Welcome To
88 Scott St #2007
Priceless Views. Space You’ll Appreciate Every Day.
Send This Listing To A FriendThere are plenty of downtown condos with good finishes and efficient floor plans. Far fewer combine expansive views, meaningful outdoor space, and flexibility in ways that genuinely change how the home feels to live in.
With its southeast exposure, Suite 2007 at 88 Scott St offers an unobstructed panorama of both Lake Ontario and the Toronto skyline. Floor-to-ceiling windows stretch across the principal rooms, drawing natural light deep into the space throughout the day and creating a constant connection to the view beyond. Combined with 9-foot ceilings, this creates a home that feels open, expansive, and noticeably larger than its square footage alone would suggest.
The outdoor space is equally special. The large L-shaped wraparound balcony functions less like a standard condo balcony and more like an additional room during warmer months. Whether used for morning coffee or entertaining friends, it adds a dimension of living space that is increasingly difficult to find in the downtown market.
Inside, the layout balances openness with flexibility. The current one-bedroom-plus-den configuration offers distinct areas for living and working, while the den (similar in size to the primary bedroom) can be converted back to a second bedroom for buyers who need additional sleeping space. It is a rare level of adaptability that allows the home to evolve with changing needs without sacrificing the sense of openness that makes the suite so appealing today.
The kitchen is anchored by a waterfall island with quartz counters and integrated built-in stainless steel appliances. Clean lines and efficient design keep the focus on the living space and the views beyond.
Practical details matter here as well. Parking is included, and the building offers a full suite of amenities that support day-to-day convenience and make hosting guests easier. Residents enjoy concierge service, a fitness centre, pool, sauna, steam room, rooftop deck and garden, BBQ area, party room, media room, games room, visitor parking, guest suites, a dog wash, and a car wash.
The location places you in one of downtown Toronto’s most established residential pockets. St. Lawrence Market is a short walk away, while Berczy Park—and its well-known dog fountain—is just down the block. The Financial District, waterfront, restaurants, cafés, and everyday essentials are all woven into the rhythm of daily life, making it possible to enjoy the convenience of downtown without feeling disconnected from the neighbourhood around you.
The appeal of this suite is straightforward: views that cannot be replicated, outdoor space that will actually be used, flexibility built into the floor plan, and a location that continues to stand the test of time.

5 Things We Love
- The terrace changes the way the suite lives. Many condo balconies are large enough for a chair or two. This wraparound L-shaped terrace functions more like an outdoor room. Whether you’re having friends over, working outside on a summer afternoon, or simply taking in the view, it becomes part of your everyday living space rather than a feature you use occasionally.
- The views are protected and panoramic. The southeast corner exposure captures two of the hardest things to find together downtown: unobstructed lake views and a wide city skyline outlook. It’s the kind of view that adds something to ordinary moments, from morning coffee to the end of the workday.
- Light is everywhere. With floor-to-ceiling windows throughout the principal rooms and 9-foot ceilings overhead, natural light reaches every corner of the suite. The result is a home that feels noticeably more open and expansive than its footprint might suggest.
- The 20th floor is the sweet spot. High enough to clear surrounding buildings and capture exceptional views, but not so high that you lose your connection to the city below. The elevation also contributes to a quieter living experience, while the terrace and corner exposure create separation from much of the street activity beneath.
- The kind of building people move into and stay in. The amenity package at 88 Scott is unusually complete: concierge service, a pool, sauna, steam room, fitness centre, rooftop deck and garden, BBQ area, party room, media room, games room, guest suites, visitor parking, dog wash, and even a car wash. It’s the kind of building where the amenities aren’t a checkbox—they become part of how you live.
Floor Plans
3-D Walk-through
About Church-Yonge Corridor
From the outside, it’s easy to assume this part of the city is all noise, crowds, and condo towers. Spend some time here, and a more nuanced picture emerges. Yes, it’s energetic. Yes, it’s busy. But it’s also remarkably liveable. For people who want to be immersed in city life without spending half their day getting to it, few neighbourhoods deliver quite as well.
Everything is close by: the Eaton Centre, Massey Hall, Yonge-Dundas Square, theatres, restaurants, grocery stores, cafés, fitness studios, transit connections, and countless everyday conveniences are woven into the neighbourhood rather than sitting on its edges. Life here tends to happen on foot. Running errands doesn’t require planning, and last-minute dinner plans rarely feel like last-minute plans.
What gives the area its character, though, is what exists between the major landmarks.
Church Street remains one of Toronto’s most distinctive main streets and the heart of the Church-Wellesley Village. It brings an energy and sense of community that has shaped the neighbourhood for decades. The patios are busy, the streets are active, and there is a genuine feeling that people participate in the neighbourhood rather than simply pass through it. During Pride, that energy expands onto a global stage. The rest of the year, it feels local.
Despite its density, the neighbourhood isn’t without places to slow down. Allan Gardens offers one of the city’s most unexpected escapes, a historic conservatory filled with tropical plants, tucked right into the middle of downtown. St. James Park provides a quieter pocket beneath the cathedral spires, while nearby Berczy Park has become something of a Toronto landmark in its own right thanks to the now-iconic dog fountain.
The architecture tells a similar story. Glass towers share blocks with heritage buildings, historic churches, theatres, and long-established businesses. It feels layered in a way that many newer downtown districts do not. There is always something happening, but there is also evidence that people have been living, gathering, and building community here for generations.
The appeal of the Church-Yonge Corridor often comes down to a simple question: how much of the city do you want within walking distance? For those who answer “as much as possible,” it’s hard to find a neighbourhood that makes a stronger case for itself.



