Sudbury's old Northern Breweries eyed to become loft apartments - Action News
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Sudbury's old Northern Breweries eyed to become loft apartments

One of Sudbury's ugliest eyesores is about to become one of the city's most ambitious projects.

Ambitious developer Greg Oldenburg needs 50 people to commit with a deposit

An abandoned building
The old Northern Breweries building on Lorne Street in Sudbury is set to be developed into 50 loft apartments. (Erik White/CBC)

One ofSudbury'sugliest eyesores is about to become one of the city's most ambitious projects.

Greg Oldenburg, aSudbury-borndeveloper now based in Torontohopes to turnthe 107-year-oldNorthern Breweries building onLorneStreet into loft apartments. He bought thelandmark building for $850,000.

Standing in a freshly swept loading bay of the echoing century-old brewery, he unveiled his plans for the newBrewer Lofts on Wednesday morning.

Oldenburg envisions as many as 50 loft apartments, a rooftop bar with a sauna, a ground-level cafe, a contemporary art gallery, some commercial space he thinks would be great for another brewery, plus more space still to spare in the 60,000 square footfactory.
Greg Oldenburg, a Sudbury-born developer, has bought this Sudbury landmark for $850,000. (Erik White/CBC )

Some of the building would be demolished, Oldenburg said, to make way for a new eight-storey addition, where about half of the lofts would be housed.

Asked how much it will cost to make those plans a reality, Oldenburg answered with a figure of $12 million, but admitted that it could be much more than that.

"You know at any point, there may be a point where all this stops," he said."Where I just go 'This is way more complicated and fundamentally way more expensive than I think anybody could have ever imagined.'"

Advised not to buy building

That's what happened to the last owner.Druve Sookrambought the old brewery in 2010, aiming to turn it into a depot for his tour bus company.

He told CBC News last year that he had run out of money and had to sell.

"I found out that it's a lot more demanding than I had expected," Sookramsaid in March 2013.
Greg Oldenburg envisions 50 loft apartments, a rooftop bar, an art gallery, and much more, for the old Northern Breweries building in Sudbury. (Erik White/CBC )

Oldenburg will discover in the coming months if his dreams for Northern Breweries will sink or soarbut, for now, he's optimistically aiming to open the doors to tenants by the end of 2016.

He saidhe was advised not to buy it in the first place.

"Some told me you don't want to do this. It's way too expensive," said Oldenburg, who grew up in Sudbury's Minnow Lake neighbourhood.

"But the price I have it at allows me to at least go forward without knowing I'm into it $5-10 million just to buy the building."

Like most condominium projects, he said he needs people to buy the lofts before he can transform the old brewery.

"Fundamentally I need to have 50 people come forward and say yes, here's my deposit. I believe in what you're doing. I love it. And I'm willing to wait two years for it to be built. So there's a certain amount of momentum you need for these types of projects."