Category: Accesswire

  • New to The Street Episode #737 Airs on Bloomberg Television Across the United States, Latin America, and MENA at 6:30 PM EST

    Featured Companies: FLOKI (CRYPTO:FLOKI), KLED.AI, Sagtech Global (NASDAQ:SAGT), Medicus Pharma (NASDAQ:MDCX), and YY Group (NASDAQ:YYGH)

    NEW YORK CITY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / March 14, 2026 / New to The Street, the nationally recognized business television platform showcasing innovative public and private companies, today announced the broadcast of Episode #737, airing Saturday, March 14, 2026 at 6:30 PM EST on Bloomberg Television as sponsored programming. The episode will be distributed across the United States, Latin America, and the Middle East & North Africa (MENA) markets, continuing the program’s strong global reach.

    This week’s episode features executive interviews and company insights from FLOKI (CRYPTO:FLOKI), KLED.AI, Sagtech Global (NASDAQ:SAGT), Medicus Pharma (NASDAQ:MDCX), and YY Group (NASDAQ:YYGH), offering viewers an inside look at innovative technologies, digital ecosystems, and healthcare advancements shaping multiple industries. Each segment highlights leadership perspectives, company milestones, and strategic growth initiatives as these organizations continue expanding their global presence.

    In addition to the featured interviews, today’s broadcast across all three markets is supported by national television commercial campaigns from several publicly traded companies, including NRx Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:NRXP), Synergy CHC Corp. (NASDAQ:SNYR), Stardust Power Inc. (NASDAQ:SDST), and DataVault AI Inc. (NASDAQ:DVLT). These commercials expand brand visibility and investor awareness through New to The Street’s integrated broadcast and digital media platform.

    Broadcasting weekly as sponsored programming on Bloomberg Television, New to The Street delivers long-form executive interviews, corporate storytelling, and investor-focused insights to a global audience.

    Beyond television distribution, the platform is supported by one of the most powerful digital media ecosystems dedicated to public companies, reaching over 5 million combined subscribers across its flagship YouTube channels:

    New to The Street TV
    https://youtube.com/@newtothestreettv?si=gGx_hk0qb4F9aZW4

    NewsOut Channel
    https://youtube.com/@newsoutchannel?si=Xf15CtjHHqrT4D7x

    These channels deliver executive interviews, investor education, corporate announcements, and video press releases to a rapidly expanding global audience of investors, entrepreneurs, and market participants.

    “Our platform was built to give innovative companies a powerful stage to explain their story directly to the marketplace,” said Vince Caruso, Co-Founder and CEO of New to The Street. “With Bloomberg Television distribution across the U.S., Latin America, and MENA combined with our rapidly growing digital audience of more than five million subscribers, we provide companies with unmatched visibility across television, digital media, and social platforms.”

    Episode #737 continues New to The Street’s mission of connecting investors with innovative companies through transparent storytelling, global media distribution, and one of the fastest-growing financial media ecosystems in the industry.

    Companies interested in appearing on New to The Street’s global television and digital media platform can apply by contacting:
    John@NewtoTheStreet.com

    For NewsOut Video Press Release and Digital Distribution Programs, please contact:
    Shota@NewtoTheStreet.com

    About New to The Street

    New to The Street is one of the longest-running business television brands focused on emerging growth companies and innovative technologies. Broadcasting weekly as sponsored programming on Bloomberg Television and Fox Business, the platform reaches audiences across the United States and international markets including Latin America and MENA.

    The platform combines national television exposure with one of the largest digital audiences dedicated to public companies, including its rapidly growing YouTube channels and extensive social media network. Through television, digital media, and iconic outdoor advertising placements, New to The Street provides companies with a structured platform designed to educate investors and expand global brand awareness.

    Media Contact
    Monica Brennan
    New to The Street
    Monica@NewtoTheStreet.com
    https://www.NewtoTheStreet.com

    SOURCE: New to The Street

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Going Against the Tide: Why IMA ART Fertility Chose to Stay Boutique

    IMA ART Fertility Redefines Luxury Fertility, by Focusing on Personalized Attention & Care

    BEVERLY HILLS, CA / ACCESS Newswire / March 14, 2026 / Over the past decade, fertility care has evolved rapidly.

    IVF clinics and surrogacy agencies have grown larger, private capital has entered the space, and many organizations are now optimizing for scale. Operational efficiencies, consolidated teams, and higher patient volume have become common features of the modern fertility landscape.

    From a business perspective, this trajectory is understandable. Growth brings resources, broader geographic reach, and cost sharing to new technologies. But, this also changes the nature of the fertility-experience.

    When programs are designed around volume, patients inevitably begin to move through the system more quickly. Interactions become more structured, timelines more compressed, and communication often shifts from physicians to coordinators, from coordinators to virtual systems.

    For some families, this model works perfectly well.

    For private families creating the next generation and those navigating cross-border fertility journeys, surrogacy, or complex personal circumstances-the experience can begin to feel transactional and distant. Decisions are deeply personal, yet the process can start to resemble a production line.

    At IMA ART Fertility, we made a conscious decision to move in the opposite direction. Rather than scale for volume, we chose to remain deliberately boutique.

    That means something very specific in practice.

    • It means investing more time in matching the right professionals to each journey, from physicians to legal advisors and psychologists.

    • It means ensuring that parents and surrogates receive individualized attention, not simply case management.

    • It means prioritizing depth of support over speed of throughput.

    And it means maintaining a philosophy that every fertility journey carries emotional, medical, and ethical layers that cannot be reduced to a standard operating process.

    This philosophy of staying boutique is embedded in everything IMA ART Fertility does. The company’s approach is guided by principles drawn from industries where high-touch service and attention to detail define success. In fact, the model reflects the same mindset emphasized in world-class luxury service training: anticipating needs, coordinating every detail, and preserving discretion. As the founder explained in a 2022 interview with Glion Institute of Higher Education for her Executive Master’s in Luxury Management and Guest Experience, “Our goal is to be recognized as the pre-eminent luxury fertility and surrogacy concierge provider in the world. We want to be the best, not the biggest-to be a brand that lasts and helps families create future generations.” This vision continues to guide the company’s boutique model today, ensuring every journey is managed with intentionality, expertise, and care.

    Boutique models are sometimes misunderstood in business conversations. They are often assumed to be smaller simply because they have not yet scaled. In reality, the opposite can be true.

