公司有个中国人从多市到纽约来了又回多市去了,现在经济好一点了,market相对hot一点。3月30日 送别会
又到月底了,又有几个同事跳槽走了,其中一个还跳到纽约去了。
一年多走了很多人,也来了很多人,来来往往的好不热闹。
以前工作的地方,人走了很快就失去联系了。
在加拿大,大家都把自己的工作情况登在linkedin上面。
过去的同事现在在做什么一目了然。
多伦多房市5大热点,C14区排首位。
East Willowdale/Bayview Village
Who can forget the headline-making story of 300 Dudley Ave. last month. A student, whose family lives in China, bought the bungalow for about $1.18 million, a shocking $421,800 over asking.
Thom knows the area: between Sheppard and Finch, running east from Yonge to the Don River.
He offers another market measure: A bungalow at 59 Forest Grove Dr., on an extra large lot, sold in 2010 for $1.65 million. Just 22 months later, it resold for $2.53 million. No changes: just a hefty $900,000 gain.
Affluent immigrant buyers, mainly from China, Korea and Iran, are drawn to the area. It started with the excellent public schools, such as Earl Haig Secondary, says Thom, but there are other attributes.
The location is close to the subway and major highways, and the original housing stock is uniform: post-war bungalows on large lots, which lend themselves to redevelopment. Properties with “knockdowns” go for about $1.3 million, but with a brand new house, you’re looking at $2.4 to $2.5 million, Thom says.
“I don’t think this is the end of it, because there’s still a lot of money coming in. This area will continue to attract more investment.”
http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1160061--five-housing-hot-spots-in-toronto
多伦多房市5大热点,C14区排首位。
East Willowdale/Bayview Village
Who can forget the headline-making story of 300 Dudley Ave. last month. A student, whose family lives in China, bought the bungalow for about $1.18 million, a shocking $421,800 over asking.
Thom knows the area: between Sheppard and Finch, running east from Yonge to the Don River.
He offers another market measure: A bungalow at 59 Forest Grove Dr., on an extra large lot, sold in 2010 for $1.65 million. Just 22 months later, it resold for $2.53 million. No changes: just a hefty $900,000 gain.
Affluent immigrant buyers, mainly from China, Korea and Iran, are drawn to the area. It started with the excellent public schools, such as Earl Haig Secondary, says Thom, but there are other attributes.
The location is close to the subway and major highways, and the original housing stock is uniform: post-war bungalows on large lots, which lend themselves to redevelopment. Properties with “knockdowns” go for about $1.3 million, but with a brand new house, you’re looking at $2.4 to $2.5 million, Thom says.
“I don’t think this is the end of it, because there’s still a lot of money coming in. This area will continue to attract more investment.”
http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1160061--five-housing-hot-spots-in-toronto