City of Seattle wants more eco-friendly ‘green roofs’

Perched 18 floors above Madison Street is a rooftop oasis. Capping the M Street Apartments are beds of crimson and tan grasses, corrugated metal tubs that hold still-green tomatoes and basil, and a woodchip-lined dog run. It’s a green roof to behold.

“It’s a huge selling point” for prospective renters, said Jennifer Farmer, a senior property manager for the building on Seattle’s First Hill. “There’s always a ‘wow’ when we come up here.”

But Seattle city leaders want to move past the “wow” factor for green roofs, and expand their use citywide. On Thursday they’re releasing a report that inventoried Seattle’s 62 vegetated roofs, which cover the equivalent of nine football fields.

“That’s a pretty big chunk of land,” said Seattle City Councilman Mike O’Brien. “(But) when you think about what’s possible in a city like Seattle, that’s just a drop in the bucket.”

The city’s 8 acres of green roofs and rooftop gardens account for less than 1/10 of 1 percent of roofs overall. The new report, which was a collaboration between Seattle and the University of Washington Green Futures Lab, explores the potential for and hurdles to increasing the number of planted roofs

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Written by: Lisa Stiffler
Date: September 23, 2010

Why I think the HST referendum date is bad for the provincial economy

Builders and renovators are concerned about the uncertainty caused by timing

To borrow a phrase from Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, B.C.’s HST saga keeps getting curiouser and curiouser.

There have been many twists and turns since this controversial tax was announced just over a year ago and implemented on July 1. I don’t recall another issue that has been as front and centre as HST.

The latest is the announcement of a referendum on Sept. 24, 2011, 364 days from today. That’s an eternity! In fact, according to B.C. vital statistics, about 32,000 British Columbians will die before the referendum takes place. And, ironically, their arrangements will be subject to HST.

The people want a say, so the referendum satisfies that need. In the end, British Columbians might just vote in favour of the HST if they believe voting against it comes with grievous consequences, such as sizable cuts in health care, education and other services. My concern is the timing. The referendum, along with the overall HST issue, must be put to bed much sooner

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Written by: Peter Simpson
Date: September 25, 2010

Metro Vancouver priciest market for four-bedroom homes in Canada

Metro Vancouver comes out as startlingly expensive in comparison to other areas of the country when it comes to four-bedroom, two-bathroom homes.

A report issued this week by real estate firm Coldwell Banker compared average prices across the country of detached four-bedrooms, and found the average price in Metro Vancouver to be well over double that of the next most expensive region, Calgary.

The going rate for this kind of home in Metro Vancouver was $1.3 million. In Calgary, that price was $551,920. Metro Toronto was even lower, at $495,398

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Written by: Brian Cross
Date: September 24, 2010

Fall Home show: What she saw and heard from the floor

The more than 42,000 visitors to this year’s fall home show were confronted with the delightful dilemma that every visitor to the proverbial ‘‘Scarborough Fair” has negotiated: so much to see, so little time.

At Home asked Suzannah Millette, the author of our advance story on the Vancouver Home and Interior Design Show (Visitors will exit wiser, and happier, organizers, exhibitors promise Sept. 3), to walk the (waterfront convention centre) floor and find those exhibitors whose wares and expertise are locally generated (and to be universal and inclusive in her appreciation of the indigenous),

Her file follows:

Modern Shed

Strictly speaking, this one isn’t entirely local. The product is American, but comes from less than 100 kilometres away, just south of the border. And the company that sells it – Westcoast Outbuildings – is a North Vancouver company

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Published by: The Vancouver Sun
Date: September 17, 2010

Home sales drop 35 per cent as prices climb in B.C.

Average Metro price rose 12 per cent to $681,000 in August, compared to the same month last year

Housing sales dropped 35 per cent this August compared to last year, to 5,590 units, according to a report released Tuesday by the B.C. Real Estate Association.

But sales increased seven per cent in August on a seasonally adjusted basis compared to July 2010.

The average price of a B.C. home climbed 3.6 per cent to $487,804 in August compared to the same month last year. “August home sales posted the first month-to-month increase since March of this year,” said BCREA chief economist Cameron Muir in a statement. “Lower mortgage interest rates and an improving labour market are inducing additional consumer demand. The number of new residential listings in the province has fallen 30 per cent since April,” added Muir. “With fewer new listings, total active listings are now on the decline, signalling that an end to the buyers’ market may be on the horizon.”

