Key takeaways
- Condominium boards spend $3-7K annually per tower on lobby-plaza repair from grind damage — and that's before counting the board-meeting drama when residents see the damage and demand action.
- We work with major Canadian condo property managers (FirstService Residential, Crossbridge, Del Property Management, Wilson Blanchard) as well as direct condo board engagements.
- Standard condo deployment includes board-presentation deck, weekend install scheduling, and resident-communication template so the board can manage the rollout cleanly.
How the condo decision actually gets made
Condo skate-stopper deployments are board-driven, not facilities-driven. A resident notices grind damage, complains to the board, the board chair adds it to the next meeting agenda, and now you have 5-9 board members debating a property-management decision they have no domain expertise in. We support this process with a standardized board-presentation deck — 10 slides covering problem photos, lifecycle costs, install timeline, and resident-communication template — that the property manager can present without further homework.
Common condo deployment locations
The two highest-frequency targets in condos are lobby-entrance plaza ledges and underground-garage entry walls. Lobby plazas suffer because they're publicly visible from the street — drawing skaters from outside the property. Garage entries suffer because they're secluded enough that skaters feel unobserved. Both locations are owner-of-record property (not city sidewalk), so the condo corporation has full authority to install deterrents without municipal approval.
Pool deck and amenity-floor seating
Newer luxury towers (especially in Toronto's CityPlace, Vancouver's Olympic Village, and Montréal's Griffintown) include pool decks, fitness terraces, and rooftop amenity floors with continuous bench seating. These are high-prestige amenities where any visible deterrent damages the resident perception of the property. We deploy flush-mount studs in polished mirror finish that integrate visually — invisible to swimming residents, blocking to skaters.
Financial reserves and special assessments
Condo corporations can fund deterrent retrofits from operating budget (under $5K typically) or reserve fund (larger projects). For projects over $25K, we provide a reserve-fund justification memo that property managers can submit to the corporation's reserve fund study consultant — this lets the board fund the work without a special assessment vote, which is politically much easier.
Procurement timing for Canadian municipalities
Most Canadian municipal procurement cycles run on a 3-year capital plan, with skate-deterrent installs typically scheduled in the spring/fall window after frost has cleared. We respond to RFP requests within 5 business days and carry stamped engineering for every climate zone. Bonded crews work prevailing-wage municipal contracts across Ontario, BC, Alberta, and Quebec.