-->

Condominium Manager Magazine

CM Magazine is the flagship quarterly publication of the Association of Condominium Managers of Ontario (ACMO) and for more than 30 years has served as the leading source of in-depth coverage of industry news, issues, information, education and best practices for condominium management professionals and service providers.

CM Magazine has a printed circulation of 7,000+ per issue and a digital circulation of approximately 400 views per issue.  The audience consists of Condominium Managers, Condominium Management Companies, Industry Services & Trades Providers, and Condominium Boards. 

Article submission is not open to the general public. ACMO members in good standing may contribute articles. From time to time we will reach out to the broader condominium industry and request articles from non-members and other industry experts (e.g. government partners, educational partners, legal experts), if the subject matter requires a distinctive perspective that cannot be addressed by an individual ACMO member or company.

To learn more about writing for CM Magazine, see our Editorial Guidelines.

To advertise in CM Magazine, check out the Advertising Opportunites page or email ads@acmo.org for more information. 

 
CM Magazine cover image

CM Magazine Library

Summer 2026 Issue

It's one year since the first round of legislative changes to the Condominium Act have been implemented. What is the impact on condominium managers and management companies? Read our thought-provoking articles to find out.

View PDF View Flipbook

Search Archives

Issue Archive
Article Categories

Showing Articles written by 'Kaezad Wania'


The True Cost of “Cost Savings”

Smart Procurement: Delivering Value Through Strategic Sourcing

Feature || Kaezad Wania

In condominium buildings, problems rarely begin as major failures. They often start quietly, an intermittent complaint about inconsistent heating, a system requiring more maintenance than expected, or equipment not performing as intended.


Designing for the Downpour: Adapting Condominium Drainage Infrastructure to Ontario’s Changing Rainfall Patterns

The Future of Condominium Management

Your Condo || Kaezad Wania, P.Eng.

Ontario's rainfall patterns are changing. Across the province, short, intense downpours are becoming more frequent, placing stress on building drainage systems that were never designed to handle such volume. For condominium buildings, the result is all too familiar: flooded basements, sump pump failures, backflow into sewer systems, and costly damage to mechanical, electrical and building infrastructure. The need to adapt is no longer a distant concern; it is a pressing reality.


A Property Managers Guide to Starting, Facilitating and Completing Capital Projects

The How-To Guide

Feature || Kaezad Wania

As of January 2021, there are reportedly over 11,000 condominium corporations across Ontario, with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation reporting that 55% of homes under construction in Ontario are condominiums. As the number of condominiums rises year after year, managers across the province are bound to experience managing the replacement of capital equipment projects sooner or later.