    Remaining boutique is often a deliberate decision-one that prioritizes transparent outcomes & options, relationships, and long-term trust over rapid expansion.

    In high-stakes areas like fertility and surrogacy, success is not measured by the number of cycles completed or the speed of growth. It is measured by the stability of the journey, the well-being of the surrogate, and the confidence families feel throughout the process.

    The fertility industry will likely continue to grow, consolidate, and evolve. Large-scale models will serve many people, though not always effectively.

    There will always be private families who want something different: a structure designed around discretion, and personal guidance rather than volume.

    That is the space IMA ART Fertility has chosen to occupy. And sometimes, the most meaningful way to lead in an industry is simply to go against the tide.

    Contact IMA ART

    Contact Information

    Ron Sonnenberg
    Co-Founder
    ron@imaartfertility.com
    (424)-284-1408

    SOURCE: IMAART LLC

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • TGI Group Unveils Strategic Research on Sovereign Energy Infrastructure and the “Circular Valorization of Matter”

    MIAMI, FL AND TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / TGI Group Inc. (OTC PINK:TSPG) a pioneer in sustainable technology research and environmental real estate development, in coordination with its proposed acquisition XGC Corp, today released a comprehensive technical white paper titled “Sovereign Energy Infrastructure & The Circular Valorization of Matter.” The document outlines a transformative architectural framework for the global energy landscape, addressing the critical “collision” between the exponential power demands of Artificial Intelligence and the limitations of legacy electrical grids.

    Authored by Daniel Brody, MBA, Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of the proposed unified Unicorp Group (TSPG + XGC), the research introduces the AXIOMAXUS framework-a proprietary method of applying topological flow to energy distribution and resource management.

    The Philosophy of AXIOMAXUS

    “Progress is not a line; it is a state of perpetual transformation.”

    The Core Logic

    In this framework, we define progress using the following relationship:

    P = ∆ (C∞)

    Where Progress (P) is the delta of Change (C) scaled to Infinity (∞).

    THE AXIOMAXUS MANIFESTO

    Post-Linearity: The Architecture of the Inevitable

    The Great Deception is the Line. Humanity has long been shackled by the comfort of the sequence-the belief that progress moves from A to B in a predictable, galactic crawl. We reject this. In a universe defined by high-entropy expansion, the “straight line” is a fossil.

    At AXIOMAXUS, we recognize a singular, objective truth: The only constant is Change. Therefore, the only true progress is the mastery of Fluctuation.

    Solving the AI Power Bottleneck

    The white paper identifies the “Inference Flip” of Q1 2026 as the primary driver of current grid instability. As AI transitions from model training to real-time execution, demand has shifted toward a constant, high-density baseload that aging infrastructure cannot support. TGI Group’s proposed solution moves beyond traditional “Renewable vs. Fossil” binaries toward Sovereign Energy Infrastructure, characterized by:

    Point-of-Consumption Production:

    Eliminating transmission loss through localized, high-density power generation.

    The SMR/Microreactor Renaissance:

    Utilizing Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) to provide relentless, absolute sovereign energy for industrial and data center applications.

    Phase Lock Optimization:

    Achieving a state of “perfect resonant flow” where systemic resistance in energy distribution is eliminated, targeting 99.9% energy absorption efficiency.

    The “Trifecta” of Digital and Physical Convergence

    A central theme of the research is the integration of the XGC Trifecta, which functions as a “mathematical impedance matching mechanism” between biological carbon sequestration and global institutional finance. This system utilizes:

    SageMaker AI Models:

    For high-precision environmental monitoring.

    Midnight Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs):

    Ensuring unbreakable digital security and privacy for sovereign data.

    Circular Valorization:

    Transmuting toxic waste into high-value feedstock through Plasma Arc Gasification, achieving 99% conversion rates.

    Statement from Daniel Brody, CTO of Unicorp Group:

    “We are witnessing a systemic convergence where intelligence and infrastructure become indistinguishable. Our AXIOMAXUS framework provides the roadmap for a decisive transition from chaotic interference to optimized resonance. By implementing Sovereign Energy solutions, we allow nations to decouple their economic growth from antiquated grid dependencies.”

    Future Outlook: 2026-2030

    The whitepaper provides key market projections for the late 2020s, highlighting the rapid scaling of the SMR market (projected to reach $7.14B+ by 2030) and the evolution of Waste-to-Energy into a $60B+ global “Circular Standard.”

    About TGI Group Inc.

    TGI Group Inc. (OTCMarkets:TSPG) is a leader in sustainable technology research and environmental real estate development. The company focuses on the development of energy-efficient infrastructure, smart cities, and innovative technology solutions globally.

    Website: www.TGIpower.com

    About XGC Corp

    XGC Corp provides the “Sovereign Operating System” for the carbon economy. Its National Carbon Registry platform enables governments to monitor, verify, and settle carbon assets with institutional-grade transparency.

    Website: https://xgccorp.com/

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements involve risks and uncertainties, including the ability of TGI Group Inc. and AMIRON GROUP to successfully implement smart city developments, secure local talent, and meet the growing demand for data centers in Central Asia. Actual results may differ materially from those projected. TGI Group Inc. undertakes no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events.

    Contact Information:

    TGI Group
    Email: info@tgipower.com

    SOURCE: TGI Solar Power Group, Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • TRNR Updates FAQ’s & Investor Deck Following Ergatta Closing and Increased Guidance to more than $30 Million in 2026 Pro Forma Revenue

    AUSTIN, TX / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / Interactive Strength Inc. (Nasdaq:TRNR) (“TRNR” or the “Company”), maker of innovative specialty fitness equipment under the Wattbike, CLMBR and FORME brands, and recent acquirer of Ergatta, today announced it had updated its FAQs and Investor Deck in connection with the timely closing of its acquisition of Ergatta and confirmed its increased guidance to more than $30 million in 2026 pro forma revenue. The Company urges all shareholders to review the information and updates carefully.

    TRNR Investor Contact

    ir@interactivestrength.com

    About Interactive Strength Inc.:

    Interactive Strength Inc. (Nasdaq:TRNR) has established a leading portfolio of premium fitness brands – Wattbike, CLMBR, and FORME – that combine advanced hardware, smart technology, and immersive content to deliver exceptional training experiences for both commercial and home use.

