Toronto’s Elm-Ledbury, a rental community by Fitzrovia, is emerging as more than a high-end rental address. The project’s retail component, known as The Mews, is being positioned as a meticulously curated urban destination in the Garden District, with boutique commercial spaces designed to serve both residents and the surrounding downtown neighbourhood. For Fitzrovia, the goal is clear: create a pedestrian-first retail environment that strengthens the residential experience above while helping shape a rapidly evolving part of the city.
Located near Queen and Church Streets, Elm-Ledbury consists of two rental towers with 542 suites and a public retail arcade that links Mutual and Dalhousie Streets. Rather than defaulting to conventional service tenants or large-format chains, Fitzrovia says it is pursuing operators that add character, convenience, and long-term value to the community. That strategy is already visible in the tenant mix, and there is more to come as leasing continues.
Vanessa Lynch, Sales Representative at DWSV Realty, said the retail at Elm-Ledbury was intentionally planned as part of the development from the outset.
“The Mews at Elm-Ledbury was designed to complement the architecture and the caliber of the residential offering,” she said. “The units are boutique in scale rather than oversized boxes, which creates the opportunity to curate experiential retail instead of more commodity-style uses.”

Toronto Source: fitzrovia.ca
A European-Inspired Arcade in Downtown Toronto
At the heart of the project is The Mews, a cobblestone-lined pedestrian arcade with lush landscaping and brick-lined walkways that cut through the base of the development. Designed as a public-facing passage and gathering place, the space offers a more intimate and design-driven retail setting than a typical row of ground-floor storefronts.
Lynch described the atmosphere in visual terms. “It feels like you’re in Europe when you walk down the corridor where the retail units are,” she said.
The design intent matters. Elm-Ledbury is targeting residents who are drawn to a higher level of service, amenities, and finishes, and the retail is meant to reflect that positioning.
Prospective commercial tenants are even shown the residential amenities during tours to help them understand the audience they would be serving. Lynch said this approach helps retailers see “the type of community and residence that Fitzrovia is attracting” and how their businesses could fit into the overall environment.
That integration between residential and retail is central to Fitzrovia’s broader model.
Brandon Isenberg, Director of Retail Leasing at Fitzrovia, said the company’s leasing philosophy goes beyond simply filling space.
“The vision for our retail is to secure unique, amenity-driven concepts,” he said. “At the end of the day, it’s about giving people more reasons to want to live in our buildings.”

Toronto Source: fitzrovia.ca
Retail Designed Around the Resident Experience
The Elm-Ledbury retail strategy reflects a wider approach Fitzrovia is applying across its portfolio. Isenberg said the company is less interested in pursuing the most conventional or highest-covenant deals that many landlords consider.
“We’re not solely focused on securing the highest covenant tenants or the highest rents,” he said. “Those factors matter, but we’re more interested in curating uses beyond traditional retail such as banks and pharmacies. We believe this approach is thoughtful and adds the most value for our residents.”
Instead, the company is focusing on food and beverage, boutique fitness, light grocery, services, and other operators that can enhance daily life for residents while also drawing visitors from the surrounding neighbourhood. Isenberg said the goal is to build a tenant mix that feels cohesive and complementary.
“I want to make sure there isn’t overlap in uses and that residents and the surrounding community have a range of options,” he said. “Food and beverage will be a major component here, along with service-oriented businesses.”
Existing Tenants Begin to Animate The Mews
Several tenants are already operating or preparing to open at Elm-Ledbury, helping establish the tone for the retail arcade.
Among the anchors is 10 DEAN, Fitzrovia’s in-house third-wave café and cocktail concept. Lynch described it as a strong social draw.
“Anytime you go in there, it’s busy,” she said. “You see people in suits and others more casual. People are having coffee, meeting friends, or working on their laptops.”
Bloomsbury Academy, a Montessori-inspired early childhood education centre, is another major component of the community. The concept reflects Fitzrovia’s focus on addressing everyday lifestyle needs within its communities. Isenberg said the offering is particularly valuable for young families living downtown.
“It makes the morning rush and evening pickup much easier for parents,” he said.
Rendezvous Barbershop is also open and, according to Lynch, “is doing very, very well.” Isenberg described it as a strong example of the kind of operator Fitzrovia wants in its buildings: design-conscious, useful, and community-oriented. Additional food concepts are also joining the mix. SOI Thaifoon, a local Thai restaurant with locations across the GTA, including Waterworks Food Hall, is expected to open shortly, while FAMO Sandwich Creations, which Isenberg described as a local east-end operator, is slated to open in June.
Together, these tenants help illustrate the type of environment Fitzrovia is building, one rooted in amenity retail that benefits the surrounding community rather than transactional convenience.

