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Toronto

Parkdale charity buys $7.2M heritage building to secure affordable housing units

With a little help from the city, a charity in Parkdale has bought a heritage building worth $7.2 million that will give the organization the ability to secure stable housing for nearly 40 existing tenants.

Purchase means stable housing for nearly 40 tenants, says Parkdale Activity-Recreation Centre

The address of 1501 Queen Street West looms above the street. Parkdale Activity-Recreation Centre (PARC) Toronto has acquired this building, a three-storey brownstone with 38 affordable rental units. (Michael Charles Cole/CBC)

With a little help from the city, a charity in Parkdale has bought a heritage building worth $7.2 million that will give the organization the ability to securestable housing for nearly 40 existing tenants.

Victor Willis, executive director of the Parkdale Activity-Recreation Centre (PARC) Toronto, said the charityhas acquired 1501 Queen Street West, a three-storey brownstone with 38 rental units located rightnext door to the PARC office, 1499 Queen Street West. The dealclosed last Tuesday.

The purchase means PARC now owns four buildingsand operates 110 affordable housing units in South Parkdale. PARC helps Parkdale residents who live with poverty, mental health and addiction issues.

Willis said the purchase is significant because it means PARC is expanding its role as a charitythat aims to provide "safe, adequate, well-maintained, dignified homes" in Parkdale, a neighbourhood where the charity estimates 90 per cent of residents are renters and more than 30 per cent of people live in poverty.

The building's tenants, who pay below market rent, will be allowed to stay. Many use PARC's services and are low income.

"We saw this as a really important opportunity to secure this housing so that it would stay affordable and below market in perpetuity," Willis told CBC Toronto on the weekend.

"We thinkthis isan example of what needs to be done again and again. There are very few purchases like this happening now. There's an enormous trend towards buying up what was affordable housing and convertingit into unaffordable housing," he added.

Victor Willis, executive director of the Parkdale Activity-Recreation Centre (PARC) Toronto, says: 'We saw this as a really important opportunity to secure this housing so that it would stay affordable and below market in perpetuity.' (Mary Wiens/CBC)

Willis said PARCbought the building from a husband and wife who own a handful of properties in Toronto's west end. The twosold because theyhad to liquidate some of theirholdings.

In the building, which needsabout $500,000 worth of capital improvements, 35 out of 38 units are occupied. Rent ranges from just under $600 to just under $1,100. There are an estimated 36 tenants in the building, which has bachelor and one-bedroom apartments.

Willis said thefabric of Parkdaleis changing through gentrification.Development pressures are increasing, there are stories of renovictions and people being priced out, andlandlordsare selling to developers and international investors.

"This is a very different response. It's a community based one," he said. "Anybody who is living there can stay there as long as they wish. And their rents won't go up in any kind of dramatic fashion."

PARC said in a news release: "With the acquisition of this building, PARC intends to prevent the displacement of tenants out of the existing affordable housing stock, and to preserve and protect affordable housing for low-income residents."

As part of the deal with the city, rents have to remain affordable and nobody willpay more than 80 per cent of average market rent.Any vacancies that come up will be made available to people on the city's affordable housing wait lists.

Building is 1 of 2 former Parkdale Mansions

The building itself at 1501 Queen Street West was constructed in 1912, has operated as an apartment building since it opened and is a mirror image of a nearby property, Edmond Place, 194 Dowling Ave., also owned and managed by PARC as supportive housing. These buildings, which are like book ends, were once called the Parkdale Mansions.

In the 1920s, before the great crash of October 1929, Parkdale was a posh neighbourhood with stately homes. Many of themansions then became guest and rooming homes. In the 1970s, some of the housesbecame homesfor people who had been institutionalized in psychiatric hospitals.

"What's interesting about this is these buildings reflect some of the history of the old days of Parkdale," Willis said.

A side view of 1501 Queen Street West, a heritage building in Parkdale, that was built in 1912. (Michael Charles Cole/CBC)

Last September, when water from 1501 Queen Street West migrated into the basement of 1499 Queen Street West, representatives from both buildings went to investigate and the conversation about the sale and purchase of the building began, he said. The owners indicated they were getting ready to sell and PARC officials asked if they could buy.

The owners decided that selling to the charitynext door, which means rent would be kept stable, was the right thing to do.

Now, Willis said the building is in need of upgradesto heating and security systems, but the city has provided money for that as well. "There's some work that needs to be done."

Purchase raises charity's profile in Parkdale, treasurer says

For Peter Martin, treasurer of the PARC board and a former lawyer,the purchase makes a difference to the charity. Martin is an Ontario Disability Support Program recipient and once lived on the streets.

"We will be able to maintain affordable housing stock in Parkdale. We are going to be able to improve the quality of life within those buildings through making sure they are kept up to a decent standard.We can integrate the tenants in thosebuildings into the super structure of PARC's programming policies so that we can provide social supports as well assafe spacesfor people to live in," Martin said.

Peter Martin, treasurer of PARC, says: 'A place like PARC can give you the supports. They can provide you with meals, counselling and a social network of support with your peers.' (Michael Charles Cole/CBC)

"Those arereally good things," he said. "A place like PARC can give you the supports. They can provide you with meals, counselling anda social network of support with your peers."

Martin said the purchase gives PARC a larger profile in the community.

"We are now a little bigger in the neighbourhood in terms of being a landlord. And that provides us with a bit more influence and weight when we speak to government about the problems withaffordable housing, We are becoming a bigger player in Parkdalein terms of our role as a provider of affordable housing and it makes easier for us for our voice to be heard."

Martin said Toronto'scurrent housing market pushes low income people to the margins. He said he knows about the importance of stable housing because, when he was suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder years ago, he had to move toToronto from northern Ontario to get the helphe needed. He had stopped working.

"I have had to live in places where no one should have to live in order to stay in Toronto to get the medical supportI needed as I went through my crisis," he said. "The system itselfis not designed to help people like us."

A pigeon rests in the upper balustrade of the building. (Michael Charles Cole/CBC)

Financing came from variety of groups

As for financing of the building, the charity received a $4.5 million, 49-year forgivable loan from the city and donationsfrom the ECHO Foundation and the Sheila Koffman fund, individual donors and the Parkdale Neighbourhood Land Trust. The fund of the late Sheila Koffman, former owner of Another Story bookstore and chair of the PARC board, donated$200,000.

The ECHO Foundation, a family foundation that supports charities that help people with mental health histories, has loaned $3 million to the organization.

Founded in 1977, PARC provides a drop-in centre as well assupportive housing and peer-support program and outreach programs. About 20 years ago, it began operating units of affordable housing for low-income adults who are experiencing mental health issues or addiction challenges in South Parkdale.