WISE DECISION MAKING
STRATEGIC SYSTEM
Services
- Urban Development Platform
- Construction Capability
- Financial Structuring
- Supply Chain Management
- Architecture & Design Excellence
Hermitage’s current projects reflect the application of
its Integrated Program Management approach
across multiple housing typologies and
regulatory environments.
10794 Yonge St – Highrise (Under Development)
173 Charlotte St – Conversion (Under Construction)
31 Sand Rd – Sub-division (Under Development)
Completed Projects
Investment Philosophy
Successful projects begin with alignment between site potential and the long-term direction of cities and municipalities.
Hermitage evaluates opportunities through detailed interpretation of:
- Official Plans
- Secondary Plans
- zoning frameworks
- intensification corridors
- municipal housing priorities
- transit-oriented development structures such as MTSA areas
This ensures projects are positioned within future urban structure rather than short-term market conditions alone.
Early alignment with planning direction reduces entitlement uncertainty and strengthens implementation readiness.
Disciplined feasibility analysis transforms planning potential into implementable development opportunities.
Hermitage applies advanced financial modelling adapted from leading North American practices and calibrated to evolving lending environments, including institutional and CMHC-supported frameworks.
This supports:
- realistic delivery timelines
- sensitivity to regulatory and financing conditions
- balanced exposure across approval stages
- alignment between construction strategy and capital readiness
Strong feasibility alignment improves predictability across the development lifecycle.
Architecture and construction strategy are introduced early to maintain consistency between planning intent, technical feasibility, and implementation timelines.
This coordination supports:
- architectural alignment with neighbourhood context
- integration of prefabrication and off-site construction methods where appropriate
- BIM-supported coordination across consultant teams
- improved schedule reliability during approvals and delivery
Design and delivery are treated as structural components of project definition rather than late-stage refinements.
Development is evaluated as part of a longer operational lifecycle rather than a single construction phase.
Hermitage considers:
- operational adaptability
- rental and ownership positioning flexibility
- neighbourhood compatibility
- resilience to regulatory and market change
- contribution to long-term urban structure
This approach supports projects that remain relevant as cities evolve over time.
Hermitage approaches development through early coordination of planning alignment, feasibility conditions, and delivery strategy to reduce uncertainty across project stages.
Risk management focuses on:
- alignment with municipal and provincial planning priorities
- sensitivity to evolving financing environments
- coordination of consultant inputs during development applications
- integration of construction methodology at early stages
- evaluation of implementation timing within broader market cycles
By addressing these factors at the program-definition stage, Hermitage improves clarity across approvals, delivery, and long-term positioning.
Hermitage evaluates project feasibility through structured financial analysis designed to support responsible decision-making across development stages.
Feasibility models incorporate:
- construction cost dynamics
- regulatory requirements
- lender conditions and underwriting expectations
- infrastructure alignment
- market absorption scenarios
This analytical framework supports disciplined project selection and helps ensure that opportunities remain aligned with implementation conditions throughout the development process.
Successful projects begin with alignment between site potential and the long-term direction of cities and municipalities.
Hermitage evaluates opportunities through detailed interpretation of:
- Official Plans
- Secondary Plans
- zoning frameworks
- intensification corridors
- municipal housing priorities
- transit-oriented development structures such as MTSA areas
This ensures projects are positioned within future urban structure rather than short-term market conditions alone.
Early alignment with planning direction reduces entitlement uncertainty and strengthens implementation readiness.
Disciplined feasibility analysis transforms planning potential into implementable development opportunities.
Hermitage applies advanced financial modelling adapted from leading North American practices and calibrated to evolving lending environments, including institutional and CMHC-supported frameworks.
This supports:
- realistic delivery timelines
- sensitivity to regulatory and financing conditions
- balanced exposure across approval stages
- alignment between construction strategy and capital readiness
Strong feasibility alignment improves predictability across the development lifecycle.
Architecture and construction strategy are introduced early to maintain consistency between planning intent, technical feasibility, and implementation timelines.
This coordination supports:
- architectural alignment with neighbourhood context
- integration of prefabrication and off-site construction methods where appropriate
- BIM-supported coordination across consultant teams
- improved schedule reliability during approvals and delivery
Design and delivery are treated as structural components of project definition rather than late-stage refinements.