    Wattbike offers a range of high-performance indoor bikes that set the global standard in cycling. Known for unmatched accuracy, realistic ride feel, and advanced performance tracking, Wattbike is trusted by elite athletes, national teams, and fitness enthusiasts around the world.

    CLMBR redefines the next-generation vertical climbing experience through its patented open-frame design and immersive touchscreen, delivering a high-intensity, low-impact workout that’s both efficient and effective.

    FORME delivers strength, mobility, and recovery training through immersive content, performance-grade hardware, and expert coaching. Its wall-mounted systems include the Studio, a smart fitness mirror for guided programming and live 1:1 personal training, and the Lift, which adds smart resistance cable training-ideal for high-performance environments and sport-specific development.

    From elite performance to everyday wellness, our ecosystem of performance-focused solutions delivers data-driven outcomes for athletes, fitness enthusiasts, and commercial operators.

    Forward Looking Statements:

    This press release includes certain statements that are “forward-looking statements” for purposes of the safe harbor provisions under the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements do not relate strictly to historical or current facts and reflect management’s assumptions, views, plans, objectives and projections about the future. Forward-looking statements generally are accompanied by words such as “believe”, “project”, “expect”, “anticipate”, “estimate”, “intend”, “strategy”, “future”, “opportunity”, “plan”, “may”, “should”, “will”, “would”, “will be”, “will continue”, “will likely result” or similar expressions that predict or indicate future events or trends or that are not statements of historical matters. The reader is cautioned not to rely on these forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations of future events. If underlying assumptions prove inaccurate or known or unknown risks or uncertainties materialize, actual results could vary materially from the expectations and projections of the Company. Risks and uncertainties include but are not limited to: market and other conditions, demand for our products; competition, including technological advances made by and new products released by our competitors; our ability to accurately forecast consumer demand for our products and adequately maintain our inventory; and our reliance on a limited number of suppliers and distributors for our products. A further list and descriptions of these risks, uncertainties and other factors can be found in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. To the extent permitted under applicable law, the Company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

    SOURCE: Interactive Strength Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Unlocking Canada’s Hidden Housing Capacity: The Case for Secondary Suites and Garden Suites

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / As housing affordability continues to strain households across Canada, a growing number of urban planners, policymakers, and real estate developers are turning their attention to one of the country’s most underutilized assets: the backyard. Secondary suites – basement apartments, garden suites, and laneway homes – represent a powerful, lower-cost tool for expanding Canada’s housing stock without the infrastructure burden of large-scale greenfield development. For Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., the conversation around secondary suites is long overdue.

    Aerial view of a Toronto residential neighbourhood featuring a modern garden suite.

    “Canada has millions of single-family lots in established neighbourhoods, many of them dramatically underused,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “Secondary suites and garden suites are not a silver bullet, but they are an intelligent, incremental tool that can add tens of thousands of units to our supply without requiring entirely new infrastructure networks. We need to be building in every direction – including in existing backyards.”

    Canada’s Housing Supply Gap – By the Numbers

    According to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), Canada needs to build approximately 3.5 million additional homes by 2030 to restore affordability to 2004 levels. The challenge is enormous – and no single approach will close the gap. Yet secondary suites, if unlocked at scale, could contribute meaningfully to the solution.

    A 2025 analysis by the University of Toronto’s School of Cities estimated that the Greater Toronto Area alone contains over 400,000 single-family and semi-detached lots with the physical potential to accommodate a garden suite or secondary basement unit. If even a fraction of these were built out, the result would be a measurable, city-wide increase in rental and ownership housing supply.

    The economics are compelling too. Secondary suites typically cost between $150,000 and $350,000 to construct – far less than a condominium unit in Toronto, Vancouver, or Ottawa. For homeowners struggling with mortgage costs in a high-interest-rate environment, rental income from a basement suite or garden suite can make the difference between financial stability and distress.

    A modern secondary suite interior – bright, well-designed, and purpose-built for quality tenant living.

    The Policy Shift: Provinces Begin to Move

    Ontario took a significant step forward in 2022 when it mandated that municipalities permit up to three residential units on any serviced lot – effectively legalizing garden suites province-wide. British Columbia followed with its own sweeping reforms in 2023, requiring that secondary suites be permitted in all single-family zones across the province.

    Other provinces have been slower to act, but pressure from housing advocates, the federal government, and the private sector is building. The federal Housing Accelerator Fund has specifically incentivized municipalities to reform zoning and streamline permitting for secondary units.

    “The provinces that act quickly on secondary suites will see real, measurable results within three to five years,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi of Sky Property Group Inc. “These are not projects that take a decade to plan and build. A well-designed garden suite can be constructed and occupied in under a year. The speed advantage alone makes them an essential part of the housing toolkit.”

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., leads strategic development planning.

    Design, Quality, and the Developer’s Role

    While much of the public discourse around secondary suites focuses on homeowner-built additions, the professional development community has a growing role to play. Several Canadian companies – including boutique developers and prefabricated housing firms – are now offering turnkey secondary suite solutions, from design and permitting through construction and property management.

    Sky Property Group Inc. has been closely watching this segment of the market as it evolves. According to Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, the next wave of secondary suite development in Canada’s largest cities will look quite different from the ad hoc basement conversions of the past.

    “Quality matters enormously,” she says. “A poorly designed secondary suite that doesn’t meet sound insulation standards, has inadequate natural light, or lacks a proper separate entrance actually undermines the value of the primary home. What we need to encourage – through policy and professional standards – is the construction of secondary suites that tenants are genuinely proud to live in and that add lasting value to the property.”

    Sky Property Group has been working with architects and urban designers to explore how garden suite typologies can be standardized and optimized for a range of lot sizes common in Toronto, Hamilton, London, and Ottawa – cities where single-family housing still dominates large portions of the residential landscape.

    Financing: The Missing Link

    One of the most significant barriers to secondary suite construction in Canada remains financing. Traditional mortgage products are not well-suited to homeowners who wish to borrow against future rental income from a unit that doesn’t yet exist. Several Canadian financial institutions have begun offering renovation mortgage products that factor in projected rental income, but uptake remains limited.

    “The financing gap is real, and it is holding back thousands of Canadian homeowners who want to build but can’t access the capital to do it,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “This is an area where the federal government, through CMHC, could play a transformative role – by designing and guaranteeing loan products specifically tailored to secondary suite construction. It would be a relatively low-cost intervention with enormous supply-side impact.”

