Monday, February 8, 2010 Vancouver Real Estate sales surgeby Cory Raven on Mon, Feb, 8, 2010 03:00 PM
Vancouver Real Estate Sales Surge Ahead Of Winter Olympics
Canadian real estate sales have picked up in Vancouver, British Columbia, with the help of strong demand from international buyers from Asia. Local experts say the upcoming Olympics has little to do with the surge, but world wide television coverage of the region's spectacular views should pique the interest of many investors. See the following article from International Property Journal for more on this.
 Vancouver, Canada
When the Olympic flame enters BC Place Stadium on Feb. 12, the world’s spotlight will fall on one of North America’s hottest property markets.
In November more than 7,721 properties were sold in British Columbia, the highest volume for the month since 2005, according to the British Columbia Real Estate Association. And it wasn’t spurred by foreclosures and short sales; the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver’s housing price index for the area jumped 16.2 percent to $562,463, from a year earlier.
“We’ve seen a dramatic rebound in home sales,” said Cameron Muir, chief economist for the BCREA. Home prices have been on an uptrend for several months, “scratching record levels,” Muir says.
A few weeks ago, in a throwback to the old days, 20 buyers camped out over night in the cold to buy units in a Vancouver development called the Mark, a tower in the trendy neighborhood of Yaletown. In one day 163 of the 214 available condos sold, with units ranging from 460- to 730-square-feet priced between $320,900 and $660,900. (All figures in Canadian dollars; the current exchange rate is $1USD=$1.03CAD.)
International buyers are playing a “very significant” role in the upturn, according to Ross McCredie, president of Sotheby’s International Realty Canada. “Over half of the homes sold over $5 million in Vancouver sold to mainland Chinese,” he said. In West Vancouver, known as Vancouver’s most expensive neighborhood, there has been consistent activity from Middle Eastern and U.K. buyers, he says.
The bulk of the international buyers are making a lifestyle purchase more than a simple investment, taking advantage of Vancouver’s reputation as one of the world’s most livable cities, McCredie says. “They are not necessarily retirees, they’re just looking for a change,” McCredie said.
A few years ago 25 percent of condo buyers in Metro Vancouver were considered investors, according to tracking data by LandCor. Last year the number was closer to 8 percent.
“Speculators have never understood this market,” McCredie said.
The upcoming Olympic Games, local experts agree, has little to do with the recent surge. Low interest rates and pent up demand fueled sales, they say. Vancouver’s natural shortage of developable space also serves to artificially inflate prices, keeping Vancouver among Canada’s most expensive cities, even in down times.
Last year, prospective buyers held off buying, but jumped backed in as soon as the market started stabilizing, creating the recent flurry of activity, said Robyn Adamache, senior market analyst, Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corp.
Even for Vancouver, recovery in the property market has been much quicker than in past cycles, Adamache says. The regional unemployment rate is still relatively high at 7 percent, she notes. “It’s not the economy that has picked up so quickly,” she says.
But Vancouver’s property market is not dependent on locals. The region attracts a net migration of new residents of about 40,000 people a year—most of them from outside Canada, according to Canadian Mortgage and Housing data. China, Taiwan and India are the largest contributors, data shows.
In contrast, the number of U.S. buyers has slowed in the last year. Californians, in particular, are still struggling with the ripple effects of the housing crisis, industry executives say. But a pickup in buyers from Asia has more than compensated for the U.S. drop-off, Vancouver executives say.
Some compare the surge in Chinese buyers to the huge flow of money from Hong Kong in the ‘90s.
“We’ve seen a huge influx of buyers from mainland China,” said Dave Watt, a Realtor with Royal LePage and past president of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver.
Most are doing business in the area or sending their children to school, and they’re buying in the $1 million to $3 million range, he says. In December, the Chinese government gave Canada “approved destination” status, which should increase the connection, Watt notes.
Outside Vancouver, British Columbia is a patchwork of different markets. Victoria is known as a retirement community, with a sunnier climate and year-round golf. Kelowna is a region of lakes, mountains and picturesque vineyards. Whistler is a classic upscale ski resort, known around the world.
