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Groupe Humaco set to build $315M Cocité Lévis

4 years ago

A $315-million mixed-use neighbourhood is set to rise next to a bridge leading into Quebec City. Groupe Humaco will begin construction in spring 2020 at Cocité Lévis, next to the Pierre Laporte Bridge across the river from the provincial capital.

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Cineplex (CGX-T), Canada’s largest cinema chain, has reached an agreement to be acquired by U.K.-based movie theatre owner Cineworld Group plc. in a deal worth $2.8 billion in cash and assumption of net debt.

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Myers Automotive Group is gearing up to become a player in the field of commercial development with plans for an office building and a potential hotel in Ottawa. Myers is hoping got a targeted opening date for both buildings in  2021.

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The City of Ottawa’s planning committee has narrowly approved DYMON Storage‘s controversial plan for a six-storey self-storage warehouse. It marks the Ottawa-based company’s 12th location in the region.

Yardi Systems

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Chartwell Retirement Residences (CSH-UN-T) has completed the acquisition of the 256-suite Chartwell Emerald Hills Retirement Residence in Sherwood Park, Alta. The purchase price was $120.0 million.

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Edmonton city council has weighed in on a pair of high-rise projects Averton Homes proposed for the Oliver area west of downtown, unanimously giving support to one development while rejecting the other.

IMAGE: John Clark of Ottawa's Regional Group of Companies.

Vice President , The Regional Group of Companies Inc

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A historic Winnipeg building that originally housed the Manitoba College of Pharmacy has been renovated, reinvigorated and put up for lease by Avison Young as modern office space.

NAI Commercial

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Grande Prairie has been going through an unprecedented boom for the last decade or so, faring much better in an environment of low oil and gas prices compared to the rest of Alberta. Part I kicked off the four-part series.

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Hutterite colonies in Northwestern Alberta, like many farms in the province, signed leases with oil and gas companies in efforts to supplement their incomes. As commodity prices have tumbled those rental payments have either dried up or disappeared.

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The accompanying table records the 10 largest construction project starts in Canada in November. Also included is the latest trend graph on starts. This looks at 12-month moving totals of the civil and non-residential building categories in Canada.

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Hudson’s Bay Co. (HBC-T) is delaying a shareholder vote on a $1.1-billion takeover offer by a group led by the retailer’s executive chairman following a ruling by the Ontario Securities Commission. The special meeting of shareholders was set for Tuesday.

ProReit

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Developers are building more office buildings today than at any point in the last decade, but the changing nature of the work could threaten long-held beliefs about the way the office market will behave as we enter the next decade.

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The ongoing struggles of WeWork parent The We Co. have dominated co-working news, but the real action in the flexible office industry may be far from the limelight, as tiny, independent operators quietly remake the American workplace.

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Subversive Real Estate Acquisition REIT LP has filed a preliminary prospectus for an IPO. Subversive targets a qualifying transaction that will aggregate a portfolio of properties with an estimated aggregate enterprise value of between $200 million and $650 million US.

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Shares in German property group Adler Real Estate rose as much as 10.5 per cent on Monday after an agreed takeover offer by domestic peer Ado Properties on Sunday that marked further consolidation in the sector.

Happy Holidays - Real Estate Forum

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has asked Finance Minister Bill Morneau to consider recommendations for making the mortgage stress test “more dynamic,” after widespread criticism of its design.

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After years of elevated and seemingly constantly rising house prices, barely half of Canadians will be able to afford a home of their own, according to a new study by KPMG. That means the country will need more rental housing,

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Canadian households may be going bust at the fastest pace since the financial crisis a decade ago, but that’s not stopping other consumers from taking on debt. Falling interest rates have convinced consumers to jump right back into the red.

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Conditions remain challenging in the city’s real estate market, a new Altus Group (AIF-T) report has found. The study also revealed increased activity in some areas of the market, indicating brighter days may be ahead.

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