Sam Mizrahi

Birth Year 1971

Birthplace Tehran, Iran

Age 53 years old

Nationality Canada

#54471 Most Popular

1971

Sam Mizrahi (סם מזרחי, born 1971) is an Iranian-born Canadian real estate developer who is active in Toronto.

Mizrahi is currently the president of a number of corporations, including Mizrahi Developments, Mizrahi Inc. and Mizrahi Enterprises Inc. He is best known for being the developer of The One skyscraper at the intersection of Yonge and Bloor streets in Toronto.

Mizrahi was born in Tehran in 1971 to Iranian Jewish parents, Shamoil and Ziba Mizrahi.

His father was a business owner who owned and operated shops in the famous market of Tehran.

1977

The family immigrated to Canada in 1977, two years before the Iranian Revolution, when Mizrahi was six years old.

1992

In 1992, Mizrahi formed a dry cleaning company known as Dove Cleaners.

2004

DoveCorp, as it came to be known in 2004, operated both in retail dry cleaning and commercial linen cleaning.

2005

Mizrahi listed the company on the TSX Venture Exchange in 2005 and ran it until 2007, when it filed for restructuring.

Mizrahi is the founder and President of Mizrahi Developments, a real estate developer that has developed projects in Toronto that include 133 Hazelton, 181 Davenport, 128 Hazelton and Forest Hill Jewish Centre, and 1451 Wellington in Ottawa.

2011

In 2011, Mizrahi started development of his first condominium project, a 9-story building in Toronto known as 133 Hazelton Residences.

2014

Three years later, in 2014, he made headlines when he purchased land at the southwest corner of Yonge Street and Bloor Street for development of what he called "The One", the tallest residential building in Canada.

Proposed as an 91-story residential skyscraper with multi-level retail at the base, "The One" will be the tallest condominium tower in Canada, according to Mizrahi.

Mizrahi paid over $300 million for the land acquisition alone.

The total cost for the project is reported to be $1 billion.

Mizrahi hired the London-based Foster and Partners as the design architect, and Core Architects as the local architect.

He travelled to London to design the building using an exoskeleton structure.

The building's design and height have gone through multiple revisions; most recently, the expensive exoskeleton structure was removed from the tower and limited to the podium of the building.

Set to replace Stollerys as the podium tenant is Toronto's new Apple Store with approxintely 19,000 square feet of ground floor retail space, superseding Apple's current store at Eaton Centre.

The One's designer Foster and Partners also designed Apple's stores in Chicago, Miami, Hong Kong and Macau.

According to photographer Pedro Marques, the store will feature a three-story vaulted ceiling with a cantilevered mezzanine over the main floor, a build which was complicated by Apple's requirements that there be no interior columns, and will be fronted by three-story glass panels.

Manufactured in Gersthofen, Germany, each glass panel measures over 2.3 meters wide, 11.5 meters high and 10.9 centimeters thick, with eight sheets of laminated glass.

Construction of The One was plagued by delays and cost increases.

The project was placed in receivership by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in October 2023.

The project's total debt was reported at $1.7 billion.

On October 18, 2023, it was announced the project received an additional $315 million in funding to go towards ongoing construction and development costs.

In December 2023, The One reached skyscraper status having crossed the 150-metre threshold in its construction.

At this height it is over halfway towards its full height.

Once complete it will include 647 residential units along with hotel and retail spaces.

Mizrahi is an active supporter of Israel and a member of the UJA, and has managed and participated in the annual Walk With Israel parade in Toronto.

He is also on the board of directors of the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies.

2015

In 2015, Toronto Life named him the 45th most influential person in Toronto.