In the last few months, the second home markets, in particular, have seen a jump in activity, analysts say, after a long slow period.
“The recession hit us worse than everybody else,” said Ursula Morel of Sea to Sky Premier Properties in Whistler and the 2010 president of the Canadian chapter of FIABCI, the International Real Estate Federation. “The higher the prices, the more you go down.” Most of the activity in the first half of 2009 involved fractionals, she says.
However, in the second half of 2009, Whistler sales picked up again, with 11 sales between $2 million and $3 million. “It’s not Olympics driven, but there is definitely more hype in the air,” said Morel, who puts “Home of the 2010 Olympics” in the subject line of all her e-mails.
Foreign buyers in Canada are typically required to put 25 percent down, which has helped provide a level of stability to many markets, with few debt-to-equity problems and little urgency to sell, Morel said.
Clearly buyers believe there are no more steep drops in the Vancouver area’s near future. In Vancouver a property recently sold for more than $10 million and two in Victoria sold for more than $6 million.
Vancouver is expected to see price increases of four to seven percent, according to local analysts. Royal LePage predicts a 7.2 percent jump in the next year.
“Everything is pretty hot right now,” said Pete Shpak, managing broker for Sea and Sky Properties’ West Vancouver office. “I’ve been in a few multiple offer situations, which wasn’t happening a year ago.”
But there is still an air of caution. Many believe the recent surge only reflects the pent up demand and once that dissipates sales volumes could slow. A jump in interest rates could also put a wrench in the recovery.
“The high end is still softer than it has been in past years, and that is largely the result of the economy crawling slowly out of recession,” said Muir of the BCREA.
But then there’s the wild card—the Olympics, sure to supply a non-stop, two-week stream of soaring images of Vancouver’s spectacular coastline and picturesque mountains. In many ways, it will be one long advertisement for the region.
“I think it’s going to be pretty amazing how many new eyes see us,” Watt said. Monday, February 8, 2010 Colourist wants you to add colour to your Vancouver Real Estateby Cory Raven on Mon, Feb, 8, 2010 10:39 AM
Colourist wants you to live dangerously
Banish those safe greys and beiges from your interiors
The Province
February 7, 2010
Kora Sevier has spent a lifetime studying and celebrating colour -- and that's evident when you step into her home.
The walls of the living room are green. The sofa is purple; the drapes, fuchsia and orange.
A Vancouver colour consultant, Sevier is passionate about paint and colour, and it shows.
"I love bringing colour into people's lives," says Sevier, who has her own company, kcolour. "It's all I do."
As a colourist, Sevier's goal is to breathe colour into some of the drearier palettes seen in some West Coast homes.
Sevier believes the Vancouver weather, and the grey, rainy winter days, can affect our attitudes about colour. In fact, she suggests, some people will be affected by that grey environment to the point that it will be reflected in the colours they choose for their homes.
"It can seep into your being," says Sevier, who suggests that in Montreal, people embrace colour to a greater degree.
"You don't have the grey that you have here. From the dramatic fall colours, to the intense quality of light in the winter, where the sun reflects off the snow and makes colours vibrate, you tend to see more colour there."
Sevier says there's something else that can affect our choice of colours: the active local real estate market.
"Because Vancouverites are so real-estate driven, they are afraid to stray from what I call masking-tape beige," she says.
Often, Sevier says, we tend to be caught up in the "I might sell my home soon [and therefore it must be beige] trap."
But she says we don't fall into that trap because potential buyers are necessarily interested in beige or grey. Rather, a fear of making a "colour mistake" can keep us from taking a chance.
With many of Sevier's clients, the initial reaction to climbing out of the beige rut can be a bit of a shock.
"I tell them that's natural, they are leaving their comfort zone. I suggest they live with the colour for a while and get used to it.
"Once they do, they never go back to beige."
Sevier was raised in Montreal and began her career in commercial photography. She pursued studies in fine art, and in set and lighting design, before starting a colour consultation and painting business.
