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What Will the Condo Market Look Like in 10-20 Years?

condo markets

Over the past week I've had 2 separate people ask me my thoughts on the future of the condo market in Toronto. One of them was working on a University study and one of them was trying to figure out what (condo) property managers would look like in the future. 

To be clear, the questions weren't motivated by the typical "bubble" debate that the media loves to headline, rather these were questions about the long term future of condos in this city.

I haven't written about this topic so explicitly, so today I thought I would summarize my responses for the Architect This City community. There's probably a touch of aspiration in the responses I gave, but they're more or less what I'm thinking and what I believe has a good chance of happening over the next 10-20 years.

Here are some of my thoughts:

Intensification is going to continue in Toronto and that is going to mean more condominiums and other types of multi-family dwellings. Rental apartment buildings is the product type du jour right now within the real estate community.

As intensification continues, I think we're going to see a tipping point in the near term with more families opting to have and raise children in condos in the city. Part of this will be driven by a desire to stay in the city (walkable communities), but part of it will also be driven by the economics (i.e. high price) of low-rise housing in the city.

As families begin to fill in condos (not just young single professionals and empty nesters), we'll see developers and cities respond with more family friendly buildings, amenities, and program choices. This could mean anything from children's play spaces within buildings to redesigned public spaces and parks.

In line with this shift, I think we'll also see more sophisticated executions of "mixed-use." Rather than just stacked uses (retail at the bottom, a few levels of office above, and then a residential condo tower above), developers and operators are going to start thinking about the ecosystem they are creating. (Related discussion in the comment section of this post.)

It's probably a bit safe to predict that sustainability will become more important going forward. But I think that as more families and long-term end users opt for condos, that consumers will become more interested in building performance. Technological advancement (both hardware and software) should also give this a boost.

Finally, and this applies somewhat to real estate in general, I believe that we'll see a lot more openness and transparency across the industry. There will be much better access to data and information. Similar to above, I think this will be aided by advances in technology and networks.

Now it's your turn. What do you think of the above list? And what will the condo market — either in Toronto or in your city — look like in 10-20 years?

Photo Credit: Condos and Changing Markets/shutterstock