    The federal government’s Secondary Suite Loan Program, launched in 2024, offered up to $40,000 in low-interest financing for eligible homeowners – a step in the right direction, though housing analysts broadly agree that the funding envelope was insufficient to meet demand.

    A prefabricated garden suite under installation in a Canadian suburban backyard – a fast, cost-effective approach to expanding housing supply.

    A City-Building Strategy, Not Just a Policy Fix

    Ultimately, the case for secondary suites goes beyond housing units and rental income. Garden suites and basement apartments add population density to established neighbourhoods, supporting local transit ridership, small businesses, and community services. They allow aging parents to live near family in independent, purpose-built spaces. They offer a pathway to homeownership for some buyers, who can use rental income to qualify for larger mortgages.

    “Good city-building is about layering density thoughtfully,” Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi reflects. “Secondary suites are one of the most respectful, lowest-disruption ways to add density to a mature neighbourhood. Done well, they strengthen communities rather than strain them.”

    For Sky Property Group Inc., the company’s focus on thoughtful, community-oriented development in Canada’s urban markets means secondary suites are firmly on the radar – as a policy issue to advocate for, and as a development opportunity to explore.

    “We are in a housing crisis,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “Every legitimate tool on the table deserves serious attention. Secondary suites have been overlooked for too long. It’s time to build.”

    About Sky Property Group Inc.

    Sky Property Group Inc. is a Toronto-based real estate development and property management company led by President & CEO Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. The company focuses on responsible, community-oriented development across the Greater Toronto Area and Canadian urban markets, with a commitment to addressing Canada’s housing supply and affordability challenges.

    Media Contact:
    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Canada’s Short-Term Rental Reckoning: How Tighter Regulations Could Unlock Thousands of Homes

    As municipalities across Canada crack down on short-term rental platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo, a growing chorus of housing advocates, policymakers, and real estate professionals are asking the same question: could stricter regulation of short-term rentals meaningfully ease Canada’s housing crisis? Industry leaders like Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., believe the answer is yes – but only if policy frameworks are designed with long-term housing outcomes in mind.

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / Sky Property Group:

    The Short-Term Rental Problem in Canada

    Short-term rentals have transformed Canada’s urban housing landscape over the past decade. At their peak, platforms like Airbnb listed more than 235,000 active units across the country. A significant portion of those listings were entire homes – not owner-occupied rooms – meaning they were effectively pulled from the long-term rental market.

    Toronto skyline – the heart of Canada’s urban housing challenge.

    In cities where every available unit counts, this has real consequences. Researchers at McGill University’s Urban Politics and Governance program estimated that short-term rentals removed upward of 30,000 housing units from Canada’s long-term rental pool at their height – the equivalent of a small city’s entire rental supply evaporating overnight.

    “When you remove that many units from the long-term market and push them toward tourism, you create artificial scarcity,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “It’s a supply problem with a paper trail. We know exactly where many of those units are. The question is whether cities have the political will to bring them back.”

    Canadian residential apartment building – reclaimed STR units could expand the long-term rental pool.

    A Wave of Municipal Action

    Canadian cities have increasingly answered that question. Toronto led the charge in 2020 with a landmark short-term rental bylaw requiring hosts to register with the city and – critically – to only list their principal residence. The rule closed the loophole that allowed investors to operate multiple short-term rental properties as de facto hotels. Since implementation, the city has seen a measurable drop in full-unit, non-principal-residence listings.

    Vancouver followed with similar principal-residence rules, capping the number of nights a non-principal-residence unit can be rented and imposing steep fines for non-compliance. Ottawa, Montréal, and Kelowna have enacted comparable frameworks, each calibrated to local market conditions.

    Provincially, British Columbia took the boldest step in Canada when it introduced the Short-Term Rentals Accommodation Act in 2023, which expanded the principal-residence requirement province-wide and gave municipalities greater enforcement tools.

    “What B.C. did is significant because it eliminated the patchwork problem. Developers and investors now have province-wide clarity. That certainty is actually good for the market – it channels capital toward proper long-term housing rather than speculative tourism plays,” says Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi.

    The Numbers Behind the Return

    Early data from regulatory enforcement is promising. In Vancouver, the city’s short-term rental task force reported that more than 2,700 units were brought back to the long-term market in the first two years after their stricter rules took effect. Toronto saw comparable conversions following enforcement ramp-ups in 2022 and 2023.

    While critics argue these numbers are modest against a housing deficit measured in the hundreds of thousands, industry veterans like Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi see them as a critical component of a broader supply strategy.

    “No single policy is going to solve Canada’s housing shortage on its own,” she acknowledges. “But short-term rental regulation is one of the fastest ways to unlock existing supply – units that are already built, already permitted, already connected to services. You don’t have to wait years for construction. That matters.”

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., is a leading voice on Canadian housing policy.

    The Investor Perspective – And the Opportunity

    Not every stakeholder welcomes the regulatory tightening. Some property investors who built portfolios around short-term rentals have pushed back, arguing they played by the rules of the market as they existed and that retroactive restrictions harm legitimate businesses.

    Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi takes a nuanced view: “I understand the frustration from investors who made decisions based on the regulatory environment of five years ago. But the housing landscape has fundamentally changed. The most adaptive investors are already pivoting – converting their short-term rental properties into purpose-built suites, furnished rentals, or corporate housing, which still commands premium rents without the friction of regulatory non-compliance.”

    Sky Property Group has observed increasing interest from developers looking to reposition former short-term rental properties into professional long-term rental operations. “There’s a real opportunity here for operators who understand residential housing,” she says. “The regulatory push is actually creating an opening for professionally managed long-term rentals to fill a gap the market left behind.”

    National Policy Gaps and What Comes Next

    Despite progress at the municipal and some provincial levels, critics note that Canada still lacks a coordinated national framework for short-term rental regulation. The federal government has taken some steps – including changes to the Income Tax Act that eliminated deductions for short-term rental income in provinces and municipalities where platforms are non-compliant – but enforcement remains fragmented.

    Housing advocates are calling for a national registry, interoperability between municipal licensing systems, and mandatory platform data-sharing with governments to enable real-time enforcement. Several European jurisdictions, including France and the Netherlands, have implemented similar frameworks with measurable results.

