Blog

Benefits of a Gas Free Unit

{“type”:”elementor”,”siteurl”:”https://freure.com/wp-json/”,”elements”:[{“id”:”2a3aeccf”,”elType”:”widget”,”isInner”:false,”isLocked”:false,”settings”:{“editor”:” 200 Brantwood Park is a Gas Free Community,  \n Why Renting a Gas-Free Unit Could Be the Best Decision You Make \n When you’re searching for a rental in Brantford, you’re probably focused on the usual things: price, location, square footage, and whether there’s in-suite laundry. But there’s one feature that more renters are starting to pay attention to—and that most people overlook entirely on a listing: whether the unit runs on natural gas or electricity. If you’ve come across an all-electric, gas-free apartment or home for rent, here is why that might actually be a better deal than you think. \n   \n 1. One Less Bill to Deal With \n In a unit with gas appliances, you are typically responsible for two separate utility accounts: electricity through Brantford Power or Hydro One, and natural gas through Enbridge. That means two bills, two account setup fees, two monthly fixed charges, and two companies to call when something goes wrong. \n Enbridge charges a fixed monthly delivery fee just for having the gas service connected—regardless of how much gas you actually use. In the warmer months, when you’re not running the furnace, you may use almost no gas at all, yet you’re still paying that baseline charge. In a gas-free unit, that cost disappears entirely. You have one utility account, one bill, and one less administrative headache every month.  \n According to Engeryshop.com a typical annual residential gas bill in Ontario is around $1,200, which works out to about $100/month on average \n   \n 2. Cleaner Air Inside Your Home \n This one surprises a lot of people. Most of us grew up thinking gas stoves were just a normal, neutral part of cooking. But research has consistently shown that gas stoves release nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, and fine particulate matter into the air inside your home every time they’re used—even when the burner is just on a low simmer. \n In a small apartment or a unit with limited ventilation—common in older Brantford rental stock—these pollutants can accumulate to levels well above outdoor air quality standards. Studies have linked indoor gas combustion to higher rates of asthma, particularly in children, as well as other respiratory issues. An all-electric unit with an induction range produces zero combustion byproducts. The air in your kitchen stays clean, and you’re not adding pollutants to the space where you eat, cook, and spend time every day. \n   \n 3. Less Carbon Monoxide Risks \n Gas leaks and carbon monoxide exposure are real risks in any home with gas appliances. Carbon monoxide is odourless and colourless, which means a malfunctioning furnace or water heater can be dangerous before you even realize something is wrong. While landlords in Ontario are legally required to install carbon monoxide detectors in units with gas appliances, the safest version of this scenario is simply not having the risk in the first place. \n In a gas-free unit, there is no gas line, no pilot light, no combustion process happening inside your living space. An electric heat pump, induction stove, and heat pump water heater operate without any of the combustion-related risks that come with gas. For families with young children, seniors, or anyone with respiratory sensitivities, this is a meaningful safety advantage. \n   \n 4. More Consistent and Comfortable Heating \n If you’ve ever lived in a unit with gas forced-air heating, you know the cycle: a blast of hot air, then silence, then the temperature drops, then another blast. Modern heat pump systems work differently—they run more continuously at lower intensity, which means more even temperatures throughout the unit and less of that dry, stuffy air that comes with traditional gas furnaces. \n Heat pumps also double as air conditioning in the summer, which is increasingly important as Brantford summers get warmer. In a gas-heated unit, central air conditioning is often a separate add-on that may or may not be included. In a unit with a modern heat pump system, heating and cooling are integrated into one efficient system—and you benefit from both without needing two separate appliances. \n   \n 5. Lower Environmental Impact Without Any Extra Effort. \n Ontario’s electricity grid is one of the cleanest in North America. It is powered predominantly by nuclear and hydroelectric generation, which means that when you use electricity in Brantford, the carbon footprint of that energy is already very low. Simply by renting a gas-free unit, you are meaningfully reducing your household’s greenhouse gas emissions compared to a neighbour in a gas-heated unit—without any lifestyle changes, without buying anything, and without any additional cost. \n For renters who care about their environmental impact but feel limited in what they can change as a tenant, this matters. You may not be able to install solar panels or upgrade insulation in a rental, but choosing a gas-free unit is a straightforward, immediate way to reduce your footprint from day one. \n   \n 6. Cooking on Induction: Better Than You Expect \n A lot of people who cook have a sentimental attachment to gas stoves, and the hesitation around induction is understandable if you’ve never used one. But induction cooking has quietly become the preferred choice among professional chefs and home cooks who have made the switch. Induction burners heat up faster than gas, respond to temperature changes more precisely, and the cooktop surface itself stays cool to the touch—making spills much easier to clean and reducing the risk of burns. \n If the rental unit you’re considering has an induction range, give it a genuine chance. Most people who cook on induction regularly say they would not go back to gas. The learning curve is short, and the practical advantages in a rental kitchen—where you may not have a powerful ventilation hood—are significant given the absence of fumes and combustion gases. \n   \n 7. A Unit Built for the Future \n Canada and Ontario are moving steadily toward phasing out natural gas in buildings. Regulatory

