Queen Central

100 Queen · Church-Yonge Corridor, Toronto C08
Active units
0
Price range
— – —
Size range
— sqft
Avg bedrooms
Avg sale $/sqft
Avg rent $/sqft
$3.86
per month
Avg maint./mo
Avg parking
Read the Church-Wellesley Village neighbourhood guide View price history for Queen Central →

About Queen Central

Queen Central is a newer high-rise condominium at 100 Queen Street East in the Church-Yonge Corridor, sitting on the south side of Queen near the boundary between the downtown core and the Garden District. The building occupies one of the more transit-accessible addresses in the city, within direct walking range of Queen Station, the Eaton Centre, and the eastern edge of the Financial District.

The building is currently lease-only on the resale market, with no active sale listings — a profile consistent with a recently completed tower still in the lease-up phase of its early ownership cycle.

Queen Central anchors a corner of Queen Street East that has seen substantial residential intensification over the past several years, as the boundary between the historic financial core and the Garden District has steadily filled in with new high-rise development. The building's address places it within walking range of both St. Lawrence Market to the east and the Eaton Centre to the west.

Specific suite-mix and sale-pricing data is limited at this stage because the building carries no active sale listings at present — the resale market for the address is still establishing itself. Active rental listings are deeper, with 28 leases currently on the market, which gives a clearer picture of the building's near-term resident base and how the suite mix is being absorbed by tenants. Detailed suite size and bedroom-mix data should be confirmed against original developer floor plans for any specific unit.

Amenities at Queen Central include a concierge, fitness centre, party and meeting rooms, a rooftop deck and garden, recreation room, and elevator service — a curated seven-category set focused on the most-used amenities rather than a sprawling list. The package is consistent with newer downtown towers that prioritize operational efficiency and predictable maintenance fees over headline amenity counts.

Building amenities

ConciergeGymParty Room/Meeting RoomExercise RoomRooftop Deck/GardenElevatorRecreation Room

Condos for sale

28 units for rent
Data updated: 2026-06-02
No condos for sale in this building right now — 28 units are currently for rent.

Location

Nearby buildings

Glasshouse Lofts
Church-Yonge Corridor · 4 active
43 m
88 Queen
Church-Yonge Corridor · 28 active
73 m
88 Queen St. East
Church-Yonge Corridor · 1 active
from $689K · 73 m
115 Richmond
Church-Yonge Corridor · 2 active
127 m
30 Mutual
Church-Yonge Corridor · 2 active
138 m

Location & neighbourhood

The Queen Central address sits a block east of Queen Station on Line 1, putting King, Union, and the Financial District within two to three subway stops south, and Dundas and Bloor accessible directly north. The 501 Queen streetcar runs at the doorstep, providing east-west reach to the Beaches, Leslieville, Liberty Village, and Roncesvalles without transferring.

For groceries, the closest meaningful options include Loblaws at Maple Leaf Gardens a short walk north and the full Loblaws and food hall at Maple Leaf Square to the south. St. Lawrence Market is a short walk east and provides the city's most comprehensive fresh-food and prepared-food destination. Dining ranges from established restaurants along King Street East to the dense lunch and casual restaurant scene along Queen itself. The Garden District immediately east covers a more residential dining footprint.

Green space is the trade-off of a deep-core address, but Moss Park, St. James Park, and Allan Gardens are all within reasonable walking distance, with Toronto's broader Financial District plaza network filling in shorter daily walks. For families, the local TDSB elementary catchment includes Church Street Junior Public School, with Jarvis Collegiate Institute serving the secondary level. Toronto Metropolitan University is a short walk north, which matters for any investor underwriting tenant demand from the postsecondary base.

Who lives at Queen Central

The current resident profile at Queen Central tilts heavily toward renters given the building's stage in its ownership cycle, with 28 active rental listings indicating substantial investor ownership being absorbed by the tenant market. Tenants skew toward young professionals working in the Financial District, healthcare, or the surrounding downtown employer base, along with students from Toronto Metropolitan University a short walk north.

End-user owner-occupants are present but proportionally smaller than at more established downtown buildings — that mix typically rebalances over the first several years of a building's life as initial investor turnover gives way to resale activity and longer-term owner-occupancy.