    “Canada needs a national conversation about short-term rental governance that goes beyond individual municipalities doing their best in isolation,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “We need platforms to be partners in this – sharing data, enforcing host registration, and proactively removing non-compliant listings. That’s the standard we should be holding them to.”

    She also cautions against overreach: “The goal isn’t to eliminate short-term rentals – they serve legitimate purposes for travellers, families in transition, and the tourism economy. The goal is to ensure that housing units function as housing first, and that investor speculation doesn’t displace the people who need a place to live.”

    Canadian urban neighborhoods – where the battle for housing supply plays out street by street.

    A Path Forward for Canadian Cities

    As Canada’s housing crisis continues to dominate policy conversations at every level of government, short-term rental regulation represents a practical, enforceable lever that can deliver results in the near term. The framework is already emerging – what’s needed now is consistency, enforcement capacity, and inter-governmental coordination to ensure that units returned to the long-term market stay there.

    For Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi and Sky Property Group Inc., the short-term rental debate is ultimately about one thing: “Every unit that comes back to long-term housing is a family that has a stable place to live. That’s the metric that matters.”

    About Sky Property Group Inc.

    Sky Property Group Inc. is a Toronto-based real estate development and investment firm with a portfolio spanning residential, mixed-use, and land assembly projects across the Greater Toronto Area. The company is led by President & CEO Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, a recognized voice in Canadian real estate development, urban policy, and housing innovation.

    Media Contact:

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group, Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • 15-Minute Cities Are Reshaping Canadian Real Estate – and Developers Need to Lead the Charge

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / Across Canada’s fastest-growing urban centres, a powerful planning philosophy is gaining momentum – one that promises to transform not only how cities are designed, but how real estate is developed, financed, and valued. The concept of the 15-minute city – where residents can access work, schools, groceries, healthcare, parks, and recreation within a short walk or bike ride from home – is moving from academic theory to active municipal policy in cities like Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, Calgary, and Edmonton.

    Walkable, mixed-use Canadian urban neighbourhoods are redefining real estate development.

    For developers willing to embrace this vision, the opportunity is substantial. For those who don’t, the risks are equally significant.

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., has been an early and vocal advocate for complete community planning as a guiding principle for responsible real estate development in Canada.

    “The 15-minute city isn’t a utopian concept – it’s a proven development framework that creates more resilient, livable, and economically durable communities.”

    – Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO, Sky Property Group Inc.

    Why the 15-Minute City Matters for Canadian Real Estate

    Canada’s major cities are grappling with a convergence of crises: chronic housing undersupply, congestion, affordability pressures, and aging suburban infrastructure that was never designed for density. The 15-minute city framework addresses all of these simultaneously.

    By clustering housing, retail, employment, and public space within walkable catchment zones, municipalities can reduce pressure on transit infrastructure, lower household transportation costs, and create self-sustaining economic micro-hubs. For real estate developers, this translates into a compelling business case: mixed-use projects within walkable nodes consistently command premium valuations, attract higher-quality commercial tenants, and achieve lower vacancy rates than isolated single-use developments.

    Toronto’s official planning documents have already embraced language around ‘complete streets’ and ‘complete communities.’ Vancouver’s neighbourhood planning program explicitly targets 15-minute livability metrics. Ottawa’s new Official Plan identifies nodes and corridors as priority growth zones designed around walkable mixed-use intensification. Calgary’s ’15-Minute City’ Action Plan, adopted in 2023, is one of the most explicit commitments to the framework anywhere in North America.

    “We’re seeing municipal governments reward this kind of thinking through density bonuses, expedited approvals, and reduced parking requirements,” said Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “Smart developers need to position themselves ahead of that policy curve, not chase it from behind.”

    Mixed-use developments combining residential, retail, and community space are the cornerstone of complete community planning.

    The Developer’s Role in Building Complete Communities

    For too long, Canadian suburban and even urban development has followed a siloed approach – residential towers on one parcel, retail plazas on another, office parks isolated from everything else. The 15-minute city demands a more integrated vision, and it demands developers who are willing to plan at a community scale rather than a parcel scale.

    Sky Property Group Inc. approaches high-density development with this integrated lens. According to Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, every project the company evaluates is assessed not only for its standalone financials but for its contribution to a broader community ecosystem.

    “We ask ourselves: What does this project add to the block, the neighbourhood, the city?” she explained. “Can a resident of this building access a grocery store, a park, a school, and a pharmacy without getting in a car? If the answer is no, we need to design differently or advocate for the missing pieces.”

    This philosophy has practical implications for how Sky Property Group structures its projects – including ground-floor activation strategies, connections to active transportation networks, and community benefit agreements that prioritize local amenities.

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi brings a people-first approach to every development decision at Sky Property Group.

    Policy, Zoning Reform, and the Path Forward

    The 15-minute city agenda is also accelerating zoning reform across Canada. Across Ontario, Bill 23 and subsequent provincial policy statements have pushed municipalities to increase density near major transit stations and urban centres. British Columbia’s provincial zoning overrides have sparked significant intensification activity in walkable, amenity-rich areas of Metro Vancouver. Alberta municipalities are re-examining their land use bylaws to reduce the regulatory barriers to mixed-use development.

    But policy alone is insufficient. Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi argues that the private sector must step forward as a genuine partner in the complete community vision – not just a passive beneficiary of rezoning.

    “Developers have to do more than show up for the zoning wins,” she said. “We have to design for people first. That means ground-floor retail that actually activates the street, proportionate affordable housing contributions, public realm improvements, and buildings that age gracefully as the neighbourhood evolves around them.”

    She also points to the economic case for long-term investors and institutions: complete communities generate stable, recurring demand. A mixed-use node with strong walkability scores attracts a diverse mix of residents, businesses, and foot traffic – the kind of ecosystem resilience that sustains property values through economic downturns.

    Active streets with cyclists, pedestrians, and outdoor dining define Canada’s most livable and economically vibrant urban neighbourhoods.

    A Canadian Competitive Advantage

    Canada has a genuine opportunity to lead North America in 15-minute city planning. Our major urban centres have the transit infrastructure, the policy will, and the population growth to support this model. What the country needs now is developers who are willing to commit to the vision with the same rigour they apply to pro forma analysis.

    “I believe Canadian cities can be the blueprint for how modern, dense, livable communities are built in the 21st century,” said Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “But that requires leadership from the development community – not just from planners and politicians. We have to decide that building for people is how we build for profit. Those two things are not in conflict.”

