"I absolutely love how quiet it is, you're at King and Bathurst, one of the busiest intersections in the city, and inside it's just...calm."
From the Seller
Property Information

Step outside and the scale of the terrace becomes clear. Large enough to host a proper dinner party, lounge the afternoon away, and still have room for the BBQ. Every season has a place here.



Two proper bedrooms, both with sliding doors that give you the choice: open the whole loft up into one flowing space, or close things off when you need to. Two full bathrooms. An open concept kitchen with quartz countertops, custom cabinetry, tile backsplash and stainless steel appliances. And right across the hall, an oversized locker that handles everything a downtown home needs to tuck away.


Take A 3D Tour
Clock Tower Lofts
In a Toronto condo market flooded with soft lofts designed to look industrial, Clock Tower at 700 King Street West is the real thing.
The story of this corner starts long before the conversion. For nearly a century, the northwest corner of King and Bathurst was home to the Otto Higel piano factory, one of Toronto's most celebrated manufacturers, producing piano and organ components that were exported worldwide. The site passed through several hands before a commercial building rose on the same footprint in 1987, eventually becoming home to Sun Life Insurance. When the conversion to residential lofts began in the late 1990s, the building brought with it something that can't be manufactured: genuine bones.
Fourteen floors. 216 units. Solid concrete construction throughout, which is why residents will tell you, almost universally. The wide hallways, the oversized windows, the eleven-foot ceilings that run through every suite. These aren't design choices that were added to sell a lifestyle. They came with the building.
Amenities include a gym, party room, games room, concierge, and a rooftop terrace that stops people in their tracks the first time they step onto it. The CN Tower to the west. Lake Ontario to the south. The skyline rising in every direction. It's the kind of rooftop that makes you realize you've been living in the right building all along.
Clock Tower isn't trying to be a landmark. It already is one. The clock on the corner has been keeping time at King and Bathurst for decades, and the community inside has grown around it into something most new buildings spend years trying to manufacture.

"There's always something! We eat out constantly and have never run out of places to try, between everything on King, Queen, The Well and Waterworks Food Hall just minutes away. The Entertainment District is basically at your doorstep with shows, events, restaurants, all of it walkable. Shopping on Queen West is one of those things you do on a Sunday without really planning to and come home three hours later."
From the Seller
The Neighbourhood: Fashion District
There's a version of downtown Toronto that announces itself loudly. And then there's King West.
This is the neighbourhood that has quietly become one of the most coveted addresses in the city, not because of a single landmark or a marketing campaign, but because of what it feels like to actually live here. The streets are walkable in a way that changes how you move through the city. The food is genuinely excellent, not just plentiful. The energy is present without being exhausting.
The Fashion District, which wraps around King and Bathurst, carries the memory of Toronto's textile and manufacturing past in its low-rise brick buildings and wide sidewalks. Today those same buildings house design studios, independent restaurants, creative agencies, and some of the most interesting retail in the city. Queen Street West is a short walk north, where the shops, galleries and coffee spots that define Toronto's creative identity have been building for decades.
For getting around, the King and Bathurst streetcar lines put you anywhere in the city with minimal effort. The Financial District is a short ride east. Billy Bishop Airport is closer than most people realize, and the waterfront trail running along Lake Ontario is an easy walk south when you need to decompress.
The Entertainment District sits at the eastern edge of the neighbourhood, anchored by the Rogers Centre, Scotiabank Arena and the TIFF Bell Lightbox. On game nights and festival weekends, the energy spills westward down King Street in a way that makes you glad you live close enough to join in, but far enough to choose when you do.
King West doesn't ask you to explain why you love it. Once you're here, you'll understand.
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