Year-to-date, B.C. residential sales’ dollar volume has increased eight per cent to $26.9 billion, compared to the same period last year. Residential unit sales rose two per cent to 53,717 year-to-date, while the average residential price climbed 10 per cent to $501,226 over the same period

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Written by: Brian Morton, Vancouver Sun
Date: September 15, 2010

Sellers’ market over for housing

Anyone hoping that the real estate market turned around for the better in August probably won’t want to hear the latest news from Vancouver and Toronto. The real estate boards in each city are among the first to release their monthly sales data, and tend to foreshadow the broader national data that will be released on Sept. 15 by the Canadian Real Estate Association. Here’s what they’re seeing:

SALES

The two cities released their August data late last week, and real estate boards in both cities have conceded that the heady days of the seller’s market are over. In Vancouver, sales were down 36 per cent from August, 2009. In Toronto, sales were 22 per cent lower.

“The prospect of interest rate hikes and new mortgage lending rules prompted some households to purchase a home sooner than they otherwise would have this year. The result has been a larger than normal dip in sales over the summer months,” Toronto Real Estate Board president Bill Johnston said

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Written by: Steve Ladurantaye for CTV News

Like life, home building is just change followed by more change

Minimalism may be attractive right now, for example, but once upon a time the excessive was attractive

This observation might be challenged by video-game aficionados, but I believe the first video game was Tennis for Two, developed in 1958. The game was played on a laboratory oscilloscope. Today’s kids wouldn’t be caught dead with an oscilloscope sticking out of their backpacks. For real.

Remember the early cellphones? I had one of the first car phones. Man, was that something. The first week I had the phone, I was on it all the time. “Guess where I’m calling you from. Yeah, that’s right, from my car! Can you believe it? Call me back so I can hear it ring.”

My dad, trying to keep up with his cool son, installed a fake car phone in his Pontiac Parisienne, complemented by a fake suction-cup antenna on the trunk. Didn’t fool anyone, bless his soul.

These days, even toddlers have cellphones. And, alas, my new cellphone — which does everything but wash my socks — will likely be obsolete by the time I wake up tomorrow morning.

The same can be said for homes…

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Written by: Peter Simpson, Vancouver Sun
Date: September 11, 2010

Fears of a Canadian housing market crash overblown

A well-written report has been published by the RBC Economics Department. It talks about the recent decline in housing resale activity in the past few months and the speculations of the Canadian market crash. According to the report, while the decline in housing sales is apparent, a market crash is not likely to follow. It is an interesting read and you can find the full report written by Robert Hogue by clicking here.

Vancouver housing sales slump may not last long

It was a long, dry summer for Vancouver real estate, especially when compared to the halcyon days of the summer before.

Vancouver real estate sales were down 36 per cent from August 2009, according to the latest monthly report for August from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver.

Prices, however, have stayed strong despite the fact that people aren’t buying like they were just a few months ago. Over the last year, the benchmark price for all Vancouver housing increased from $539,600 to $576,597.

Homeowners may have been reluctant to get with the times and lower their prices, even though the average house currently takes 59 days to sell, according to the Real Estate Board figures. They might have been stuck on the 2007 mindset, when houses sold in mere days, amid bidding wars. Whatever their incentive, there are signs that home sellers are adjusting…

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Written by: Kerry Gold
Date: September 2, 2010

VictorEric in the Media Again!

August has been a great month for us. In the August 12, 2010 New Local Home article, our Cliffside project was prominently featured as the cover story. This was perfect timing as the article was published right before our open house media event. Please click here to read the full article featuring our principal, Eric Lee, and the amazing home VictorEric Design Group designed and built.

Below is an excerpt from the article written by Maggie Calloway:

“Taking a holistic approach to luxury home design, the company manages everything from architectural design to interior design to the construction of the home. This approach allows VictorEric Design Group and its clientele to make all the thousands of decisions necessary in large magnitude builds, with the confidence that each decision is made with the entire project in mind.”