Lot that was supposed to be home to SkyCity, Winnipeg's tallest tower, now up for sale - Action News
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Manitoba

Lot that was supposed to be home to SkyCity, Winnipeg's tallest tower, now up for sale

All that remains of the dream of Winnipeg's tallest tower is a weathered billboard on a surface parking lot and hundreds of investors who doubt they will get their investment back.

With SkyCity project dead, investor worries she will never see her money back

SkyCity was announced with great fanfare in 2013. Despite the developer's claim that 50 per cent of the units were pre-sold, the project never broke ground. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

All that remains of the dream of Winnipeg's tallest tower is a weathered billboard on a surface parking lot and hundreds of investors who doubt they will get their money back.

The troubled $200-million, 45-storey SkyCity projectwas supposed to be built by 2019 but it never broke ground.

FAANMortgage Administrators, the trustee for SkyCity investors, recently announcedthe parking lot atat the corner ofGraham Avenue and Smith Street is up for sale, with no list price and a deadline for offers of Oct. 15.

The City of Winnipeg assesses the value of property at just over $4.6 million.

Sales for SkyCity, a mixed-use condo project originally announced in 2013, looked good back in 2015, when Richmond Hill, Ont.-based developer Fortress Real Developments said it had sold more than 50 per cent of the units.

But construction was delayed and problems for the company began to mount.

In 2018, the developer made headlines when Ontario's mortgage regulator, the Financial Services Commission of Ontario,issued $1.1 million in fines to four brokerages involved in syndicated mortgage investments on Fortress real estate projects.

A couple of months later, the RCMPraided six properties, including Fortress's headquarters in the Greater Toronto Area, as part of an ongoing investigation into syndicated mortgage fraud. Nocharges have been laid in that investigation.

'It's my pension'

Condo purchasers' deposits were refundedshortly after the RCMP raid, but they were not the only ones who hadmoney on the line with Fortress.

Accordingto a Sept. 23, 2020, letter sent from FAANto lenders, inaddition to pre-selling units, Fortress borrowed $32 million for SkyCity from investors through syndicated mortgages a pooled investment to pay for marketing and pre-construction costs. Those investors, who are primarily based in Ontario and Eastern Canada, have now been told it's unknown whether they will get any of their investment back.

Carole Skelhorne of Halifax invested $104,000 of her pension into a SkyCity syndicated mortgage. For the first couple of years she was happy, getting 12 per cent interest and then the payments abruptly stopped.

"It's heartbreaking. It's my pension," the 52-year-old said. "I've been working a second job to help to try to make [it] up. But I will never be able to make up $104,000with a part-time job."

She considers herself luckier than some others, who invested insurance settlements that they depend on forincome.

"It never even broke ground," said Skelhorne. "It's very, very frustrating."

This conceptual drawing shows SkyCity, a planned mixed use condo that was never built. (Fortress Real Developments)

In its Sept. 23 letter, the trustee says after refunding all the unit deposits to the condo purchasers, Fortress went back to the drawing board because the original design "had proven to be too tall and with too much commercial space." No revised design plan was made public.

The trustee has warned syndicated mortgage investors thatit is unknown whether they will recover any of the money they invested.

In addition to the $32 million in syndicated mortgages, there is $9.5 million in priority mortgages, which take precedence for repayment from funds obtained through the sale of the parking lot. The trustee says these mortgages have substantial accrued and unpaid interest and are currently in default.

Angela Mathieson, president of the downtown development agency CentreVenture, says she is happy to see the property on the market.

"It's a prime site, right on the rapid transit mall, surrounded by a number of new developments.We are very optimistic that a purchaser [will] come forward with a redevelopment plan," she wrotein an email.

Fortress did not respond to a request for comment.