For anyone who is considering purchasing a Lamb Development preconstruction condo,
I just want to warn you in advance of what you’re getting yourself into.
I bought into the Gotham Ottawa three and a half years ago.
After several tentative occupancy delays, we had a
firm occupancy date of
November 28, 2014.
Two months before our firm occupancy delay, they claimed an
unavoidable delay due to a trade going bankrupt (based on my conversations with Tarion, FYI, this likely does not constitute an unavoidable delay as it cannot be the fault of the company or the purchaser and it has to be an *extreme circumstance*). As an unavoidable delay, they would not have to pay us compensation
As I’ve heard from others, this was due to the plumbing trade cutting holes in our building the wrong size and having to redo them all (and not being able to afford it).
We had a new firm occupancy date set for
January 30, 2015.
We gave our two months’ notice at our current apartment.
Ten days before we were set to move in, we were informed there was another delay and our firm occupancy date was moved to
February 9, 2015.
Because we gave our notice already, we had to move out and we moved into an extended stay temporarily on January 30 and put all our stuff in storage.
On that day, we got a notice that our building occupancy had been delayed to
February 18, 2015. (10 days notice)
On February 6, 2015, we got a notice that our occupancy had been delayed to
February 24, 2015. (12 days notice)
On February 19, 2015, we got a notice that our occupancy had been delayed to
March 4, 2015. (5 days notice)
At the end of day March 2, 2015, we got a notice that our occupancy had been delayed to
March 24, 2015. (essentially 1 day's notice).
We were assured that they believed this to be the final delay.
Today, March 20, 2015, we got a notice that we’ve been delayed from March 24 to
April 1, 2015 (four days notice)
Tarion has a $7500 max compensation cap which they’ve blown past. So at this point, they’re just completely disregarding all niceties of communication.
They’ve been so terrible at communicating, I’ve actually gotten more information consistently out of the concierge company representative, the internet sales people (who have a deal with the builder), and a certain fast food restaurant worker nearby (who interacts with the construction guys all the time and gets the inside scoop) than I have from the builder representative.
We’re also just lucky that our current extended stay hotel contact is sympathetic to our situation and willing to extend us on last minute notice consistently (minimum there is 14 days notice).
They’ve also eliminated features that were (still are) listed on the features list on their website and promotional material - specifically a vapour-proof pot light that is supposed to go above the bathtub/shower stall - and claimed because there was an asterisk beside the feature that said “availability based on suite design”, that they didn’t have to include it (for the record, I asked the woman doing our PDI and not a single suite in the building has the feature).
There’s a thread of us frustrated owners here if you need further convincing:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=188850
And we’re not a one-off case.
See the epic King East thread on this forum for more horror stories involving Lamb - that was where I was first alerted to possible problems although it was too late by that point because I had already bought the condo.
http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showth...ment-Hyde-Park-Sher-Corp-)-Real-Estate/page23
And there used to be a blog detailing the horror stories of dealing with Lamb for a townhouse development where they completely forgot to construct the landing the way it was supposed to be in the floor plan, as well as the cheap quality of the build and all the struggles of getting Lamb to actually fix the issues after move-in. I think it was called Bad J. Lamb but it seems to have been wiped off the face of the internet.
Buyer beware.