Visit http://www.collierscanada.com/8872 for more details.
Visit http://www.collierscanada.com/8872 for more details.
Manulife Real Estate acquires Aldergrove Village Shopping Centre in Langley, BC.
“LANGLEY, BC, March 6, 2013 /CNW/ – Manulife Real Estate has acquired Aldergrove Village Shopping Centre, a 91,517-square-foot retail property in Langley, British Columbia, for C$29.25 million in a deal that closed March 5, 2013. The property was purchased for its Manulife Canadian Property Portfolio, a core, open-end, income producing real estate investment fund that invests in quality Canadian commercial real estate assets managed by Manulife Real Estate. The Fund is offered to institutional investors through Manulife Asset Management, the global asset management arm of Manulife Financial.
“Manulife is pleased to be able to put our long established real estate expertise to work in a platform that allows investors to take advantage of what has been a sound asset class for the Company for the last seven decades,” said Kevin Adolphe, Global Head of Private Asset Management for Manulife Financial and President and CEO of Manulife Real Estate. “We’ve had great interest in our fund platform since it launched in February 2011 and we’re encouraged by the significant capital we’ve raised to date for the Manulife Canadian Property Portfolio. We are well positioned for continued growth.”
Located in Greater Vancouver’s Langley Township, Aldergrove Village Shopping Centre enjoys prime exposure on the Fraser Highway. The multi-tenanted shopping centre is anchored by Save-On-Foods and Shoppers Drug Mart, two top Canadian retailers, which occupy 46 per cent of the 91,517 square feet of commercial retail space.”
If only we charged a Community Revitalization Levy in Vancouver….(tongue in cheek). It’s amazing how Vancouver has been addicted to Community Amenity Contributions (CACs) for almost 30 years but some cities are just starting to figure it out.
“Told repeatedly that there’s no way to afford the southeast LRT for perhaps decades, Ald. Shane Keating will bring another fundraising idea to council Monday.
He’ll ask colleagues to explore whether the same complicated funding scheme that finally got the East Village redeveloped can also deliver his southeast ward’s long-awaited dream project.
Some colleagues say it’s a long-shot proposal, but Keating said he’ll test it “rather than sitting here and having no money.”
“Let’s find the money instead of (saying), ‘I want to steal it from wherever,’ ” he said.
After finishing the nearly $1.5-billion west LRT, the city has a group of more modest and partially completed transit projects slated for the next decade: special bus-only lanes down 17th Avenue S.E., bus-only lanes partway up Centre Street, and the first phase of a new southeast “busway” road that will eventually become LRT to the south hospital.”
Read more: http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/calgary/Novel+funding+plan+could+kick+start+southeast/8043975/story.html#ixzz2MgUgqQw6