Cesario Ginjo knew the rent would go up. The last lease he and his wife, Tina, secured for their tiny bakery and pie shop in a residential area of Toronto’s Little Italy was inked pre-pandemic, and they were under no assumptions their lease for the modest brick shop would be re-signed at $3,000 per month.
But the sticker shock was worse than expected. The building’s longtime owner had sold it in June for $1.85 million in Toronto’s still red-hot real estate market. Their new landlord asked for more than double the rent: $6,300 per month to keep the space and continue selling pastries beside Bickford Park.