Downtown Markham and the York University Campus Effect — What It Means for Condo Buyers
When a university establishes a permanent campus in a neighbourhood, real estate is permanently altered — as Waterloo and Midtown Toronto demonstrate. York University's Markham Campus, now in its second full year, is exerting that same force on Downtown Markham. Michael John Lau & Neeraj Moolchandani map the transformation.
There is a pattern in urban real estate that repeats across cities worldwide: when a university establishes a permanent campus in a neighbourhood, the surrounding real estate market is permanently altered. The University of Waterloo in Kitchener-Waterloo helped transform that city into a technology startup hub. The University of Toronto’s expansion contributed to the transformation of Midtown Toronto. York University’s Markham Campus — now in its second full academic year after opening in Spring 2024 — is beginning to exert the same force on Downtown Markham.
Michael John Lau and Neeraj Moolchandani, top real estate agents in Markham Ontario, are tracking every dimension of this transformation. Here is what it means for condo buyers today.
What the York University Campus Brings to Downtown Markham
York University’s Markham Campus at Birchmount Road and Enterprise Boulevard is a $275.5 million, 10-storey facility housing graduate-level and professional programs from the Faculty of Science (AI, machine learning, data science), the Lassonde School of Engineering, and the Schulich School of Business (technology management, digital transformation). The campus includes suite-style residences — but falls well short of housing the growing student and faculty population, routing the remainder to Downtown Markham’s condo and rental market.
The campus generates three distinct categories of housing demand:
- Direct student housing demand: graduate students and professional program participants who need accommodation within a practical commute of campus — typically older, more financially stable, and more demanding in housing quality than undergraduates.
- Faculty and staff housing demand: professors, researchers, administrators, and support staff who work full-time at the campus and want to live near their workplace.
- Commercialization ecosystem demand: the startup founders, AI researchers, and tech company employees who cluster around any university research ecosystem and who need housing near the employment hub they are building.
Each category is end-user demand — people who need to be in this specific location because of where they work, learn, or build their careers. End-user demand is more durable than investor demand because it does not evaporate when capital markets shift or yield calculations change.
How the York U Effect Shows Up in Downtown Markham Condo Data
Sales agents at Gallery Towers, UnionCity, and Pangea Condos report a meaningful proportion of purchasers specifically motivated by university proximity — graduate students purchasing with family support as a housing alternative to renting, York University employees purchasing within walking distance of their workplace, and technology professionals whose companies have established relationships with York University’s research programs.
Mid-term rental investors in Downtown Markham are specifically targeting York University’s graduate student and visiting faculty population. A furnished two-bedroom unit in Gallery Towers or UnionCity, listed with a 30-night minimum on Airbnb and Furnished Finder, achieves $3,500 to $4,200 per month from university-affiliated tenants on academic-year rental cycles — well above the $2,600 to $2,900 achievable on a standard long-term unfurnished lease.
Evaluate the 10-Year Location Thesis with the Team That Knows It Best
Michael John Lau & Neeraj Moolchandani provide current, independently researched analysis on Downtown Markham’s condo market for buyers evaluating the York University location thesis.
Book a Downtown Markham Consultation (647) 370-8885The Long-Term University Effect — What Toronto’s History Shows
The transformation of Bloor-Annex and Midtown Toronto by the University of Toronto’s expansion did not happen overnight. It happened over decades as the university’s physical presence, student population, faculty community, and commercialization activity gradually concentrated housing demand, retail development, and cultural programming in the surrounding neighbourhoods.
York University’s Markham Campus is in year two of what will be a multi-decade institution-building process. The condo buyers who purchase in Downtown Markham in 2026 are not buying a one-year investment thesis. They are buying a ten-to-twenty year location thesis — betting that York University’s campus, Microsoft’s data centre, the IndyCar race, and the Remington Group’s master plan collectively transform Downtown Markham into one of the GTA’s most compelling urban residential addresses over the next decade. The evidence that this transformation is already underway is visible in the campus, the circuit, the towers, and the York U students walking to class through Remington’s public art installations on Enterprise Boulevard.
Michael John Lau and Neeraj Moolchandani, top real estate agents in Markham Ontario, provide current, independently researched analysis on Downtown Markham’s condo market for buyers evaluating this investment thesis.
Michael John Lau and Neeraj Moolchandani are licensed REALTOR®s and members of the Kaizen Real Estate Team at eXp Realty (eXp Luxury), serving buyers and sellers in Markham, Ontario and across York Region. Licence #4784577. Office: 8763 Bayview Avenue #127, Richmond Hill, ON. This blog is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Rental income is not guaranteed and will vary with market conditions.
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