside the 98-year-old hotel's former boardroom. The room, along with the hotel's façade will be preserved - vestiges of the Ritz's opening in 1912, when the city was booming and its status as "the Paris of North America" wasn't yet a cliché. Torriani insists that today's economic climate - including the success of the Cirque du Soleil and "Quebec Inc." companies - is equally ripe for the Ritz's reopening, both as a high-end hotel and as a residence. "I think we've seen a resurgence in the last five years or so," he said. "Montreal has a lot more wealthy people than you would expect." alampert@ thegazette.canwest.com Join Allison Lampert at our blog Inc. Ink for a tour of the Roc Fleuri's most expensive condo and see what $9.5 million will buy. http://www.montrealgazette.com/story_print.html?id=2759239&sponsor=
  4. Gracieuseté de Hildephonse Ce projet aurait occupé le site de l'actuel Roc Fleuri.
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