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The COVID-19 pandemic has slowed the flow of people into North America’s fastest-growing city. It hasn’t stopped Toronto’s bullish developers from banking on a quick recovery.
Construction of rental apartments in Canada’s financial capital is near record levels despite a decline in immigration. In the second quarter 13,358 units were under construction in the Toronto region, close to a 40-year high, according to research from real estate consulting firm Urbanation Inc.
More than 3,000 new apartments were proposed in the past three months, lower than in the first quarter but a 45 per cent increase from the same period in 2019.
Toronto has enjoyed a decade-long building boom, fuelled by an influx of immigrants and international students and growth in the finance and technology sectors. The exponential growth has made life difficult for apartment seekers: before the pandemic the vacancy rate in Toronto was just 1.1 per cent, Urabanation said.