17 views 0 shares 0 comments
Created/changed by:
System
set bookmark!
Four Seasons Hotel and Residences Toronto, Canada
Category: Attraction
Address details
Four Seasons Hotel and ResidencesToronto
ON M4W 1L4
Canada
Toronto, Canada Print route » N43° 40' 19" W79° 23' 20" (43.671944444444, -79.388888888889) Start navigation »
Phone & WWW
Business hours
Info
The Four Seasons Hotel and Residences Toronto is a complex consisting of a 204-metre, 55-story residential condominium tower and a 125-meter, 30-storey hotel tower in the Yorkville district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, which opened on October 5, 2012. Located at 60 Yorkville Avenue, at its intersection with Bay Street, the complex is situated one block east of the former Four Seasons Hotel Toronto building at 21 Avenue Road.The complex was designed by Peter Clewes of architectsAlliance, and developed by Bay-Yorkville Developments. The taller tower was initially the 10th tallest building in Toronto, but by 2017, its position had fallen to 17th as other taller buildings were completed. The location had previously been the Bay Ford Lincoln car dealership, and it is next door to Toronto Fire Services Station 312.
The penthouse, which claims the entire 55th floor of the West Residence, sold for C$28 million, making it the most expensive condominium sold in Canada.The 55-floor complex contains 259 hotel rooms and 210 private condo suites. It offers a two-storey spa, Café Boulud and bar (by international restaurateur and chef Daniel Boulud), and glass-enclosed event spaces. It was designed by architectsAlliance, with Page and Steele as Architect of Record. The project was developed by Bay-Yorkville Developments Ltd., a joint venture of Alcion Ventures, LP, Menkes Developments and Lifetime Homes, and uses the "Four Seasons" trademark under licence.[2]
Before the ribbon-cutting ceremony, Four Seasons Hotels chairman and founder Isadore Sharp proclaimed the new location as being "...in a category by itself, a true Four Seasons in our hometown, our flagship hotel. It is a landmark development for the city of Toronto".
[3]