Housing affordability and the Hated Sales Tax

Worried about the HST coming soon? Here are some information that may interest you.

New tax likely will drive deeper the underground home-reno economy, observes Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association CEO

HST, OMG! Can you believe how this thorny issue -day after day after day -continues to dominate the news and commentary? It certainly has hit a raw nerve with many thousands of British Columbians.

Actually, HST has been under my skin since March 2009, when Ontario announced it had inked a $4.3-billion tax harmonization deal with the feds. I figured then, what with B.C.’s budget challenges and all, it would only be a matter of time until this province jumps aboard the HST bandwagon.

We all know what happened. On July 23, 2009, the B.C. government, without consultation, announced it had signed a memorandum of understanding with the federal government on HST implementation. In exchange, B.C. was promised $1.6 billion. The firestorm of criticism and accusations has been relentless ever since…

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Posted by: By Peter Simpson, Vancouver Sun
Date: May 29, 2010

UPDATE 2-Canada home resale price index up, no crash seen

* Month-on-month price rise of 0.3 percent in March

* Prices in four out of six metropolitan markets rise

* Group says home market not headed for U.S.-style crash (Adds Canadian Real Estate Association report)

TORONTO, May 26 (Reuters) – Canadian home resale prices climbed in March for an 11th straight month, but the gain was one of the smallest since prices began rising last year, according to a report on Wednesday.

The Teranet-National Bank Composite House Price Index, which measures price changes for repeat sales of single-family homes, showed overall prices rose 0.3 percent in March from February.

“The broad slowing of monthly gains is consistent with a general loosening of resale-market conditions across the country. For some months now, homes have been coming on the market faster than they have been selling,” the report said.

March’s gain was only a tick ahead of February’s 0.2 percent increase, which was the smallest monthly gain since the end of a recession-induced price slump…

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Posted by: Reuters
Date: Wed May 26, 2010

Reflections on Housing

Even though Canada has slowly come out of the recession in the past year and the market seems to improve everyday, there are still things that builders should look out for in the future. With the introduction of new sales taxes on our heels, some potential homebuyers are making the move now to try to beat the clock. This may in turn lead to decreased sales in the next two years and explain why the market has been so busy in the past few months. Therefore, builders should be aware and cautious going into the next year but also stay positive for the future.

Please click for the Housing Commentary May 2010 prepared by Altus Group for CHBA

Tiny prefab units promote eco-friendly building

A young San Francisco company that makes prefabricated housing is set to provide multifamily buildings for two urban Bay Area projects that its development partner hopes will become a model for eco-friendly construction.

Zeta Communities will construct the housing for the 22-unit developments, planned for parking lots in Berkeley and San Francisco. The projects will feature tiny living spaces – 310- to 340 square-foot studios – and no parking. Instead, they will include a car-sharing space.

The proposed four-story projects are the first foray into prefabricated housing for East Bay developer Patrick Kennedy of Panoramic Interests.

He said the construction technique conserves resources because fewer materials are wasted in a precise, factory building process, and the housing can be completed far more quickly than the conventional on-site approach. He chose two parking lots for development sites, he said, because they were perceived to be too small for other uses and are close to public transportation…

Posted by: Robert Selna, Chronicle Staff Writer
Date: May 18, 2010

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Vancouver’s Chinatown looks to future, recalls its past

VANCOUVER — On a Friday night in early May a private party is being held beside a rooftop sculpture garden in the Wing Sang building, the oldest in Chinatown, and now the home of condo marketing wizard Bob Rennie’s new contemporary art gallery and his business operations.

To the 1889 building on Pender Street where Chinese immigrant businessman Yip Sang once lived with his four wives and 23 children, Rennie has invited close friends, art collectors, curators and a few media types, in honour of Richard Jackson, the Los Angeles artist whose conceptual work he has purchased extensively and is now exhibiting.

After the party has wound down, Rennie Collection director Wendy Chang gives a mini-tour of the new exhibit. A wander through the gallery leaves the mind boggling at what Yip Sang, who made his fortune as a labour contractor for the CPR, would have made of some of the art now in his former home. There are bears with urinal heads and urinals with bear heads, for example; products of an imagination so wonderfully twisted, it’s as if the visiting neo-Dadaist Jackson absorbed some lingering fumes from the opium produced out back in Market Alley in the late 1800s…

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Posted by: Doug Ward, Vancouver Sun
Date: May 19, 2010

Squamish have power to radically change city skyline

The Squamish First Nation is going to reclaim its ancestral village in the heart of Vancouver by putting up two major condo towers that will block views to English Bay and the mountains and dramatically change the city skyline.