    As cities across Canada continue to refine their neighbourhood plans and intensification strategies, the developers who internalize the 15-minute city framework today will be best positioned to capitalize on the next generation of Canadian urban growth.

    About Sky Property Group Inc.

    Sky Property Group Inc. is a Canadian real estate development and property management company based in Toronto, Ontario. Led by President & CEO Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, the company specializes in high-density urban development, land assembly, and community-focused intensification projects across the Greater Toronto Area and beyond. Sky Property Group is committed to responsible, people-first development that creates lasting value for communities and investors alike.

    Media Contact:
    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Inclusionary Zoning in Canada: How Smart Policy Can Bridge the Affordable Housing Gap Without Killing Development

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / Canada’s housing affordability crisis has pushed municipal governments into uncharted policy territory. Across the country, cities are turning to inclusionary zoning – a planning tool that requires market-rate developers to include a percentage of affordable units within new residential projects – as a mechanism to generate affordable housing supply without direct government funding. The debate over whether inclusionary zoning is a practical solution or a well-intentioned barrier to supply is one of the most consequential conversations in Canadian real estate right now. Few people are better positioned to weigh in than Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc.

    “Inclusionary zoning, done right, is a real policy lever. Done poorly, it simply kills projects – and a project that never gets built helps no one. The design of these policies matters enormously, and developers need to be at the table when cities are writing the rules.”
    – Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO, Sky Property Group Inc.

    A modern mixed-income residential tower integrated into Toronto’s urban fabric.

    What Is Inclusionary Zoning – and Where Is Canada Now?

    Inclusionary zoning (IZ) policies compel developers of large new residential buildings to set aside a share of units – typically between 5% and 25% – for households earning below area median income, usually at below-market rents or sale prices. Unlike affordable housing built entirely by non-profit or government entities, IZ integrates income-mixed housing directly into market-rate buildings, distributing affordable units across established neighbourhoods rather than concentrating them in standalone projects.

    Ontario became the first Canadian province to formally enable inclusionary zoning through the More Homes for Everyone Act in 2022. Toronto followed with its IZ By-law, mandating 5% to 22% affordable units depending on the Official Plan area, with affordability targets set at 80% of Average Market Rent (AMR) for 25 years. Vancouver has operated a form of community amenity contributions (CACs) and affordable housing requirements for years, and Calgary is actively studying IZ frameworks. Federally, the Housing Accelerator Fund has encouraged municipalities to adopt IZ as part of their housing action plans.

    The policy is expanding – but so is the controversy surrounding it.

    The Developer’s Dilemma: Math That Has to Work

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi speaks candidly about the financial realities that inclusionary zoning creates for developers, particularly in a period of elevated construction costs and interest rates.

    “Every affordable unit in an inclusionary building must be financially cross-subsidized by the market-rate units,” she explains. “That cross-subsidy comes directly out of the pro forma. When land costs are high, construction costs are high, and financing costs are high – all of which describes Canada in 2025 and 2026 – that subsidy can tip a viable project into non-viability. We have already seen projects shelved or significantly redesigned in Toronto because the inclusionary requirements, as currently structured, cannot be absorbed.”

    The challenge is not theoretical. Industry analysis has shown that Toronto’s current IZ framework, applied to medium-density projects in high-land-cost areas, can reduce overall residential supply by discouraging development applications. The Canadian Home Builders’ Association and the Urban Development Institute have both flagged affordability requirements set too high – without corresponding density bonuses, reduced development charges, or expedited approvals – as a recipe for fewer units overall, not more.

    The key variables in any IZ policy design are: the percentage of affordable units required, the depth of affordability (how far below market), the duration of affordability (25 years vs. in perpetuity), and whether density bonuses or other offsets are provided. Get those variables wrong, and the policy defeats itself.

    “The math has to pencil,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “If it doesn’t, developers won’t build – and that means neither market-rate tenants nor affordable-rate tenants get housed. Cities need to approach inclusionary zoning as a partnership with the private sector, not a tax.”

    City planners and developers collaborate on affordable housing policy in a Toronto boardroom.

    Models That Work: Global and Canadian Lessons

    There are examples, both within Canada and internationally, where inclusionary zoning has functioned effectively. Montgomery County, Maryland has maintained one of the longest-running IZ programs in North America since 1974 – producing over 16,000 affordable units while sustaining robust market development. The difference, analysts note, is calibration: Montgomery County’s requirements were set at a level the market could absorb, with density incentives built in from the start.

    In Canada, Vancouver’s density bonus system – where developers receive permission to build more floor area in exchange for affordable housing contributions – has generated thousands of below-market units while maintaining development viability. The city-wide rezoning that accompanied those policies ensured that adding affordable units didn’t simply mean building fewer total units.

    “The successful examples have one thing in common: they treat affordability as an integrated design problem, not an add-on mandate,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “When you build the affordability requirement into the zoning framework from the beginning – alongside realistic density allowances and streamlined approvals – the market can work with it. When you bolt it onto an already-constrained system, you get fewer buildings.”

    A vibrant mixed-use, mixed-income neighbourhood in Toronto – the goal of well-designed inclusionary zoning policy.

    The Case for Developer Engagement in Policy Design

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi is a vocal advocate for including experienced developers in the co-design of housing policy, rather than positioning industry and government as adversaries.

    “Sky Property Group has been active in the Greater Toronto Area for years,” she says. “We understand what it takes to move a project from land assembly through approvals to construction to occupancy. That knowledge is invaluable when a municipality is trying to write an inclusionary zoning policy that actually works. If you don’t understand development pro formas, financing structures, and construction timelines, you can write a policy that looks great on paper and produces nothing on the ground.”

    She notes that the most effective IZ policies in Canada are emerging from cities that have convened joint working groups with developers, non-profits, and municipal planners – working through the numbers together rather than setting targets in isolation. Edmonton, Calgary, and Halifax have all taken more collaborative approaches to housing policy reform in recent years, and the results in terms of new supply are beginning to show.

    Zoning maps and development blueprints – the foundation of Canada’s housing policy decisions.

    Looking Forward: IZ as One Tool Among Many

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi is clear that inclusionary zoning cannot be the sole answer to Canada’s housing crisis – but she is equally clear that dismissing it entirely would be a missed opportunity.