Development is evaluated as part of a longer operational lifecycle rather than a single construction phase.
Hermitage considers:
- operational adaptability
- rental and ownership positioning flexibility
- neighbourhood compatibility
- resilience to regulatory and market change
- contribution to long-term urban structure
This approach supports projects that remain relevant as cities evolve over time.
Hermitage approaches development through early coordination of planning alignment, feasibility conditions, and delivery strategy to reduce uncertainty across project stages.
Risk management focuses on:
- alignment with municipal and provincial planning priorities
- sensitivity to evolving financing environments
- coordination of consultant inputs during development applications
- integration of construction methodology at early stages
- evaluation of implementation timing within broader market cycles
By addressing these factors at the program-definition stage, Hermitage improves clarity across approvals, delivery, and long-term positioning.
Hermitage evaluates project feasibility through structured financial analysis designed to support responsible decision-making across development stages.
Feasibility models incorporate:
- construction cost dynamics
- regulatory requirements
- lender conditions and underwriting expectations
- infrastructure alignment
- market absorption scenarios
This analytical framework supports disciplined project selection and helps ensure that opportunities remain aligned with implementation conditions throughout the development process.
Asset Class
Hermitage focuses on development environments where alignment with municipal priorities, delivery coordination, and disciplined feasibility analysis can improve execution certainty and long-term performance. Rather than approaching projects only through building typologies, we evaluate opportunities through their relationship to planning frameworks, infrastructure readiness, financing conditions, and community context.
Conversion projects represent an important pathway for improving the productivity of existing buildings and underutilized sites.
Hermitage evaluates conversion opportunities aligned with programs such as CMHC’s MLI Select initiative, where repositioning existing structures can accelerate housing delivery while benefiting from embedded infrastructure and established neighbourhood conditions. These projects are assessed through regulatory alignment, feasibility modelling, and delivery coordination to improve implementation readiness and long-term operational performance.
Mid-rise and missing-middle housing play a central role in addressing evolving housing needs across Ontario.
Hermitage evaluates multi-residential opportunities through corridor intensification strategies, neighbourhood transition conditions, transit accessibility, and municipal housing priorities. These projects are positioned to support stable long-term integration within existing communities while responding to regional supply objectives.
Multiplex housing initiatives in the City of Toronto represent another active direction for the organization. Hermitage’s development team coordinates zoning interpretation, permitting strategy, and regulatory compliance, while internal feasibility analysis supports alignment with CMHC financing structures and evolving housing policy frameworks.
High-rise developments require careful coordination between planning frameworks, financing conditions, construction methodology, and long-term asset positioning.
Hermitage positions tower developments within transit-supported intensification corridors, including Major Transit Station Areas and municipal growth zones identified through Official Plans and Secondary Plans. These projects are evaluated through integrated feasibility modelling and regulatory alignment to support resilient delivery pathways.
Low-rise neighbourhood development remains an important component of balanced regional growth.
Hermitage evaluates these opportunities through infrastructure readiness, environmental context, and long-term community integration. Projects are positioned to contribute not only housing supply but also landscape continuity, public accessibility, and neighbourhood identity.
Commercial space supports the economic continuity required for complete communities.
Hermitage evaluates opportunities within employment corridors, mixed-use intensification areas, and adaptive workspace environments that strengthen neighbourhood performance alongside residential growth.
Conversion projects represent an important pathway for improving the productivity of existing buildings and underutilized sites.
Hermitage evaluates conversion opportunities aligned with programs such as CMHC’s MLI Select initiative, where repositioning existing structures can accelerate housing delivery while benefiting from embedded infrastructure and established neighbourhood conditions. These projects are assessed through regulatory alignment, feasibility modelling, and delivery coordination to improve implementation readiness and long-term operational performance.
Mid-rise and missing-middle housing play a central role in addressing evolving housing needs across Ontario.
Hermitage evaluates multi-residential opportunities through corridor intensification strategies, neighbourhood transition conditions, transit accessibility, and municipal housing priorities. These projects are positioned to support stable long-term integration within existing communities while responding to regional supply objectives.
