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Vancouver Market - Tracking commercial real estate investment sales across Metro Vancouver — sale prices, cap rates, and $/SF data for apartment, retail, office, land, and development transactions. By David Taylor, SVP at Colliers International Canada.
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Development, Market Research

Vancouver Reviews Developers’ Fees for Community Amenities

The City of Vancouver said Thursday it is reviewing its method of demanding extra payments from developers to help pay for non-traditional services such as daycare centres, heritage conservation, parks and social housing.

The review comes after the province issued new guidelines for how local governments assess community amenity contributions (CACs) that are tied to rezoning applications. Those guidelines were sparked in large part by concerns that Vancouver is using a method of calculation that could be seen as both coercive of developers and breaching long-standing rules against the selling of zoning in return for a benefit.

The city’s practice has been to seek what it calls “voluntary contributions” from developers that amount to 75 per cent of any profit they might generate from land that becomes more valuable through rezoning. In the most expensive of cases, that amounts to as much as $50,000 per-unit, compared to a more modest $1,200 per unit in Surrey.

By seeking “voluntary” payments the city retains a discretionary right to approve rezoning applications. The payment is different from legislated “development cost levies” that all applicants must pay for services such as sidewalks, water, roads and sewer connections. Vancouver said it obtained a legal opinion that the CACs are fair as long as they are made “voluntarily” by developers, who are told they are not a precondition of zoning approval.

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/real-estate/Vancouver+reviews+developers+fees+community/9772704/story.html
April 25, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Apartment, Development

51-unit Rental Building Moves to Public Hearing

The owners of a site located at 3120-3184 Knight Street (at East 15th Ave) are seeking final approval at public hearing next week for a rezoning from RT-2 to CD-1 District to permit the development of a five-storey residential building with 51 market rental units.

Currently, three rental apartment buildings, built in the 1950s, exist on the site. The buildings are three storeys in height and contain a total of nine rental units. The location of the development, on an arterial street and within 500 metres of an identified local shopping area (Commercial Drive and East 16th Avenue), qualifies the site to be considered, under the policy, for a building of up to six storeys in height.

Existing site

Existing site

3120-3184 Knight St.

The application was made last year under the Affordable Housing Choices Interim Rezoning Policy (IRP), and in accordance with that policy, the application seeks increased height and density in return for all proposed housing units being secured as for-profit affordable rental housing for the longer of the life of the building and 60 years. The rezoning, if approved, would result in an increase of rental units on this site of over 400% — from the existing 9 units to 51 units.

April 24, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Development

North Vancouver’s Harbourside Project gets Council Approval

The largest single commercial/residential development to come before the city in recent years won its approval at City of North Vancouver council Monday night, years after it was first pitched.

Concert Properties’ Harbourside development, which will place roughly 800 strata and rental units and 300,000 square feet of commercial space on the waterfront property along Harbourside Drive at the foot of Fell Avenue over the next 10 to 15 years, passed 5-2 in a late-night session of council.Harbourside

The city previously held a public hearing to rezone the property on April 1 but chose to defer the vote.

The motion passed 5-2, with Couns. Pam Bookham and Rod Clark voting against – the same split on council for each step of the project over the last two years.

For the two dissenters, the issues were poor access, a loss of land that could be commercial or industrial and the project’s isolation from the rest of the city and its services.

The only ways into the area are via Fell Avenue and Bewicke Avenue, which is home to an at-grade rail crossing. TransLink has no plans to run transit to the area and so the developer has promised to run a private shuttle linking the neighbourhood with the SeaBus terminal.

Read more: http://www.nsnews.com/news/north-vancouver-s-harbourside-project-gets-council-approval-1.965173

April 21, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Development, Retail

Looking Ahead to a Vision of Lougheed’s Future

Lougheed Town Centre has long been one of the quietest of Burnaby’s four town centres. Not in terms of traffic, of course. The intersection of Lougheed Highway and North Road has always been busy. But while Metrotown has boomed, and the neighbourhoods of Brentwood and Edmonds have seen a flurry of new development over the years, the Lougheed area has been comparatively stagnant.

26066burnabyWEB-LougheedMaps

Since opening in 1969, the mall has evolved over the years. It doubled in size in 1986, and underwent significant renovations about a decade ago. But now big plans are in the works. The area is poised for a massive makeover.

Shape Properties Corporation owns the mall property, and recently purchased four more properties in the town centre.

To prepare the ground for redevelopment, the city is embarking on a planning process for the entire 61-acre “Lougheed Core Area” that includes the wedge from Cameron Street in the north all the way down to the Lougheed-North Road intersection.

And like the plans for Brentwood Town Centre, which Shape also owns, the city and the company hope to gradually transform the site from suburban, car-oriented shopping centre to urban, transit and pedestrian-oriented town centre.

Read more: http://www.burnabynewsleader.com/news/254758551.html

April 14, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
Development, Investment

Aquilinis Partner with First Nations in Land Deal

The Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam First Nations announced this week they have partnered with the developer Aquilini Investment Group in the purchase and development of Burnaby’s Willingdon Lands.

“What I’m hoping to provide are economic benefits for the future,” said Tsleil-Waututh Chief Maureen Thomas. “We’re buying land that was originally ours to start with,” she added. “We don’t want to miss these opportunities.”

Brennan Cook, spokesman for the Aquilini Investment Group, said, “We look at our partnerships with First Nations as very valuable.”

So far there are no plans for the site, which includes 40 acres between Brentwood and Metrotown, directly adjacent to BCIT.

“It’s a prime site,” said Cook. “There’s lots of opportunity.”

The province announced two weeks ago that the Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam had bought the property at Willingdon and Canada Way for $57.9 million, but didn’t mention the involvement of the Aquilini Group at the time.

Read more: http://www.nsnews.com/news/aquilinis-partner-with-first-nations-in-land-deal-1.951298

April 14, 2014by david.taylor@colliers.com
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Greater Vancouver commercial real estate transactions down 8.3% in 2025 via @westerninvestor

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David Taylor Personal Real Estate Corporation

Colliers International

DT

David Taylor

Senior Vice President, Colliers Canada

David Taylor is a Senior Vice President at Colliers International in Vancouver, BC, specializing in the sale of commercial real estate across Metro Vancouver. He has sold over $1.7 Billion in office buildings, retail properties, apartment buildings and development land since 2004.

Vancouver Market chronicles investment and development activity in Metro Vancouver, including sale prices, cap rates, $/SF metrics, and market context for commercial real estate transactions.

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