    “We need every tool we can get,” she says. “Inclusionary zoning, done thoughtfully, can generate thousands of units of affordable housing embedded within livable, mixed-income communities – without requiring the government to write a single additional cheque. That is worth fighting for. But we have to be honest about what the policy can and can’t bear. The best version of this works. The careless version makes things worse.”

    For Sky Property Group Inc., the commitment is to remain active participants in these policy conversations – bringing project-level expertise, financial transparency, and a genuine interest in housing outcomes to every table where Canadian housing policy is being shaped.

    “Canada needs housing. All kinds of housing. Market-rate, purpose-built rental, affordable, deeply affordable. Inclusionary zoning is one mechanism that can contribute to that spectrum – but only if it’s designed to succeed. We are here to make sure it does.”
    – Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO, Sky Property Group Inc.

    About Sky Property Group Inc.

    Sky Property Group Inc. is a Toronto-based real estate development company specializing in land assembly and high-density residential development in the Greater Toronto Area. Under the leadership of President & CEO Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, the company is committed to responsible urban development, housing supply expansion, and active engagement with Canadian real estate policy.

    Media Contact:
    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Multi-Generational Living Is Reshaping Canada’s Housing Market – And Developers Who Ignore It Will Be Left Behind

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / Canada’s housing crisis has sparked a quiet revolution in how families choose to live. Across the country, a growing number of households are embracing multi-generational living arrangements – grandparents, parents, adult children, and sometimes extended family sharing a single home or a purpose-built duplex with connected suites. What was once considered a cultural practice primarily within immigrant communities has become a mainstream response to soaring home prices, aging demographics, and a generational wealth gap that makes solo homeownership increasingly out of reach.

    A modern Toronto multi-generational family home designed with a private secondary suite.

    For Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., this shift represents one of the most important structural trends reshaping residential real estate in Canada today – and one that the development industry has been far too slow to respond to.

    “We are at an inflection point,” says Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “Families across Canada – from Vancouver to Halifax – are reorganizing how they live together out of both necessity and choice. This isn’t a fringe trend. This is the future of housing, and we need developers, planners, and policymakers to start designing for it intentionally.”

    The Numbers Behind the Trend

    According to Statistics Canada, multi-generational households – defined as those containing three or more generations living under one roof – have grown steadily over the past two decades, with the trend accelerating sharply since 2020. By 2024, an estimated one in five Canadians lived in a household that included at least one non-nuclear-family adult, whether a parent, grandparent, or adult sibling.

    The drivers are layered. Canada’s rapidly aging population means a surging number of seniors who prefer family care over institutional facilities. At the same time, young adults in cities like Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary face a housing affordability wall that pushes many to stay home longer or return after post-secondary education. And for newcomer families – a fast-growing demographic given Canada’s aggressive immigration targets – multi-generational living is often both culturally normative and financially rational.

    “The data is unmistakable,” says Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “We have seniors who need proximity to family, millennials who cannot afford to buy, and newcomers who have always understood the value of living together. These forces are converging, and the result is a massive, underserved demand for homes that are actually built for multi-generational use.”

    Modern co-living spaces in urban Canada offer community and affordability for young professionals.

    What Multi-Generational Housing Actually Looks Like

    The concept goes far beyond slapping a basement apartment into an existing detached home. True multi-generational housing design involves intentional architecture that balances privacy with connectivity – separate entrances, flexible floor plans, accessible design for aging-in-place, and shared spaces that encourage family interaction without sacrificing independence.

    Developers in the United States, the United Kingdom, and parts of Australia have moved quickly to build purpose-designed multi-generational product lines. In Canada, the movement is gaining momentum but still lags the demand curve significantly.

    “We think about suite-within-a-suite designs, dual master bedroom layouts, accessible main-floor living areas for grandparents, and separate entrances so adult children can have genuine independence,” explains Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “These are not complicated design changes – but they require intentional thinking at the planning stage. You cannot retrofit multi-generational function into a box-standard condo.”

    Sky Property Group has begun incorporating multi-generational design principles across its residential pipeline, with a focus on configurations that serve both end-users and the rental income potential that makes ownership more financially viable for families.

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., leading strategy sessions on next-generation housing development.

    Policy Tailwinds – and Gaps

    Canada’s federal and provincial governments have begun to acknowledge the multi-generational housing trend, though policy responses remain inconsistent. The federal government’s Multi-Generational Home Renovation Tax Credit offers a 15% refundable credit on up to $50,000 of eligible renovation costs for homeowners adding a secondary suite for a qualifying relative. Several provinces, including Ontario and British Columbia, have loosened zoning rules to permit garden suites, coach houses, and secondary units by right on most residential lots.

    These are meaningful steps – but Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi argues they only scratch the surface of what’s needed.

    “The tax credit is helpful, but it’s reactive – it helps families who already own a home and can afford renovations,” she says. “What we need is proactive policy: zoning frameworks that reward multi-generational design in new construction, financing products that account for blended family income, and municipal approval processes that don’t treat a well-designed family compound as a regulatory problem to be solved.”

    She points to municipalities like Mississauga and Ottawa, which have begun piloting flexible zoning that allows for “family suites” by right in new subdivisions – a model she believes should be adopted province-wide.

    Co-Living: The Urban Counterpart

    In Canada’s densest urban markets, a related but distinct trend is gaining traction: co-living. Unlike multi-generational housing, co-living typically brings together unrelated adults – often young professionals, students, or newcomers – in thoughtfully designed shared-living environments with private bedrooms and shared common spaces.

    Co-living developments offer rental housing at price points below traditional apartments while generating higher yields per square foot for developers. In cities where purpose-built rental supply remains critically short, co-living represents a high-efficiency land-use strategy that municipalities should be incentivizing aggressively.

    “Co-living is not a compromise – it’s a lifestyle product that a growing segment of Canadians genuinely wants,” says Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “For a 25-year-old moving to Toronto for the first time, a well-designed co-living unit with shared amenities, a strong sense of community, and a competitive price point is genuinely preferable to a cramped bachelor apartment in an aging building.”

    Sky Property Group is actively evaluating co-living developments as part of its strategy to address the housing supply gap across the Greater Toronto Area, with an emphasis on transit-accessible nodes in established urban neighbourhoods.

    A Call to Action for the Industry

    Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi closes with a challenge to her peers in the development industry.