Benefits of a Gas Free Unit Read More »

The Stars Are Aligning for Ontario Home Buyers

The Stars Are Aligning for Ontario Home Buyers — And Black Oaks Is Where You Want to Be If you’ve been waiting for the right moment to buy a new home in Ontario, that moment is now. A rare convergence of soft market pricing, historic tax relief, and sweeping government incentives has created a window of opportunity that simply didn’t exist twelve months ago — and may not stay open for long. At Freure Homes, we believe the best decision you can make right now is to step into the community we’ve been building at Black Oaks in Cambridge. Ontario’s real estate market has spent the last two years in a deep reset. Prices have pulled back from their pandemic peaks, listings are sitting longer, and buyers that have been waiting for an opportunity are in a great position to get into the market now. Simultaneously, both the provincial and federal governments have introduced a suite of incentives unprecedented in the province’s history — slashing HST on new homes, cutting development charges in half, and directing billions of dollars toward housing affordability. For buyers who move decisively, the financial rewards could be transformative. For buyers who choose Black Oaks, the lifestyle rewards will last a lifetime. A buyer’s market hiding in plain sight The data tells a clear story. Ontario entered 2026 with active listings at their highest level for February in over a decade, and the sales-to-new-listings ratio sat at just 39% — firmly in buyer’s market territory. Average resale prices declined roughly 6.7% year-over-year, and new home sales across the Greater Toronto Area closed out 2025 as the worst year on record. For cautious buyers, those headlines sound like a reason to wait. For savvy ones, they describe exactly the environment where long-term wealth is built. The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) projects that sales will begin rising across Ontario’s major centres in 2026 and continue trending upward through 2028, driven by improving affordability and pent-up demand. Prices are expected to recover in both 2027 and 2028, as tightening inventory meets stronger demand. In other words: today’s softness is tomorrow’s equity — and those who act now buy ahead of that recovery. $130K – Maximum HST relief on new homes up to $1.5M50%- Reduction in development charges for 3 years (city dependant)$8.8B -Federal-Ontario investment to support charge cuts The HST rebate: a once-in-a-generation tax break Effective April 1, 2026 and running through March 31, 2027, the Ontario and federal governments have jointly eliminated the full 13% HST on new homes valued up to $1 million. For homes priced between $1 million and $1.5 million, buyers receive a flat $130,000 tax reduction. This is the most generous housing tax relief in Ontario’s history — and Black Oaks townhomes, starting from the mid $700s, fall squarely within the maximum rebate range. What this means in real dollars On a $900,000 new home, the full 13% HST would normally add over $117,000 to your purchase cost. Under the current rebate window, that obligation is eliminated entirely — putting six figures back in your pocket before you’ve moved a single piece of furniture into your Black Oaks home. Industry groups have not been shy about characterizing these measures. The Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) and the Ontario Home Builders’ Association (OHBA) jointly called the rebate a “game changer” for the preconstruction sector. Historically, government fees, charges, and taxes have added 25–30% to the final price of a new home. Eliminating the HST doesn’t just make buying cheaper today — it fundamentally changes the economics of new homeownership. Development charges slashed in half — what it means for you On March 30, 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Doug Ford jointly announced the Canada–Ontario Partnership to Build: an $8.8 billion commitment over ten years enabling municipalities to cut development charges by as much as 50% for the next three years. Development charges are fees levied by municipalities and passed directly to buyers in the final price of a new home. Ontario carries some of the highest development charges in Canada. In many GTA and surrounding communities, they can represent tens of thousands of dollars embedded in the sticker price of a new build — costs that buyers pay without ever seeing them itemized. Cutting those charges by half flows through to lower base prices on new construction, improved viability for builders, and more supply entering the market over the coming years. The OHBA noted that in an environment where government fees have added 25–30% to the cost of a new home, halving development charges “will dramatically improve the viability of projects and enhance affordability.” For buyers at Black Oaks, this means a structurally better-priced product at a time when the incentive environment couldn’t be more favourable. Introducing Black Oaks by Freure Homes, Cambridge Black Oaks is Freure Homes’ newest townhome community, ideally situated in Cambridge’s desirable West Galt neighbourhood near 215 Blenheim Road. This thoughtfully planned community of 164 freehold and POTL (Parcel of Tied Land) townhomes combines the tranquility of low-rise living with exceptional access to everything Cambridge has to offer. With sizes ranging from 1,166 to 1,975 square feet and prices starting from the high $500s, Black Oaks is designed to meet the needs of first-time buyers, growing families, and real estate investors alike. Each home features open-concept floor plans, contemporary design, and high-end finishes — the hallmark of Freure quality that has defined the company since 1954. Black Oaks at a glance: • Location: 101 Queensbrook Crescent, Cambridge (Blenheim Rd & Queensbrook Crescent)• Home types: POTL towns• Pricing: Starting from the high $500s• Unit count: 164 homes• Size range: 1,166 – 1,975 sq ft• Bedrooms: 3–4 bedrooms, 2–3 bathrooms, 1 garage• Occupancy: 2026-2029 Location, lifestyle, and long-term value Cambridge is one of Ontario’s fastest-growing cities, and Black Oaks places residents at the heart of everything that makes it special. Situated just minutes from Victoria Park and Downtown Cambridge, and within easy reach of the Grand