Pricing context

With no active sale listings at present, sale-pricing data for Queen Central is limited and should be approached cautiously — a single new comparable sale can move the building's average $/sqft figure meaningfully when the active sample is this small. Rental data is more developed, with average rents around $3.86 per square foot across 28 active lease listings. That rent figure sits in the middle of the downtown Toronto range, consistent with the building's positioning at the eastern edge of the core. Buyers tracking the building should watch for the first wave of resale activity to establish a meaningful $/sqft benchmark.

Pros & cons

Pros

  • Direct access to Queen Station on Line 1
  • 501 Queen streetcar at the doorstep for east-west reach
  • Short walk to St. Lawrence Market and the Eaton Centre
  • Newer construction with current building systems and finishes
  • Curated seven-category amenity set keeping fees efficient

Things to consider

  • No active sale listings — resale market still establishing
  • Limited sale-pricing and suite-mix transparency at this stage
  • Heavy renter share typical of newer downtown buildings
  • Limited direct green space within a five-minute walk
  • Smaller amenity footprint than older downtown towers

Similar buildings

Frequently asked questions

What are the maintenance fees at Queen Central?

Maintenance fee data at Queen Central is limited at this stage because the building carries no active sale listings, which means the typical maintenance-per-square-foot averages are not yet established in the public listing pool. Buyers should expect fees in line with newer downtown Toronto towers of similar amenity load — the seven-category amenity set suggests fees toward the lower end of the downtown range rather than the higher pool-and-spa tier. Confirm the current fee schedule, inclusions, and reserve fund status directly with property management for any specific suite under consideration.

Does Queen Central allow pets?

Pet policies at Queen Central follow standard condo bylaws — most downtown Toronto buildings permit pets within size and breed limits typical of the city. Specific weight caps, breed restrictions, and rules around elevator and common-element use can change with board updates, so confirm the current declaration and rules with property management before purchase or before signing a lease. Owners and tenants with larger dogs should request the rules in writing rather than rely on a verbal summary.

What floor plans are available at Queen Central?

Specific floor-plan and bedroom-mix data at Queen Central is best confirmed against the original developer brochure for any individual suite, as the building's small public sale sample limits what can be reliably stated as an average across the inventory. The active rental pool of 28 listings spans a range of layouts, suggesting the suite mix is broader than a single typology. For any specific suite under consideration, the original floor plate diagrams remain the most reliable reference for square footage, bedroom count, and exposure.

Is Queen Central a good rental investment?

The building shows meaningful rental activity, with 28 active lease listings on at present and average rents around $3.86 per square foot. That depth reflects strong tenant demand for the immediate Queen-Bay corridor, particularly from Financial District workers and Toronto Metropolitan University students. Whether the building pencils as an investment depends on the individual purchase price, financing rate, and maintenance fee exposure — and at this stage in the building's resale cycle, those numbers can vary significantly between recent purchase comparables.

What schools serve Queen Central's address?

The TDSB elementary catchment for the 100 Queen East area is Church Street Junior Public School, with Jarvis Collegiate Institute serving the secondary level. TCDSB options for Catholic students are part of the downtown cluster. Catchment boundaries can shift year to year, so families should verify the current assignment directly with the TDSB or TCDSB. Toronto Metropolitan University sits a short walk north, which is a meaningful factor for any family with university-age children or any investor underwriting the building's tenant base.

How many condos for sale at Queen Central right now?

There are currently no active sale listings at Queen Central — the building is in a lease-only stage of its public resale market at present, which is consistent with a newer downtown tower still in the early years of its ownership cycle. Rental inventory is significantly deeper, with 28 active lease listings on the market. Buyers tracking the building should monitor the active listing grid on this page, which updates as new sale listings come on through the MLS feed.

When was Queen Central built?

Queen Central is a newer entrant to the Church-Yonge Corridor, completed within roughly the past few years as part of the wave of residential intensification along the eastern edge of Toronto's downtown core. The building's stage in its ownership cycle — lease-heavy with a thin sale resale market — is consistent with a recent completion. For precise completion-date confirmation on any specific suite, property management and the original developer registration documents remain the most reliable reference.

Questions about Queen Central?

Talk to Scott Miralami, Broker · Central Home Realty Inc., Brokerage. Floor-plan questions, recent sales, buying or selling at Queen Central — Scott answers personally.

Sold & leased history

Sold & leased history for Queen Central may be coming

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