An early draft of the development proposal features 35-storey and 28-storey condo towers on the south end of the Burrard Bridge, exactly where a giant billboard was erected by the first nation a few months ago. It will fundamentally block the view corridor the City of Vancouver has preserved for decades.

The development, which also dramatically ramps up the density of Kitsilano, will bring an additional 2,000 parking spots and offices that will house thousands of workers. It’s a real-estate play that could near the $1-billion range and generate massive profits.

It’s hard to fault the Squamish for thinking big. Like any developer, they want to squeeze as much profit out of the land as possible, which means density and height…

Posted by: Miro Cernetig, Vancouver Sun
Date: May 20, 2010

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The Vancouver Art Gallery debate is a blank canvas

At 7 p.m. on Thursday, a two-hour symposium was held in the subterranean Robson Square theatre to discuss the burning civic question of, Whither the Vancouver Art Gallery? Two mind-numbing concept-filled hours later, nothing had been settled except I definitely had a headache. For this, I missed 30 Rock.

Here’s an important fact about that evening:

It was exactly 46 minutes into the proceedings before one of the five panellists deigned to mention the issue of money, and then only in passing — which was odd because, as we all know, art is about money.

In this case, the VAG’s desire to relocate to the block just east of the Queen Elizabeth Theatre would demand a whack of it, somewhere in the range of $350 million, give or take a king’s ransom.

Is such a sum problematic? No, we have been told. A couple weeks ago, developer Michael Audain, chair of the art gallery relocation committee, assured the editorial board of The Sun that raising it was not at all a difficulty; that with the $50 million the provincial government had already promised for a new gallery, and the $40 million the committee had lined up in pledges, the rest could be made up by private donation. Audain travels in rarefied company…

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Posted by: Pete McMartin, Vancouver Sun
Date: May 22, 2010

Demand expected to fall as first-time buyers bow out

Metro Vancouver real estate sales will drop in 2010 compared to last year and flatten out in 2011 because new buyers who would have been in the market were enticed to buy in 2009, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Wednesday.

CMHC is forecasting that Metro Vancouver will see 35,000 property sales cleared through the realtor-controlled Multiple Listing Service, a 3.5-per-cent decline from 2009 and will slip another three per cent to 34,000 transactions in 2011.

“Certainly the market recovery we saw over the past year, at least anecdotally, a lot of that seems to have been first-time homebuyers taking advantage of the lower [mortgage] rates combined with lower prices,” Robyn Adamache, a market analyst with CMHC said in an interview…

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Posted by: Derrick Pener, Vancouver Sun; With Files From Canwest News Service

Date: May 20, 2010

Have us evaluate your space – for free!

Do you ever feel like you want a change but don’t know what it is or how to do it? Have you been in your space too long and have gotten used to the mistakes and don’t even know what they are anymore? If you ever feel like that, call on us and from now till September, we are happy to offer a free 30 minute, no obligation assessment of your space. This could be in your home or business.

You would be surprised with what a small change in layout can do for the efficiency of your space. It could re-gain valuable space so you can avoid moving to a bigger home or business. With the pricing of property these days, that’s a big savings! Flow in a home and especially in business is so important for day to day function that it cannot be overlooked.

You may be happy with your current layout, but just need a facelift. We can help by updating the colours and finishes of a space. For businesses, we target to select colours and finishes that are mindful of their target customer and company image. From a conservative and professional office to an edgy and attention grabbing salon, having the right “look” gives buyers the confidence and comfort to buy from you.

A simple facelift in a home does wonders for your personal psychology. Your home is your sanctuary and your escape after a hard day’s work, so we like to create a nurturing home that revitalizes, refreshes, and renews. We can do this with the right selection of colours and finishes.

So whatever space it may be, trust us to give you an honest opinion of what’s needed to improve your space. But hurry, as the summer sun goes away, so does this offer.


Sixteen of ‘my’ builders have 50 show homes waiting for you

Annual spring ‘Open House’ is a ‘Showcase’ for local design and construction abilities and advances

On the window ledge in my office sits a framed ink sketch of a man who appears to be well into his late 80s, maybe older. The caption beneath his experienced face reads: “This is the young man who waited for real estate values to come down.”

Perhaps values did drop, momentarily, but over the long haul, the price bar tracks steeply uphill, and the “young man” might have waited too long to step on to the first rung of the property ladder.

If you bought a house in Vancouver in 1960, you paid an average of $13,000, about the same price as a new, imported pickup truck today. In 1980, the average price climbed to $100,000, then $230,000 in 1990. In 2006, it reached $735,000. And earlier this year, it broke $1 million.

