

Artistry is your chance to live in the creative heart of the city. A luxurious new Toronto condo on Dundas Street West at McCaul Street. Overlooking the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Ontario College of Art and Design University, the best of urban culture is at your door. St. Patrick Subway Station is here too, providing easy connections around the city.


Artistry is an invitation to a more refined urban lifestyle. Its elegant silhouette adds a new dimension to the evolving artwork city's skyline. Inside, suites blend form and function. When you step into our majestic lobby, it’s like stepping into a true work of art. Elegant flourishes and eye-catching details create a space of remarkable contemporary grandeur. It’s a space that will leave a lasting first impression with your guests, and give you a little jolt of inspiration every time you come home.






Founded over 35 years ago, Tribute Communities is a Builder/Developer who has built more than 35,000 new homes and condominiums with a mission to create distinctive, visionary communities across Southern Ontario. The company's reputation has been earned through their architecturally distinct and exquisitely designed homes and condominiums ideally situated amongst the very finest streetscapes and communities. Beautifully appointed homes with many unique features and classic finishes that result in eminently liveable environments — that is the Tribute ideal. Our condominiums are expressions of a vibrant urban ethos, with iconic architecture, sophisticated designs and inspired lifestyle amenities. Whether living in an exquisite Tribute single family home or an elegant Tribute condominium, our customers can be sure of one thing: their home has been built by passionate people who truly care about bringing dreams to life. Some of our recent successes include The Reserve Collection at Danforth and Main, Y & S Condominiums at Yonge and Soudan, Stanley Condominiums at Church and Carlton, Max Condominiums near Church and Dundas, and The College at College and Spadina.
