Best Deals for Kitchener Condos Under $200K

Looking for a well priced Condo in Kitchener?  We have condos under $200,000 availalble, both new construction and resale condominium projects.

Among others, City Centre by Andrin has units starting under $200,000 – and so does their last project, the Kaufman Lofts, a conversion of the historic Kaufman factory up the street.

These are both in booming downtown Kitchener; the Kaufman Lofts are across the street from land the Region recently purchased to use as a transit hub (see: Waterloo Region Buys Kitchener Land to Redevelop for Transit Hub), and it’s kitty corner to the University Health Sciences Campus.

For a complete list of condos under $200,000 in Kitchener Waterloo (and Cambridge or Guelph too!) email me, click the link on the sidebar up top or call 519 772 4377

Pre Construction Condos in Kitchener: City Centre by Andrin

City Centre Condos in downtown Kitchener

One of the most anticipated pre-construction condo projects in Kitchener Waterloo, City Centre has recently started selling units.

There will be two towers, 17 and 14 floors, that will  house about 380 units.  In addition, the site plan calls for retail, underground parking, and a boutique hotel and spa where the Mayfair currently stands.

I have floorplans for the units, but can’t post them online.  If you’re interested in more information, email me by clicking here

From 570 News

Ground has been broken on a sales office that will drive growth in downtown Kitchener. Representatives from Andrin Homes, the City of Kitchener and the Downtown BIA were on-hand at a ceremony Tuesday morning that marked the beginning of construction on what will become a dedicated, 3,500-square-foot sales pavilion.

“The sales centre itself will have two, fully furnished model suites,” says Anne Marchildon, vice-president, Sales and Marketing with Andrin Homes. “The exterior of the sales centre (will also be) representative of what the building will look like, (from the) brick colour, the panel colours, the window details, all of that sort of thing.”

The sales centre will also include a 2,000-square-foot presentation area with multimedia capabilities to allow potential buyers to go through the project step-by-step.

Marchildon calls Kitchener a “very good” municipality to work with.

“They’re very forward-thinking, they do their homework, everybody is looking to the same objective,” she says.

Kitchener’s Director of Economic Development, Rod Regier, is admittedly excited by this next step in the project.

“It’s coming at the right time,” he says. “We’ve had some great announcements in the downtown recently with The Tannery and The Communitech Hub developed there, followed by the Google move. So we’re very excited about where this fits into the overall constellation.”

Regier says the next step is to get more people living in the downtown and he believes Tuesday’s announcement is a positive move in that direction.

Centre Block has sat dormant for almost a decade after the city learned of plans for a pornographic movie theatre and began buying up property. To date, Kitchener has spent about $9-million acquiring lands in the area bounded by King, Young, Duke and Ontario streets. Previous efforts to develop the property, including a potential relocation of the Main Branch of the Kitchener Public Library, have failed.

Condo Towers coming to Kitchener’s Centre Block

  There is a new Condo Development coming to downtown Kitchener, Ontario: The Centre Block, which will be developed by the same developer that built that Kaufman Lofts in Kitchener.

City gives nod to developer for Centre Block

Centre Block Condo in Kitchener Ontario

KITCHENER — City councillors reached an important milestone Monday in their decade-long effort to redevelop a strategic parcel of land next to City Hall.

During a closed-door meeting councillors gave their final authorization to staff for an agreement between the City of Kitchener and Brampton-based Andrin Homes for the redevelopment of Centre Block with 385 condominiums, four new buildings, underground parking, a boutique hotel-spa and a parkette.

“It has been a long time coming, obviously,” Mayor Carl Zehr said.

By 2000 the city had purchased almost all of the properties and buildings that wrapped around the western half of the block, which is bounded by King, Young, Duke and Ontario streets. So far the city has spent about $13 million on all of the costs associated with buying the land, buildings and businesses.

Andrin gets the 2.6 acre site and two heritage buildings for $3.1 million

For more information on the Centre Block and other condos in Kitchener, contact Benjamin Bach @ Benjamin@BenjaminBach.com, or call me at 519-772-4376