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The Toronto home where world champion Kurt Browning hangs his skates

(5 months ago)
Carolyn Ireland
Toronto

AI Summary

TL;DR: Key points with love ❤️

Figure skating legend Kurt Browning and his wife Alissa Czisny are selling their contemporary three-bedroom home on Soudan Avenue in midtown Toronto, which Browning purchased in 2015, and are planning to move to the Niagara Peninsula to build a country retreat. The article details the features of the home and Browning's life there with his sons and wife.

  1. 1 1988: Kurt Browning becomes first skater to land a quadruple jump in competition in Budapest.
  2. 2 2015: Kurt Browning purchases the Soudan Avenue home in Toronto.
  3. 3 2022: Kurt Browning marries Alissa Czisny.
  4. 4 During COVID pandemic: Couple uses home gym extensively.
  5. 5 Currently: Browning and Czisny are selling their Toronto home.
  6. 6 Future: They plan to move to the Niagara Peninsula, build a country retreat, continue coaching/choreography, and Browning will commentate at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
  • Browning and Czisny will relocate
  • pursue new ventures in adult skating coaching/choreography
  • Browning will continue as a TV commentator for the 2026 Winter Olympics
What: Kurt Browning and Alissa Czisny selling their Toronto home and planning a move to the Niagara Peninsula.
When: Purchased in 2015, married in 2022, currently selling and planning to move.
Where: 397 Soudan Ave., Toronto (current home); Niagara Peninsula (future home); Budapest (1988 event); Edmonton (past training).
Why: Browning's sons have graduated and moved on, changing his parenting duties, and he and Czisny are transitioning to a new phase of life, including coaching and choreography for adult skating, and winding down.
How: By listing their Toronto home for sale and planning to build a new home.

Figure skating legend Kurt Browning and his wife Alissa Czisny are selling their contemporary three-bedroom home on Soudan Avenue in midtown Toronto, which Browning purchased in 2015, and are planning to move to the Niagara Peninsula to build a country retreat. The article details the features of the home and Browning's life there with his sons and wife.