The Stars Are Aligning for Ontario Home Buyers Read More »

First Time Homebuilders Rebates

First Time Homebuilders Rebates Up to $130,000 in HST Savings:What Ontario’s New HST Rebate Means for First-Time Home BuyersUpdated March 2026 — Federal Legislation Now Law If you have been waiting for the right moment to buy your first new home in Ontario, that moment may have just arrived. On March 12, 2026, the federal government’s Bill C-4 — the Making Life More Affordable for Canadians Act — received Royal Assent, officially making the First-Time Home Buyers’ GST/HST Rebate the law of the land. Combined with Ontario’s own proposed provincial HST rebate, eligible first-time buyers stand to save up to $130,000 on the purchase of a qualifying new home. This is not a small tax adjustment. This is one of the most significant housing affordability measures in a generation, and if you are a first-time buyer in Ontario, it pays to understand exactly what is available, how it works, and what you need to do to qualify. What Is the New HST Rebate? Historically, the purchase of a new home in Ontario was subject to 13% HST — a 5% federal portion and an 8% provincial portion. While a partial rebate existed for homes under certain price thresholds, buyers of more expensive new homes still faced a significant tax bill at closing. The new rebates change that picture dramatically for first-time buyers. Here is how the two layers of relief work together: The Federal Rebate: Bill C-4 eliminates 100% of the 5% federal GST on new homes valued up to $1 million for qualifying first-time buyers — a saving of up to $50,000. For homes priced between $1 million and $1.5 million, the rebate is gradually phased out. The Ontario Provincial Rebate: The Ontario government has proposed matching the federal measure by rebating the full 8% provincial portion of HST on new homes valued up to $1 million — a saving of up to $80,000. Combined with Ontario’s existing HST New Housing Rebate of up to $24,000, first-time buyers could effectively eliminate the entire provincial HST on a qualifying purchase. Together, for a first-time buyer purchasing a brand-new home at $1,000,000 in Ontario, the combined federal and provincial HST savings could reach $130,000. Even for a new home priced at $700,000, the combined savings would be approximately $91,000 — a transformative reduction in the cost of homeownership. ESTIMATED HST SAVINGS BY PURCHASE PRICEHome Purchase Price Estimated Total HST Savings$500,000 Up to $65,000$600,000 Up to $78,000$700,000 Up to $91,000$800,000 Up to $104,000$900,000 Up to $117,000$1,000,000 Up to $130,000$1,200,000 Partial rebate — phased out $1,500,000+ Minimum $24,000 (existing rebate only) Note: Estimates are approximate. Savings include both new federal and proposed Ontario provincial rebates combined with existing housing rebates. Subject to legislative approval. Important Update: Federal Law Is Now in Effect A crucial development for buyers: Bill C-4 received Royal Assent on March 12, 2026, meaning the federal GST rebate of up to $50,000 is now officially law. This is significant because it means eligible buyers who purchased a qualifying new home from a builder on or after March 20, 2025, can now formally apply to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) for their federal rebate. However, if your home’s ownership transferred before Royal Assent (i.e., before March 12, 2026), your builder was not able to credit the rebate directly at closing. In that case, you will need to apply to the CRA directly using Form GST190 — the GST/HST New Housing Rebate Application for Houses Purchased from a Builder. Do not delay in checking whether this applies to you, as there are filing deadlines. For buyers whose ownership transfers after Royal Assent, builders will be able to credit the federal rebate directly at closing, reducing your purchase price at the time of the transaction rather than requiring a separate application. Ontario’s provincial rebate is still pending its own enabling legislation. Once passed, it is expected to align with the federal framework, and eligible buyers will be able to claim both rebates together. Do You Qualify? The Eligibility Rules Explained Both the federal and proposed Ontario rebates have consistent eligibility criteria. Here is what you need to know: You must be at least 18 years old and a Canadian citizen or permanent resident at the time of purchase. You must be purchasing the home as your primary place of residence — investment properties and rental homes do not qualify. You must be a true first-time buyer, meaning you have not owned a primary residence — anywhere in the world — in the calendar year of the purchase or in any of the four preceding calendar years. For example, if you take ownership in 2026, you must not have owned a home in 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, or 2026. Your spouse or common-law partner must also not have owned a primary residence during your relationship. If they have previously claimed this rebate, you are no longer eligible. The rebate can only be claimed once per lifetime. It is not a program you can use on your second or third purchase. The purchase must be a newly built or substantially renovated home — resale properties do not qualify for these new rebates. Your agreement of purchase and sale must have been entered into on or after March 20, 2025 (for the federal rebate), with construction beginning before 2031 and the home substantially completed before 2036. Corporations cannot claim the rebate — all purchasers must be individuals. However, you can purchase with a non-first-time buyer, as long as you are a first-time buyer and will live in the home as your primary residence. What Types of Homes Qualify? The new rebates apply to newly constructed homes and substantially renovated homes only. This includes: • Brand-new detached homes, semi-detached homes, and townhomes purchased from a builder• New condominium units purchased from a developer• Homes that have been substantially renovated (where the renovation is so extensive the home is effectively treated as new construction for tax purposes)• Owner-built homes, subject to specific criteria including when construction began

First Time Homebuilders Rebates Read More »

