Toronto tower will have the largest EV parking garage in Ontario

Published February 2, 2026 at 10:37 am

In a province redefining what sustainable city living means, Concord Park Place’s King’s Landing in North York presents a bold blueprint for the future.

 

Part of the 45-acre Concord Park Place master-planned community near Sheppard Avenue and Leslie Street, King’s Landing features Ontario’s largest electric-vehicle parkade — with 515 EV charging stalls built directly into its foundation from day one. It’s a rare example of sustainability meeting scale: innovation engineered beneath the surface to serve generations to come.

Rather than retrofitting for the future, Concord designed for it — integrating mostly Level 2 chargers alongside several Level 3 superchargers, supported by a fully automated, touchless car wash system. The result is a seamless blend of convenience, technology, and environmental foresight.

Concord has consistently led the industry in EV infrastructure, having built the world’s largest EV parkade at Concord Brentwood in British Columbia and the largest in Central London at Marylebone Square — reaffirming its role as a pioneer in building for an electric future.

A Vision for Complete, Connected Communities

King’s Landing continues Concord’s legacy of large-scale city-building — following Concord Pacific Place in Vancouver and Concord CityPlace in downtown Toronto, two of Canada’s largest and most transformative master-planned communities. Together with Concord Park Place, they reflect a decades-long commitment to creating self-sustaining neighbourhoods that evolve alongside the cities around them.

The community is directly connected to both Bessarion Station on the TTC and Oriole GO Station, making car-light or car-free living effortless. With parks, schools, and retail seamlessly integrated between residential towers, Concord Park Place transforms North York into a walkable, transit-oriented urban hub — demonstrating how density, mobility, and livability can coexist.

Building Green Energy and Smart Design — Without Compromise

King’s Landing also embodies the vision behind Concord Green Energy, a nationwide initiative investing in renewable power through wind, solar, and hydroelectric projects across Canada. The development’s extensive EV infrastructure reflects the same forward-thinking mindset — connecting clean-energy generation with everyday urban living.

“Green energy isn’t an add-on anymore; it’s part of our foundation,” says Terry Hui, CEO of the Concord Pacific Group of Companies. “When you build thousands of homes, small efficiencies multiply into real environmental impact.”

This commitment to sustainable innovation also shapes how King’s Landing is designed and experienced — proving that environmental responsibility and architectural excellence can thrive together.

An Iconic Crown in North York’s Skyline

The rooftop lighting system, designed in the shape of a crown, inspired the project’s name. Its digital lighting display will compose a shining, multicoloured mosaic visible from afar, transforming King’s Landing into a living artwork of light and form.

Inside, that same sense of artistry continues through the arrival court and grand lobby centerpiece — home to the largest chandelier installation of its kind in Canada. Together, the illuminated crown above and chandelier below create a symbolic dialogue between sky and ground — light expressed both outward and inward.

The refinement continues into the residences, where premium finishes, meticulous detailing, and in-suite wine cellars in most homes reflect Concord’s three-decade evolution in luxury and craftsmanship.

The Future of City Living in Balance

As Ontario continues to advance EV adoption and sustainable construction standards, King’s Landing at Concord Park Place shows how a community can be green and beautifully designed at once — where advanced infrastructure, architectural innovation, and everyday livability coexist in perfect balance.

Green and smart design — without compromise

Visit www.concordkingslanding.com

INsauga's Editorial Standards and Policies