Multiplex housing initiatives in the City of Toronto represent another active direction for the organization. Hermitage’s development team coordinates zoning interpretation, permitting strategy, and regulatory compliance, while internal feasibility analysis supports alignment with CMHC financing structures and evolving housing policy frameworks.
High-rise developments require careful coordination between planning frameworks, financing conditions, construction methodology, and long-term asset positioning.
Hermitage positions tower developments within transit-supported intensification corridors, including Major Transit Station Areas and municipal growth zones identified through Official Plans and Secondary Plans. These projects are evaluated through integrated feasibility modelling and regulatory alignment to support resilient delivery pathways.
Low-rise neighbourhood development remains an important component of balanced regional growth.
Hermitage evaluates these opportunities through infrastructure readiness, environmental context, and long-term community integration. Projects are positioned to contribute not only housing supply but also landscape continuity, public accessibility, and neighbourhood identity.
Commercial space supports the economic continuity required for complete communities.
Hermitage evaluates opportunities within employment corridors, mixed-use intensification areas, and adaptive workspace environments that strengthen neighbourhood performance alongside residential growth.
About
1. Why Hermitage Exists
Hermitage was established in response to the growing complexity of housing delivery in Ontario and other rapidly evolving urban environments.
Based on careful analysis of the housing and real estate landscape, we recognize that today’s housing challenges are shaped not only by external pressures such as regulatory costs, approval processes, and development charges, but also by fragmented approaches within the private sector—ranging from misalignment with planning policies to inefficient construction methods and disconnected decision-making across development stages.
At the core of Hermitage’s work is a commitment to creating a meaningful sense of place. This principle reflects the diverse communities and immigrant cultures that shape our region and serves as an essential foundation for long-term urban quality and resilient city building.
2. What Hermitage Is
Hermitage operates in the real estate and housing sector through an integrated framework designed to address the full lifecycle of complex development projects. Across each stage of a project, we apply established best practices where appropriate and introduce innovative methods where improved outcomes for stakeholders require new approaches.
Hermitage’s work is structured across several coordinated roles:
- Program manager through its Integrated Program Management (IPM) approach
- Development platform guided by urban strategies and planning alignment
- Owner’s representative across complex projects
- Investment analysis and feasibility coordination framework
- Construction coordination supported by innovative approaches such as prefabrication and off-site methods
- Holding structure supporting long-term project participation
Instead of treating planning, financing, design, and construction as separate and fragmented phases, Hermitage restructures these traditionally disconnected processes into one coordinated system—improving productivity, strengthening alignment with urban policy directions, and increasing execution certainty across the project lifecycle.
In practical terms, Hermitage defines and creates structured development opportunities through careful alignment with provincial and municipal urban priorities.
Our process begins with land selection informed by planning direction across the Greater Toronto Area, including walkability frameworks, transit-oriented development requirements such as MTSA areas, parking strategies, and long-term intensification policies. Each opportunity is evaluated through detailed due diligence supported by both macro- and micro-level market analysis.
Financial feasibility is tested using advanced modeling frameworks adapted from leading North American real estate practices and enhanced with AI-supported analysis. These models allow us to respond sensitively to evolving requirements from major lenders and housing agencies such as CMHC, ensuring that projects remain aligned with current financing environments.
From permitting through construction planning, Hermitage works to coordinate closely with municipalities and regulatory bodies. Rather than approaching approvals as obstacles, we treat them as part of a collaborative process that improves project certainty and long-term urban integration.
Through this approach, Hermitage transforms planning intelligence, financial discipline, and delivery coordination into well-positioned development opportunities
3. Leadership and Team
Alireza Pourrezaei
Founder — Civil Engineer and entrepreneur with over 30 years of experience in real estate development and construction leadership.
Alireza Valipouri
Structural Engineer and project management specialist with 25 years of experience in major construction project delivery.
Shahram Haddadi
Architect with a Master’s degree in Architecture and 25 years of experience in architectural coordination and built environment development.
Reza Azizi
Mechanical Engineer with an MBA in Technology and Innovation Management and 20 years of experience in business development and strategic coordination.
Ali Davarpanah
Structural Engineer with 25 years of experience in construction systems and implementation oversight.
“Hoo… Hoo-Hoo”