Welcome To
955 Queen St W PH25
More Space. More Sky. The Address You’ve Always Wanted.
Send This Listing To A FriendPH25 is perched atop the best stretch of Queen West, with a combination of features rarely available in The Chocolate Company Lofts: penthouse privacy, 1,233 square feet of living space, wraparound south-east windows, and a terrace large enough to become part of your daily routine. Morning coffee with the CN Tower in view, dinner outside on a warm evening, a quiet moment above the neighbourhood while a Queen West summer carries on below—this is the kind of home that changes how you experience Toronto. It’s part of a building with strong roots in the neighbourhood and has long been appreciated by residents who value its boutique scale and established community.
At 1,233 square feet, the layout immediately distinguishes itself from the long, narrow floor plans that dominate much of the condominium market. The living space stretches wide across the south-east corner of the building, framed by wraparound windows that draw sunlight deep into the home throughout the day. From nearly every principal room, the city becomes part of the experience, with views extending over the surrounding neighbourhood toward the CN Tower and downtown skyline beyond.

The floor plan balances openness with privacy. A spacious entryway with a double closet provides a proper arrival experience and valuable storage rarely found in downtown condominiums. The split-bedroom configuration separates the sleeping quarters, making the layout equally well suited to guests, a home office, or changing household needs over time.
The open-concept kitchen, living, and dining area is designed around those views. Generous proportions allow the space to function comfortably for both everyday life and entertaining, while the moveable island offers flexibility depending on how you use the room. Oak engineered hardwood flooring runs throughout, complemented by built-in living room speakers, room-darkening blinds and shades, and thoughtful sound insulation within the bedrooms.
One of the home’s defining features is the generous terrace. Accessed directly from both the living room and the primary bedroom, it’s a genuine extension of the living space rather than an afterthought. The south-facing exposure provides a front-row perspective over the rooftops of Trinity Bellwoods and toward the skyline, creating a backdrop that shifts from early morning light to evening city views.
The primary suite is generously scaled and includes an ensuite bathroom along with a walk-in closet fitted with built-in storage. The second bedroom also features a walk-in closet with built-ins, while the second bathroom is positioned discreetly off the entry hall, convenient for guests and well located for the second bedroom.
Beyond the suite itself, The Chocolate Company Lofts remains one of Queen West’s most respected residential conversions. Occupying the former Patterson Candy Company factory, the building emerged during the early wave of Toronto loft conversions, before “loft-inspired” became a marketing category of its own. While PH25 sits within the newer section of the building and presents a softer aesthetic, ownership here still comes with a connection to a building that reflects Toronto’s industrial past and the evolution of Queen West itself.
Residents enjoy thoughtfully designed shared spaces, including a landscaped courtyard, rooftop terrace, and fitness facilities. Just as notable is the building’s reputation for a strong owner community and a level of permanence that many buyers find increasingly appealing.
The location places you in one of the most dynamic pockets of the city, across from Trinity Bellwoods Park and within easy reach of Ossington, Dundas West, and King West. The result is a home that offers access to the energy, culture, and walkability that define Queen West, while providing the privacy and perspective that come with penthouse living.
For those who value individuality over convention and understand how uncommon this combination of penthouse-scale, outdoor space, views, and authentic loft pedigree has become, PH25 represents an opportunity that may not present itself again anytime soon.

5 Things We Love
- The View Changes by the Hour. Wraparound south-east windows frame views that stretch from neighbourhood rooftops to the CN Tower, bringing changing light and a constant connection to the city.
- The Best of Queen West, All Within Reach. Trinity Bellwoods Park, the Ossington strip, and foodie favourite Dundas West are all moments away, placing some of the city’s best within walking distance.
- Summer Starts Here. With direct access from both the living room and primary bedroom, the terrace becomes the setting for morning coffee, outdoor dinners, and long evenings overlooking the neighbourhood below.Â
- A Penthouse Position in a Building That Rarely Lets Go. Opportunities at the top of The Chocolate Company Lofts are naturally limited. Add the scale, exposure, terrace, and location, and the list becomes even shorter.
- Space in All the Right Places. At 1,233 square feet, the floor plan prioritizes livability. The open living area stretches across the south-east corner of the building, while the split-bedroom layout, generous entryway, walk-in closets, and abundant storage solve many of the compromises that often come with downtown living.
Floor Plans
3-D Walk-through
About Queen West
Trinity Bellwoods isn’t a neighbourhood people stumble into by accident. It’s a place they choose — and then refuse to leave.
Over the last couple of decades, this pocket of the west end has evolved in a way that feels organic rather than engineered. Artists, designers, and creative entrepreneurs didn’t arrive because it was polished; they arrived because it wasn’t. Old warehouses, modest storefronts, blank brick walls — they saw possibility where others saw rough edges. That sensibility still defines the area. Nothing here feels overly curated, yet everything feels intentional.
West Queen West runs straight through it, and this is the stretch that still carries weight. Independent restaurants outnumber chains. Shops feel personal. Style leans confident, not showy. It’s a neighbourhood where people develop routines rather than itineraries. It’s the kind of place where favourite spots become default settings.
Daily life here revolves around the park. Dogs everywhere. Morning walks that turn into conversations. Afternoons stretched out on the grass. Evenings that start with a loop through Bellwoods and end wherever feels right. Food decisions are rarely debated — Matty’s Patty’s for something easy, Oyster Boy when dinner feels like a good idea, cocktails at Mother when the day deserves punctuation. Nadege is there for mornings that need a ham-and-brie croissant and a reset.
What makes Trinity Bellwoods endure isn’t trendiness — it’s livability. Artscape Youngplace sits nearby, anchoring the area’s creative backbone. Studios, galleries, and small cultural spaces quietly reinforce the neighbourhood’s identity. Fitness studios, salons, and wine bars fill in the rest. Transit is close. Everything needed is walkable. Nothing feels forced.
Former factories and warehouses now function as some of the city’s most desirable lofts, not because they were reimagined to chase a market, but because they were adapted with restraint. The result is a neighbourhood that feels lived-in, layered, and honest.
This is a place for people who care about where they live — not as a status symbol, but as an extension of who they are. Trinity Bellwoods doesn’t ask for attention. It already has it.







