scarberiankhatru
Senior Member
Okay, this will clear things up:
http://www.colliersmn.com/prod/ccgrd.nsf/publish/D07CA1DF11E42476852576790062E553/$File/Colliers+Q3+2009+GTA+Office+Statistics.pdf
About 86 million square feet in ALL OF TORONTO and all classes.
After I thought about it for a while - we probably added a bit more then 6 million over the last 20 years. But no where near 50/60!
Anyway the point is - there has been quite a bit less growth since the 1980's then was predicted back then in the city of Toronto.
You're still wrong. That's 86M in downtown and midtown, not the whole city. We've probably built 6M just in Etobicoke, North York, and Scarborough since 1988. Also, I said it was "closer to 60M" than 6M, not that it was exactly 60M. The short list ShonTron mentioned is at least 5M and there's still dozens of other towers that have gone up, each with hundreds of thousands of square feet of office space.
The point is that people looking exclusively at office towers tend to look only at the handful of tallest towers while ignoring shorter ones, conversions, people working from home, etc., and tend to ignore employment growth in places like institutions. The 905 has grown more than the 416 since 1988 but the 416 could not, under any circumstances, have accommodated all of this growth.