Real estate continues to be the best investment a family can make. I mean, why throw money away on rent when there is a broad range of condos, town houses and single-detached homes available? My daughter took the plunge a few years ago and reminds me often that she made a wise decision.

If you are in the market for a new home, and you want to view what some of the region’s best builders have to offer, consider participating in a popular spring event which started Thursday and continues today and Sunday at 22 home sites around the Lower Mainland.

The Open House: A Showcase of New Homes, highlighting the latest advancements in architecture, design, construction technology and energy efficiency, is produced by the Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association and sponsored by the Homeowner Protection Office, a branch of B.C. Housing.

Sixteen builders are featuring 50 decorated and furnished show homes and suites in Abbotsford, Burnaby, Coquitlam, Fort Langley, Langley, Maple Ridge, North Delta, North Vancouver and Surrey. Participating builders are Adera, Azura, Boffo, Cressey, Domani, Foxridge, Legendary, Marathon, Marcon, Morningstar, Oakvale, ParkLane, Polygon, Portrait, Vesta and Wallmark.

Many of the builders have won a variety of provincial and national housing awards over the years. A few have even been honoured with prestigious international awards for design excellence.

Open House offers a broad range of home types and prices, from a space efficient Langley low-rise condo priced at $199,900 to a luxurious Coquitlam beauty valued at more than $1 million. And don’t miss the 8,300-square-foot country house located in an equestrian-themed community in rural Langley.

An incurable housing junkie, I am constantly impressed by the products and services incorporated into today’s new homes.

The Open House event includes sumptuous kitchens, spa-like bathrooms, designer colours, sophisticated finishing details, resort-style amenity facilities and full basements.

Attention to energy- and resource efficient products and services is also evident, including heating and cooling systems, BuiltGreen standards, bamboo flooring and high-performance windows.

As expected, there is a wealth of neighbourhood amenities – public transportation, parks, green space preserves, walking trails, waterfront, golf courses, schools, restaurants, health care and shopping.

With so many builders participating, it’s difficult to feature each one in a space-limited column, so I closed my eyes and twice thrust my finger at the list. The names I hit were Boffo and Legendary.

Boffo has been building homes for more than 40 years. “We see ourselves as a niche or boutique builder, as we design and build our homes strictly for the end user. We build larger than average spaces, focusing on the livability of the homes,” said Boffo marketing manager Karen West.

Boffo is just completing its first Jewel tower at Central Park in Metrotown, a month ahead of schedule. Only six condos remain to be sold, and West expects them to be snapped up by buyers wishing to move in before the HST comes in on July 1.

“The buyers range from newly retired couples downsizing from the family home to young professionals eager to attain home ownership in an excellent location close to the SkyTrain and the vibrant atmosphere of Metrotown,” said West.

West said the second tower, Jewel II, opens today, offering 98 condos and town homes, ranging from 743 to 1,784 square feet. Adding to the living space are covered terraces, some as large as 1,285 square feet. Similar to the first tower, this building has only five condos per floor, providing a measure of privacy. The penthouse levels have just three condos per floor, evoking in owners a feeling of exclusivity.

A selection of floor plans are available, from one bedroom plus den, to three bedrooms. Finishings feature over-height ceilings and doors, hardwood floors, granite and marble countertops, high-end appliances and fixtures, and full concierge services. Talk about being spoiled in your own home.

Legendary Developments chose Fleetwood, an established Surrey neighbourhood, to introduce Maple on 84, an enclave of three and four-bedroom Craftsman-style town houses close to major commuting routes, and within walking distance to public transit, schools, shopping and the sports and leisure centre.

“The spacious floor plans include gourmet kitchens with shaker-style cabinetry and granite counters, the convenience of main-floor powder rooms, and luxurious ensuites with both tubs and showers. Backyard decks and patios extend the living space,” said sales manager Seeta Dhaliwal.

Dhaliwal said a new showhome, loaded with top-of-the-line features, is available for viewing. Sales have been brisk as first-timers and move-up buyers alike are attracted to Maple on 84.

This year’s Open House is sure to please. Even if you are not in the market for a new home, all the show homes have been professionally furnished and decorated, so there is no better place to get ideas. Then again, you might just fall in love with a home on the tour and make the move of your dreams.

Hours are 12 noon to 5 p.m. today and Sunday. Visit www.gvhba.org for details on builders, locations, descriptions, maps and contacts. The website offers links to each builder’s website, so you can choose the new-home projects that interest you the most, then plan your day accordingly.

Posted by Peter Simpson, Vancouver Sun
Date: May 15, 2010

Peter Simpson is the chief executive officer of the Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association.
E-mail: peter@gvhba.org