Live Well. Live Smart

Live Well. Live Smart 200 Brantwood park road, BRANTFORD, ONTARIO – ENERGY-SMART LIVING Live Well. Waste Nothing. A new standard for rental homes in Brantford — designed from the ground up to keep you comfortable, cut your energy bills, and tread lightly on the planet. 0 Natural Gas Lines, 17 SEER Rating, Triple-Pane Windows, and 100% Electric WHY IT MATTERS Renting Smarter in Brantford When most people look for a rental, they weigh the rent, the location, and the layout. But there’s a hidden cost that rarely shows up on the listing: energy. Heating, cooling, and the quality of the building envelope can add hundreds — sometimes thousands — of dollars to what you actually pay to live somewhere each year. Our Brantford rental site was designed with that in mind. Every decision — from the insulation in the walls to the windows facing the sun to the heating and cooling system humming quietly in the background — was made to give you a home that performs. One that keeps you warm in January without breaking the bank, and cool in August without relying on an energy-hungry central air system from the 1990s. “The most sustainable building is one you actually want to live in.”We believe high-efficiency living shouldn’t be a luxury or a compromise. It should be the baseline — and that’s exactly what we’ve built. Zero Natural Gas. Full Stop. No gas lines. No gas bills. No carbon monoxide detectors mandated by a fossil fuel appliance. Our site runs entirely on electricity — cleaner, safer, and increasingly powered by Ontario’s low-carbon grid. As the grid gets greener, your home gets greener automatically. WHAT SETS US APART Built Different, By Design Triple-Pane, High Solar Heat Gain Windows Our windows don’t just block cold — they work for you. High solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) glazing is strategically chosen to let Ontario’s winter sun warm your home naturally, reducing how hard your heat pump needs to work on cold but sunny days. Three layers of glass mean dramatically less heat loss overnight and on cloudy days, cutting down on condensation and cold drafts near the glass. Insulation Above Ontario Building Code Building code sets a floor, not a target. We’ve gone beyond it. Extra insulation in the walls, roof, and foundation means the thermal envelope of your unit holds conditioned air in longer, requires less energy to heat or cool, and delivers noticeably more even temperatures room-to-room. No cold corners, no drafty walls — just a tight, quiet building that stays comfortable. All-Electric, Future-Ready Everything in the unit runs on electricity — no gas stove, no gas furnace, no gas water heater. That means one utility to manage, compatibility with time-of-use rate optimization, and a home that’s ready for whatever Ontario’s grid looks like in 10 years. As more renewable generation comes online, your home’s carbon footprint falls with it. Heat Pump Heating & Cooling A heat pump doesn’t generate heat — it moves it. That fundamental difference is why it can deliver 2 to 3 units of warmth for every unit of electricity consumed, far outperforming any gas furnace on efficiency. In