Nearly a quarter of condos in Vancouver are empty or occupied by non-residents in some dense areas of downtown, a signal that investors play a significant role in the city’s housing market.
And the city overall has a much higher rate of empty apartments and houses than other Canadian cities, with a rate closer to places like New York and San Francisco at the height of their mortgage crisis in 2010.
Downtown, the rate is so high that it’s as though there were 35 towers at 20 storeys apiece – empty.
That’s the latest discovery that adjunct UBC planning professor Andrew Yan made when he analyzed 2011 census numbers to try to add more information to the contentious debate over whether Vancouver is turning into a high-end resort or offshore investors’ holding tank.
Read more: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/home-and-garden/real-estate/vancouvers-vacancies-point-to-investors-not-residents/article10044403/
Developing Story: Pacific Arbour puts Dunbar seniors’ plan on hold.
It could be weeks or months before Pacific Arbour decides whether to submit a revised application to the city for a senior’s facility it hoped to build on property on the east side of the 4600 block of Dunbar Street between 30th and 31st avenues.
Earlier this month, the city rejected its rezoning application to build a six-storey seniors residence south of Stong’s grocery store. City staff cited concerns about affordability and how it fit into the Dunbar Vision Plan, which envisions buildings up to four storeys.
President Peter Gaskill told the Courier Pacific Arbour is not working on a revised application at this time and that, in the company’s opinion, a four-storey building is not financially feasible at current land prices.
Bastion Development Corporation in conjunction with the Musqueam Indian Band are constructing a 9,000 linear foot marina at the foot of Granville Street in between Vancouver and Richmond. The project will have in-water moorage for 226 recreational boats and dry-stack storage for 190 boats. There will also be a service shop, cafe and 228 stall parking lot. The project also includes a new observation deck, wildlife habitat created from the by-product of site dredging, cycling and jogging trails.
Visit http://milltownmarina.com/index.html for more information.
The City of North Vancouver is currently in the public input stage of their CityShaping initiative, which is a 6-step process that will culminate in the revision of the Official Community Plan to accomodate growth over the next 20-30 years. The City expects to draft an amended OCP sometime in the summer, with adoption by the end of 2013. This comes at an interesting time for the City in the wake of the contentious Onni rezoning at Lonsdale and 13th Ave, which was approved by a slim margin last week.
Source: City of North Vancouver
What are the potential changes? City staff are proposing a number of land use change scenarios that would impact specific areas. Overall the City is expecting an additional 8,000 units built by 2041. Here are few areas being contemplated for increased density:
Other points of discussion include increasing density in the Lions Gate Hospital Precinct, gently densifying areas currently designated R1, and not changing densities in the Lower Lonsdale area.
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