Toronto Source: fitzrovia.ca
Two Retail Opportunities Remain Available
For prospective tenants, Elm-Ledbury currently offers two notable leasing opportunities.
The most significant space, a flagship restaurant unit of about 2,700 square feet, is currently under negotiation with a full-service food and beverage operator, with an announcement expected in the near future. Lynch said the unit was “intentionally designed for restaurant use” and includes infrastructure that is increasingly rare in new downtown developments. She pointed to 17-foot ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows, a gas line, 400-amp, 600-volt power, shipping and receiving access, and a 600-square-foot wraparound patio.
The space also connects internally to the residential lobby, allowing the approximately 1,000+ residents above to access it year-round without going outside. Lynch said that level of planning gives the unit a real competitive advantage. “That foresight was built in from day one, so it allows a full-service restaurant operator to execute properly and not have a compromised version. It’s really a true flagship scale opportunity in a dense urban setting with strong visibility.”
Isenberg echoed that sentiment, describing it as “our flagship retail space” with “lots of natural light” and exposure onto Queen Street.
With the flagship restaurant space now under negotiation, two retail units remain available, approximately 1,400 square feet and 800 square feet in size. The larger unit was previously occupied by Aisle 24, an automated convenience concept that has since closed.
“We’ve had interest from various health and wellness concepts for this unit, uses that we really like as an addition to the tenant mix here,” said Isenberg.
Fitzrovia is seeking small-format operators that align with the project’s curated, amenity-focused retail vision.

A Neighbourhood in Transition
The leasing story at Elm-Ledbury is also tied closely to what is happening in the surrounding district. The area around Queen Street East, Church Street, Mutual Street, and Dalhousie Street is seeing sustained residential intensification and new investment, which is beginning to reshape both foot traffic and retail potential.
Lynch said the pocket is “undergoing significant transformation” and shifting toward a “more lifestyle-oriented mixed-use neighbourhood.” She cited strong pedestrian traffic, a large and growing nearby population, proximity to Toronto Metropolitan University, and easy access to the Financial District, St. Michael’s Hospital, CF Toronto Eaton Centre, and St. Lawrence Market.
According to figures shared during the interview, about 36,000 people live within 500 metres of the project, with population growth of about 20 percent projected over the next five years. That helps explain why Fitzrovia sees long-term promise in taking a more selective leasing approach rather than rushing to backfill vacant space.
The neighbourhood is also receiving hospitality investment. An AC Hotel by Marriott is planned nearby, adding another layer of confidence to the area’s evolution. Lynch said the hotel announcement is meaningful because “hotels don’t choose locations lightly. They really rely on strong demand drivers, safety improvements, and future growth forecasts.”
Retail as a Competitive Advantage for Rental Housing
Elm-Ledbury also reflects a broader shift in purpose-built rental development, where curated retail and in-house lifestyle brands are being used as differentiators. Fitzrovia already operates 10 DEAN and Bloomsbury Academy within its communities, and Isenberg said those businesses are part of a wider effort to create a high-service living environment.
“Everything comes back to the resident experience,” said Isenberg. “That means delivering an exceptionally high level of service and real, tangible benefits. Our residents get exclusive discounts at 10 DEAN and reduced tuition at Bloomsbury Academy.”
That philosophy extends to the community’s amenity package, which includes an official Toronto Raptors branded basketball court, a commercial-grade gym, ski and snowboard and Formula 1 simulators, penthouse rooftop lounges, and two penthouse pools with cabanas. These features make the community feel closer to a hospitality offering than a standard rental building. Retail at grade is meant to reinforce that identity rather than dilute it.
In that sense, Elm-Ledbury’s retail component is as much about placemaking as it is about leasing. The storefronts are intended to help animate the public realm, support the daily needs of residents, and create a destination in a part of downtown that is rapidly evolving.
Curated Leasing Over Quick Leasing
Perhaps the clearest message from both Lynch and Isenberg is that Fitzrovia is not in a rush to lease for the sake of leasing. The company believes the long-term success of the retail arcade depends on choosing the right mix.
“We’re taking the same approach across all of our projects, including Sloane, our three-tower development across from Yorkdale where we are marketing approximately 5,000 square feet of retail, and Marlow, our master-planned community with Hazelview, where about 45,000 square feet of retail is expected to deliver in Q2 and Q3 this year,” said Isenberg.

