summer, the same system reverses to provide cooling. One system, year-round comfort, extraordinary efficiency. THE TECHNOLOGY A Heat Pump Worth Talking About Not all heat pumps are created equal. We’ve specified the Midea ML18HP230LMNT-O outdoor unit paired with the Midea ML18HP230LMNTAHU-I air handler — a purpose-built ducted system sized for the demands of a Canadian climate. Here’s what those model numbers actually mean for your daily life: Outdoor Unit Midea ML18HP230LMNT-OAir Handler Midea ML18HP230LMNTAHU-ICapacity 1.5 Ton (18,000 BTU/hr)Cooling Efficiency 17 SEER — well above minimum standardsHeating Efficiency 8.8 HSPF — high-efficiency cold-climate ratedSystem Type Ducted split system — whole-home distributionFuel Source Electricity only — no combustion The 17 SEER rating means this unit is significantly more efficient than the 14–15 SEER systems found in most rentals. SEER measures cooling efficiency: a higher number means more cooling delivered per dollar of electricity consumed, particularly during Brantford’s humid summer months.The 8.8 HSPF (Heating Seasonal Performance Factor) is the heating equivalent. An HSPF of 8.8 means the system extracts and delivers substantial heat even as outdoor temperatures drop — a critical spec for Ontario winters where less capable systems struggle or rely on inefficient backup resistance heat.Paired with the above-code insulation and triple-pane windows, this system operates in an exceptionally well-sealed envelope — meaning it runs less, works less, and lasts longer, while keeping your unit at a steady, comfortable temperature throughout the year.The Real-World Picture What This Means for Your Monthly Bills Energy efficiency isn’t abstract — it shows up in your bank account. A well-insulated building with triple-pane windows loses heat much more slowly than a standard-code build, meaning your heating system runs fewer hours per day to maintain the same indoor temperature. Fewer run hours means less electricity consumed. Less electricity consumed means a lower bill. Add a 17 SEER / 8.8 HSPF heat pump into that envelope and the effect compounds. Where a standard electric baseboard system might deliver 1 unit of heat per unit of electricity, a heat pump at this efficiency level delivers closer to 2.5 to 3 units of heat for every unit of electricity — particularly in the shoulder seasons of fall and spring when Brantford temperatures are mild.And because there’s no natural gas connection at all, you’re not paying a monthly gas distribution charge even in months when you barely use any gas. One utility. Predictable. Simple.No gas bill. No connection charge. No combustion in your home. Ontario’s electricity grid is also among the cleanest in North America, with significant nuclear, hydroelectric, and growing renewable generation. When you heat your home with electricity here, you’re doing so with a much lower carbon intensity than burning natural gas directly — and that gap will only widen as Ontario’s grid continues to evolve. Live Better, Spend Less Brantford’s Most Energy-Efficient Rental If you’re looking for a rental in Brantford where the building

Live Well. Live Smart Read More »

