Liberty Village real estate, market intelligence, and active listings. Hard lofts, soft lofts, and townhouses in Toronto's converted industrial core. Live MLS feed updated daily.
Twenty years ago this was derelict factory land. The Massey-Harris plant, the carpet mill, the paper warehouse: empty brick between King West and the lake. What got built in around the smokestacks became a neighbourhood that still feels like nowhere else in the city.
Today it's 7,600 people in a square kilometre. Median age 33. Most bought their first place here. Many work in the same converted warehouses their condos sit beside. The lake is a twelve-minute walk. King West is five.
The housing splits cleanly.
Hard lofts in the original conversions. Exposed brick, timber beams, fourteen-foot ceilings. The buildings that made Liberty Village a brand. They command a premium and rarely sit.
Soft lofts and modern towers along King and East Liberty. One-bedrooms in the high $500s to mid $700s. Two-bedrooms $800K to $1.3M.
Townhouses tucked behind the main streets for buyers who want freehold without leaving the core.
What holds the value isn't the architecture. It's the geography. Exhibition GO puts you in Union in seven minutes. The 504 puts you on King in fifteen. Trinity Bellwoods, Stackt Market, BMO Field, the lake, all walkable. Mildred's for brunch. School for lunch. Wvrst when you want to eat in a room that used to be a paper warehouse.
Who buys here: dual-income professionals in their early thirties. Couples on their first or second place. Single buyers in tech, design, and media who want a building that doesn't look like every other building.
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