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Olympics'on housing could last umtil 2031
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 15 November 2006
Nov 15, 2006

Olympics'on housing could last umtil 2031

British Columbia's southwest region can expect the 2010 Winter Olympics to deliver a four-per-cent kick to housing growth, economist David Baxter said Tuesday.

Baxter, speaking to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s annual housing outlook conference, said the impact will be marginal, "not transformative." The increase in home construction -- above what would have been expected without the Games -- could last until 2031.

It will be driven by people moving into the region for jobs created by Olympic-related spending, and then from the "legacy effects" felt from the promotion of Vancouver.

Canada Mortgage and Housing commissioned Baxter's Urban Futures Institute and CitySpaces Consulting Ltd. to study the potential impact the Olympics could have on demand for housing from 2006 until the event, and beyond.

Baxter said their study estimated that by 2031, B.C.'s southwest, which includes Greater Vancouver and the Sea to Sky corridor, will have drawn 94,000 more people looking for work than it would have if the games weren't here.

Those workers, along with dependents, will give the overall population a boost of 152,000.

Housing those people, Baxter said, will require 27,000 more houses, 13,600 more townhouses and 20,500 more apartments. In total, the housing growth works out to be about four-per-cent higher than if Vancouver and Whistler weren't hosting the games.

"Are the games a big deal?" Baxter said. "They make a positive contribution to [the economy], but they're not transformative."

He noted that the Vancouver-Whistler region will be the largest area with the biggest economy to ever host the Winter Olympics, so "we're going to absorb [the games] and move on."

Baxter added that critics are right in saying that there are a lot of other things that governments could spend money on than the games, but they likely would not have spent as much in absence of the Olympics and likely not all in B.C.

Baxter said the construction stimulated by the games is "the real issue . . . which brings a lot of people who would otherwise go to [Alberta's] oilpatch."

Then, more importantly, is the role the games' play in reinforcing Vancouver as a brand, because "the Olympics is not a destination event, it's a branding event."

Canada Mortgage and Housing regional economist Carol Frketich said the agency commissioned the Olympics study as part of its mandate to research events or trends with a potential to affect housing markets.

To do the study, Baxter said the consultants studied the experiences of other host cities along with B.C.'s housing market data. The estimates included the use of an extrapolated, long-term trend for B.C.'s economic growth factoring in an estimate for Olympics-related spending.

Baxter said consultants used an estimate of $4.9 billion in direct, indirect and induced Olympics-related spending to host the games and related activities.

That figure was one scenario forecast by InterVISTAS Consulting in its cost-benefit scenario for the games.

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Mortgage helpers
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 23 October 2006

Condos with "mortgage helpers"

 may be answer to Vancouver's housing c

runch

John Bermingham, CanWest News Service; Vancouver Province

Published: Sunday, October 22, 2006
 

VANCOUVER -- For those caught in the real-estate crunch, a "mortgage helper in the sky" could be the answer to their prayers.

Real estate experts say apartments with built-in rental suites point to the future for families looking for new ways to pay the mortgage.

It's been a long-time practice to build rental basement suites in houses, but suites in condos are a new idea.

About 40 of the three-bedroom units have already been sold at the UniverCity project at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

UniverCity's President Michael Geller said owners get a three-bedroom condo, with one of the bedrooms designed as a self-contained suite.

Each 22.3-square-metre room has its own entrance off the main corridor, with a bed, bathroom and kitchen.

SFU students, who had been living around the campus in basement suites, snapped up the units.

"A lot of the students said these condos are all going to be for rich people, there won't be anywhere for students to live," Geller said.

"So I thought why couldn't we have basement suites in a condominium on the fifth floor."

Geller said the model could work around the Lower Mainland of B.C., where housing prices are among the highest in the country.

"The idea could apply everywhere," he said.

"Lots of people would buy a three-bedroom apartment, if maybe they could rent out that third bedroom for a while, until such time as their household is big enough.

"You know what I should call it? It's a mortgage-helper in the sky. It's a mortgage-helper, and it's a way of delivering affordable housing. It's just like the basement suite."

Intergulf Development Group, which built the condos, designed the flex-suites either to be rented out, or occupied by another family member who wanted some independence.

"That particular part of the unit is self-sufficient," said Intergulf spokesman Kais Samarrai.

"It has its own bathroom and kitchen, and it's connected through a door to the main space."

The condos are a mortgage-helper, Samarrai said, but they could also be bought by empty-nesters who want to downsize.

Urban experts hailed the idea at a forum on affordable housing design in Vancouver Friday.

Former Vancouver councillor Gordon Price said the renters get privacy and live separately from the apartment owners.

"You're going to have to be far more innovative so you have a mix, a different kind of range of housing," said Price.

"It may be that there are choices that will give people options to get into the market, or stay in housing that we wouldn't have had otherwise, because the option simply didn't exist."

Architect Bruce Haden said people in Vancouver have to get used to the idea they won't be able to afford a single-family home.

"What it does is build in housing flexibility, which is enormously important," said Haden. "It's not a solution, but it's certainly part of a solution."

Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan said his EcoDensity plan will put more housing units in the city, with a broader mix of options.

Sullivan said he would look at reducing parking-stalls in new condo buildings to reduce prices.

"What we need to do is make sure there are different sizes, throughout the different areas of the city, that we can make more housing available," said Sullivan.

"By increasing the supply, you will have a downward effect on the price."

Vancouver Province

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Olympics And The Poor
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 02 October 2006

 Vancouver city councillor wants to make sure poor aren't evicted as Olympics nears

VancouSeptember 30, 2006 - 11:15 pm

Vancouver (NEWS1130) -  People living in the American Hotel were facing eviction as of midnight, even though many tenants are legally allowed to stay.   Vancouver City Councillor Tim Stevenson says the city is breaking its word and he plans to bring an emergency motion to council on Tuesday to put a moratorium on the demolition of any more rooming houses. 

 He says the city is breaking its word, because it had promised to make sure there would not be any more evictions in the wake of the 2010 Olympics.  He says certain people are trying to cash in on rising real estate prices, and it ends up being at the expense of the city's most vulnerable.  Stevenson says these older hotels are in bad condition, but it provides shelter for our poor.  He says all levels of government should be putting in money to help find housing for those in need.

 
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