Ontario Just Removed HST on New Homes

Ontario Just Removed HST on New Homes — Here’s What You Need to Know Big news for Ontario homebuyers and the construction industry: Premier Doug Ford announced this morning that the province is temporarily removing the full 13% Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) on new homes valued up to $1 million — and this time, it’s open to all buyers, not just first-timers. Here’s a complete breakdown of what was announced, who qualifies, and what it means for the Ontario housing market.   What Was Announced? Premier Ford held a news conference in Mississauga today confirming that Ontario, in partnership with the federal government, will eliminate the full 13% HST on new home purchases for a one-year window running from April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2027. This is a significant expansion of existing rebate programs. Previously, HST relief was targeted at first-time home buyers. Today’s announcement opens the rebate to all buyers of new homes in Ontario — whether you’ve owned a home before or not. For Future Freure home buyers that means a maximum savings? Up to $130,000 back in your pocket.   Who Qualifies? To be eligible for the full rebate, buyers must meet the following conditions: Purchase agreement signed between April 1, 2026 and March 31, 2027 The home must be used as a primary residence or residential rental property The home must be valued at $1 million or under for the full rebate Construction must begin on or before December 31, 2028 Construction must be substantially completed by December 31, 2031 If construction on your home began before March 31, 2026, you can still qualify — provided your purchase agreement is signed within the program window and construction wraps up by December 31, 2029. Contact Freure Homes to discover if you can qualify   What About Freure’s Larger Luxury homes? The full rebate applies to homes under $1 million, but buyers of pricier properties aren’t entirely left out:   Home Value Rebate Available Up to $1,000,000 Full rebate — up to $130,000 $1,000,000 – $1,500,000 Full rebate (up to $130,000) $1,500,000 – $1,850,000 Reduced / partial rebate Over $1,850,000 Pre-existing rebate of $24,000   How Is This Being Funded? Ontario is covering the 8% provincial portion of the HST, while the federal government has agreed to cover the 5% federal portion. Together, that wipes out the full 13%. The province estimates the program will cost Ontario approximately $1.4 billion in foregone tax revenue. However, the federal portion of the relief requires passage of federal legislation to be fully confirmed — so buyers should stay tuned for updates on that front.   What Does This Mean for Freure Homebuyers? The Ford government is banking on this measure to jumpstart a construction sector that has been struggling with high building costs and weak buyer demand. In Kitchener, Waterloo and surrounding areas, new condo sales have fallen to levels not seen in decades. The province estimates the rebate could: Stimulate 8,000 additional housing starts in Ontario over the next year Support up to 21,000 jobs in the construction and related industries Boost Ontario’s real GDP growth by $2.7 billion The Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) welcomed the announcement, calling it a move that will “significantly reduce upfront homeownership costs” and a major step toward unlocking affordability in Ontario’s housing market.   What Should Buyers Do Now? Ford was direct in his message to prospective buyers: “Please get everything together, you have one year… talk to your bankers and start buying the homes.” If you’re considering purchasing a newly built home in Ontario, here’s what to do: Speak to a mortgage broker or lender to understand what you can afford with the tax savings factored in. Consult a real estate lawyer to understand the timing requirements — particularly the April 1, 2026 start date for purchase agreements. Contact Freure Homes to explore new homes that qualify under the program. We are always here to help Watch for federal legislation confirming Ottawa’s portion of the rebate. The Bottom Line   Ontario’s one-year HST holiday on new home builds is one of the most significant housing affordability measures the province has introduced in years. With savings of up to $130,000 available to any buyer — not just first-timers — this is a rare window of opportunity in a market that has been tough for buyers and builders alike. The clock starts April 1, 2026. You have until March 31, 2027 to get a purchase agreement signed. Freure Homes,Discover Where you Belong   This blog post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional to understand how these changes apply to your specific situation. Rebate eligibility is subject to passage of applicable federal and provincial legislation Explore Our Gas Free Unit in BrantWood Discover our exceptional communities and new home developments in Brantford.

Ontario Just Removed HST on New Homes Read More »