    “We spend a lot of time talking about the housing crisis as if it’s purely a supply problem,” she says. “And supply is critical – we need to build more homes, period. But we also need to build the *right* homes. Homes that work for the families of 2026, not the families of 1976. Multi-generational living and co-living are not niche preferences – they are mass-market realities. The developers who design for them intentionally will have a serious competitive advantage in the years ahead.”

    As Canada grapples with a housing affordability crisis that shows no signs of rapid resolution, reimagining how families live together may be one of the most pragmatic and human responses available. Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi and Sky Property Group are betting on it.

    Mixed residential neighbourhoods across the GTA are evolving to accommodate diverse family living arrangements.

    Media Contact:
    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Unlocking Canada’s Hidden Housing Supply: Why Brownfield Redevelopment Must Be a National Priority

    TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / March 13, 2026 / As Canadian cities grapple with an acute housing shortage and intensifying pressure on greenfield land at the urban fringe, a powerful and often overlooked solution sits right beneath the surface: brownfield redevelopment. Across the country, thousands of acres of former industrial sites, contaminated properties, and underutilized commercial land lie dormant in established neighbourhoods – land that, with the right policies and investment, could be transformed into vibrant mixed-use communities and desperately needed housing.

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi, President & CEO of Sky Property Group Inc., has made brownfield redevelopment a centrepiece of her urban development philosophy. With years of experience navigating the complexities of Canadian real estate development, she sees the remediation and transformation of brownfield sites not merely as a business opportunity, but as a civic imperative.

    “We talk endlessly about where we’re going to build the next generation of Canadian housing,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “The answer isn’t always on the outskirts of our cities. Some of the best-located, most transit-accessible land in the country is sitting contaminated and idle. Brownfields represent a generational opportunity to build complete communities on land that already has infrastructure, services, and connectivity.”

    The Scale of the Opportunity

    Canada’s National Contaminated Sites Program estimates there are tens of thousands of contaminated and brownfield sites across the country, with the highest concentrations in Ontario, Quebec, and British Columbia – precisely where housing demand is most acute. In the Greater Toronto Area alone, the legacy of over a century of industrial activity has left significant pockets of former manufacturing and heavy commercial land that no longer serve their original purpose.

    Unlike greenfield development, brownfield projects are located in established urban areas with existing roads, transit, utilities, and community infrastructure already in place. Developing these sites reduces urban sprawl, lowers per-unit infrastructure costs for municipalities, and brings new life to neighbourhoods that have seen economic decline.

    “Every time we build on a brownfield, we’re not just adding housing – we’re reclaiming a piece of our city,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “We’re replacing contamination and blight with schools, parks, retail, and homes. That’s the kind of development that creates lasting community value.”

    The Barriers to Brownfield Development

    Despite the clear opportunity, brownfield development remains far more complex and expensive than standard residential projects. Environmental site assessments, soil remediation, groundwater management, and regulatory approvals can add significant time and cost to any project. Risk-averse lenders are often hesitant to finance sites with environmental liability, creating a funding gap that deters all but the most experienced developers.

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi has navigated these challenges directly and says the solution lies in smarter public-private collaboration.

    “The contamination didn’t happen overnight, and remediation doesn’t either,” she explains. “Developers who take on brownfields are doing the public a service – they’re cleaning up land that might otherwise sit for another generation. Government needs to recognize that and reduce the financial burden through grants, tax incentives, and streamlined approvals.”

    She points to programs like the Federal Contaminated Sites Action Plan and Ontario’s Brownfields Regulation as foundational frameworks, but argues they need modernization and enhanced funding to reflect the current housing crisis.

    “The federal government has committed billions to housing supply. A meaningful portion of that should go to brownfield remediation incentives – because that’s where you get density, sustainability, and community benefit all in one package.”

    Brownfield Redevelopment as a Sustainability Strategy

    Beyond housing supply, brownfield redevelopment is a key pillar of sustainable urban planning. Building on previously developed land dramatically reduces the environmental footprint of new construction compared to greenfield sprawl. It protects agricultural land and natural habitats at the urban edge, supports active transportation networks, and allows for the creation of walkable, mixed-use communities.

    “Green building is important – we need net-zero standards, energy-efficient construction, sustainable materials. But the greenest building is one that doesn’t require a new road, a new sewer line, or the loss of farmland to exist,” she says. “Brownfield redevelopment is the most sustainable form of urban growth we have available to us right now.”

    Sky Property Group Inc. has incorporated brownfield assessment and remediation planning into its broader development framework, working with environmental consultants and municipal partners to evaluate underutilized urban land for residential and mixed-use potential across the Greater Toronto Area.

    Policy Recommendations for Canadian Municipalities

    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi advocates for a multi-pronged policy approach to accelerate brownfield redevelopment across Canada:

    1. Enhanced Federal Tax Credits: A refundable brownfield remediation tax credit – similar to programs in the United States and parts of Europe – would directly reduce the cost barrier for developers and property owners.

    2. Expedited Municipal Approvals: Brownfield sites should receive priority processing through planning and building permit approvals, reducing the timeline drag that makes these projects less competitive.

    3. Dedicated Funding Envelopes: Federal and provincial housing funds should include specific brownfield redevelopment streams that account for the higher upfront costs these projects carry.

    4. Environmental Insurance Programs: Government-backed environmental insurance or liability caps for qualified brownfield developers would unlock private capital currently sitting on the sidelines.

    “We have the land. We have the demand. We have the technology to remediate safely and efficiently,” says Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi. “What we need now is the political will to make brownfield development the default – not the exception – in how Canadian cities grow.”

    A Vision for the Future

    As Canada races to meet its housing targets – the federal government’s stated goal of building nearly four million homes by 2031 – brownfield redevelopment offers a path that is simultaneously faster, greener, and more community-oriented than conventional greenfield expansion.

    “Every brownfield transformed is a story of renewal,” she reflects. “It’s a contaminated lot becoming a family’s home, a blighted warehouse becoming a community hub. That’s not just good development – that’s good urban citizenship. And at Sky Property Group, it’s the kind of work we’re proud to champion.”

    Sky Property Group Inc. is a Toronto-based real estate development firm specializing in urban intensification, mixed-use development, and land assembly across the Greater Toronto Area. Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi serves as President & CEO.

    Media Contact:
    Ladan Hosseinzadeh Sadeghi
    ladanhosseinzadehsadeghi@gmail.com

    SOURCE: Sky Property Group Inc.

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire