If this building is being marketed to foreign investors—like Marine Gateway and Granville at 70th—then the small size of the units shouldn't matter since these people won't actually be living in them anyway. Are these buildings not designed to maximize profits above all else? What's the incentive to increase square footage and have less units to sell? Surely someone stands to make a huge amount of money from this project. These aren't homes, they're investment properties—to be scooped up by wealthy foreigners in huge blocks and rented out or left vacant. Isn't that how it works with buildings like these? Isn't that what happened with Marine Gateway and Granville at 70th? Should we not expect the same thing here?
Last edited by Darren Tate; Jun 7, 2012 at 7:29 AM.
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