Benefits of a Gas Free Unit

What Brantford Renters Need to Know Before Signing Their Next Lease 200 Brantwood Park is a Gas Free Community,  Why Renting a Gas-Free Unit Could Be the Best Decision You Make When you’re searching for a rental in Brantford, you’re probably focused on the usual things: price, location, square footage, and whether there’s in-suite laundry. But there’s one feature that more renters are starting to pay attention to—and that most people overlook entirely on a listing: whether the unit runs on natural gas or electricity. If you’ve come across an all-electric, gas-free apartment or home for rent, here is why that might actually be a better deal than you think.   1. One Less Bill to Deal With In a unit with gas appliances, you are typically responsible for two separate utility accounts: electricity through Brantford Power or Hydro One, and natural gas through Enbridge. That means two bills, two account setup fees, two monthly fixed charges, and two companies to call when something goes wrong. Enbridge charges a fixed monthly delivery fee just for having the gas service connected—regardless of how much gas you actually use. In the warmer months, when you’re not running the furnace, you may use almost no gas at all, yet you’re still paying that baseline charge. In a gas-free unit, that cost disappears entirely. You have one utility account, one bill, and one less administrative headache every month.  According to Engeryshop.com a typical annual residential gas bill in Ontario is around $1,200, which works out to about $100/month on average   2. Cleaner Air Inside Your Home This one surprises a lot of people. Most of us grew up thinking gas stoves were just a normal, neutral part of cooking. But research has consistently shown that gas stoves release nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, and fine particulate matter into the air inside your home every time they’re used—even when the burner is just on a low simmer. In a small apartment or a unit with limited ventilation—common in older Brantford rental stock—these pollutants can accumulate to levels well above outdoor air quality standards. Studies have linked indoor gas combustion to higher rates of asthma, particularly in children, as well as other respiratory issues. An all-electric unit with an induction range produces zero combustion byproducts. The air in your kitchen stays clean, and you’re not adding pollutants to the space where you eat, cook, and spend time every day.   3. Less Carbon Monoxide Risks Gas leaks and carbon monoxide exposure are real risks in any home with gas appliances. Carbon monoxide is odourless and colourless, which means a malfunctioning furnace or water heater can be dangerous before you even realize something is wrong. While landlords in Ontario are legally required to install carbon monoxide detectors in units with gas appliances, the safest version of this scenario is simply not having the risk in the first place. In a gas-free unit, there is no gas line, no pilot light, no combustion process happening inside your living space. An electric heat pump, induction stove, and heat pump water heater operate without any of the combustion-related risks that come with gas. For families with young children, seniors, or anyone with respiratory sensitivities, this is a meaningful safety advantage.   4. More Consistent and Comfortable Heating If you’ve ever lived in a unit with gas forced-air heating, you know the cycle: a blast of hot air, then silence, then the temperature drops, then another blast. Modern heat pump systems work differently—they run more continuously at lower intensity, which means more even temperatures throughout the unit and less of that dry, stuffy air that comes with traditional gas furnaces. Heat pumps also double as air conditioning in the summer, which is increasingly important as Brantford summers get warmer. In a gas-heated unit, central air conditioning is often a separate add-on that may or may not be included. In a unit with a modern heat pump system, heating and cooling are integrated into one efficient system—and you benefit from both without needing two separate appliances.   5. Lower Environmental Impact Without Any Extra Effort. Ontario’s electricity grid is one of the cleanest in North America. It is powered predominantly by nuclear and hydroelectric generation, which means that when you use electricity in Brantford, the carbon footprint of that energy is already very low. Simply by renting a gas-free unit, you are meaningfully reducing your household’s greenhouse gas emissions compared to a neighbour in a gas-heated unit—without any lifestyle changes, without buying anything, and without any additional cost. For renters who care about their environmental impact but feel limited in what they can change as a tenant, this matters. You may not be able to install solar panels or upgrade insulation in a rental, but choosing a gas-free unit is a straightforward, immediate way to reduce your footprint from day one.   6. Cooking on Induction: Better Than You Expect A lot of people who cook have a sentimental attachment to gas stoves, and the hesitation around induction is understandable if you’ve never used one. But induction cooking has quietly become the preferred choice among professional chefs and home cooks who have made the switch. Induction burners heat up faster than gas, respond to temperature changes more precisely, and the cooktop surface itself stays cool to the touch—making spills much easier to clean and reducing the risk of burns. If the rental unit you’re considering has an induction range, give it a genuine chance. Most people who cook on induction regularly say they would not go back to gas. The learning curve is short, and the practical advantages in a rental kitchen—where you may not have a powerful ventilation hood—are significant given the absence of fumes and combustion gases.   7. A Unit Built for the Future Canada and Ontario are moving steadily toward phasing out natural gas in buildings. Regulatory requirements are tightening, gas prices have historically trended upward over time, and the long-term direction is clear: electrification is where

Benefits of a Gas Free Unit Read More »

Our Founder

Building More Than Homes: The Legacy of Harold Freure How One Man’s Vision and Uncompromising Standards Shaped a Community:   In the world of home building, it is easy to talk about quality. It is far harder to live it — day after day, decade after decade, in every beam, every brick, and every handshake with a new homeowner. Harold Freure understood this distinction deeply. As the founder of Freure Homes, Harold did not simply build houses. He built a reputation, a community, and a legacy that continues to define what it means to deliver a truly quality new home in Ontario. For anyone who has ever walked through the door of a Freure home, there is a feeling that is difficult to articulate but impossible to miss. It is the feeling of craftsmanship — of knowing that the people who built this place actually cared. That feeling did not happen by accident. It was planted by Harold Freure himself, and it has grown into the very culture of the company he founded.   From the Ground Up: The Origins of a Builder   Harold Freure’s story is one that resonates with anyone who has ever built something from nothing. Rooted in the communities of Southern Ontario, Harold came of age with an appreciation for hard work, honest dealings, and the value of a well-made thing. He recognized early on that a home is not a product — it is a promise. A promise to a family that the place they would raise their children, celebrate their milestones, and find their rest at the end of a long day would be solid, safe, and worthy of the life being lived inside it.   When Harold founded Freure Homes, he brought with him not a business plan full of profit projections, but a set of values. Those values — quality, integrity, community, and respect for the homeowner — became the foundation upon which every Freure home would be built. In a competitive industry often tempted by shortcuts and cost-cutting, Harold chose a different path. He believed that doing things right, even when it cost more time or money, was simply non-negotiable.   A Standard That Would Not Be Compromised   What set Harold Freure apart from many of his contemporaries was not just his skill as a builder — it was his insistence on maintaining standards even under pressure. The building industry in Ontario grew rapidly through much of the latter half of the twentieth century, and with that growth came temptations to prioritize volume over value. Harold resisted.   He personally oversaw construction processes, walked job sites, and demanded the kind of attention to detail that he would want if it were his own family moving in. This was not micromanagement — it was mentorship. Harold taught the people around him to see what he saw: that every joint, every finish, every detail mattered because behind every detail was a person who had entrusted Freure Homes with one of the biggest investments of their life.   His standards were not arbitrary. They were rooted in a practical understanding of how a home performs over time. Harold knew that poor workmanship does not always reveal itself immediately — sometimes it takes years. And he knew that when it did reveal itself, it was the homeowner who bore the cost, the inconvenience, and the disappointment. That knowledge drove him to build homes that would not just impress on closing day, but would hold up beautifully for generations.   Community as a Cornerstone   Harold Freure understood something that many developers overlook: you are not just building a home, you are building a neighbourhood. The communities that Freure Homes created were designed with people in mind — their need for connection, for green space, for streets where children could play and neighbours could talk over the fence. This holistic view of homebuilding set Freure Homes apart and earned the company a loyalty among buyers that advertising alone could never manufacture.   There is a reason that Freure homeowners recommend the brand to their friends and family. It is because Harold built not just trust in the product, but trust in the people behind it. He was accessible, genuine, and deeply committed to the communities his company helped create. Many buyers who purchased their first Freure home eventually returned for their second or third, following the company through different life stages because they trusted the name.   Passing the Torch: A Legacy That Endures The true measure of a founder’s legacy is not what the company looks like while they are at the helm — it is what the company looks like after. Harold Freure built something lasting not just in wood and concrete, but in culture. The values he instilled — the commitment to quality, the respect for homeowners, the pride in workmanship — have been carried forward by the team at Freure Homes.   Today, Freure Homes continues to operate with that same founding spirit. Every new development, every model home, every closing day is shaped by the principles Harold established. New home buyers in the Cambridge, Brantford, and surrounding Southern Ontario areas continue to choose Freure Homes not because of flashy marketing, but because of a reputation earned one well-built home at a time — a reputation that Harold Freure spent a lifetime creating.   What Quality Means in a Freure Home   When people talk about quality in home construction, the conversation often stays at the surface — granite countertops, hardwood floors, nine-foot ceilings. Harold Freure understood that real quality goes far deeper. It lives in the things you never see: the insulation that keeps your energy bills manageable, the framing that gives your home its structural integrity, the waterproofing that means your basement stays dry through a Southern Ontario winter.   It also lives in the process. Quality homes require quality suppliers, quality tradespeople, and a builder who holds everyone to the same standard. Harold cultivated relationships with

Our Founder Read More »