Sevier then spent time in the United Arab Emirates, where she taught art and design and worked as an artist and colour consultant. When she returned to Vancouver, she joined Kerrisdale Heritage Paint and Paper as its in-house colour consultant, specializing in Farrow and Ball paints.
Sevier says the secret to creating a vibrant and colourful home is to consider the tonality of colours, since colour is all about relationships. Colours that may initially seem incongruous can blend beautifully if they have the same tones.
Her living room, which is anything but beige, is a good example.
"I tell my clients, if you were to photograph this room in black and white, all of the colours would appear to be a very similar shade of grey," she says.
"Naturally, as a colour consultant, I attempt to make people's surroundings esthetically pleasing. A beautiful room exudes a feeling of harmony, peace and comfort. Who doesn't need that in their life?"
Those who are preparing their homes for sale would do well to forget about beige and grey, Sevier says.
"Gorgeous trumps everything. Just make your home beautiful."
For more information, visit www.kcolour.com. Saturday, February 6, 2010 More on Vancouver's new "micro lofts"by Cory Raven on Sat, Feb, 6, 2010 04:19 PM It was interesting hearing people on talk radio (most of whom lived in the burbs in 3000+ sq ft homes) who simply couldn't believe that anyone could live in such a spot.
Turns out, as noted in the article below, that small living spaces are pretty normal throughout the world and perhaps Vancouver, as unaffordable as it can be, needs to adapt.
Size does indeed matter. Just ask the Surrey homeowners troubled by the 4,000-plus-square-foot home overshadowing their rancher. Or the folks who can't wait to move into a 270-square-foot rental in East Vancouver.
The former is viewed by municipalities, proponents and opponents as a rather prickly issue that is not easily resolved. The latter has generated much to-and-fro discussion ever since a developer issued a news release heralding his 30 micro-suites as "the smallest self-contained rental apartments in Vancouver."
The new boys on the Burns Block in the Downtown Eastside are anything but newbies.
The developer, Reliance Properties, is a privately owned Vancouver company with more than 50 years experience in Vancouver's real estate market. In the past decade, Reliance has built about 300 rental lofts in Gastown and the Downtown Eastside, and has won several heritage awards.
Reliance's project partner, ITC Construction Group, is the largest residential construction company in Western Canada and has completed 115 projects in B.C. and Alberta. ITC has been selected as one of Canada's best-managed companies for six straight years, and is committed to corporate social responsibility.
Not a bad partnership handling the makeover of a 100-year-old, five-storey, 18,000-square-foot building. As a former board member of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation, I can tell you the once-abandoned structure promises to be a polished heritage jewel when work is completed next year.
The suites will offer a space-saving wall bed with built-in, flip-down dining table. The kitchen will include a bar-size fridge, two-burner cooktop, sink, convection microwave, countertop and cabinets. The bathroom will have a shower, sink and wall-hung toilet. A computer work area will have space for a wall-mounted TV. A large window will take up almost the entire space on the exterior wall.
Monthly rents will be as low as $675, reasonable in a city just pegged by a public-policy research group as the most unaffordable in the world. (The group's assumptions and conclusions are considered somewhat flawed by some industry watchers, but that's a story for another day.)
Despite the need for more affordable housing in this region, the project has its detractors. As soon as media outlets posted the story on their websites, comments from the public quickly followed.
One fellow wrote that living in such a small apartment would be akin to occupying a prison cell. Perhaps he has claustrophobia issues but, for the record, the average prison cell built today is a cosy 70 square feet. Another guy said he wouldn't last more than a few months in a 270-squarefoot apartment.
Here's the thing. The Burns Block concept is not new, far from it. So all this naysayer chattering about some newfangled housing form coming soon to Lotus Land-by-the-Sea is a tad bothersome.
Tiny homes exist all over the world, and the folks who live in them are quite happy and content.
Take, for example, Californian Jay Shafer, who for more than 10 years has lived in a 96-square-foot home complete with galley kitchen, bathroom with shower, seating, desk, bookshelves, closets and fireplace. The home is easy to heat and cool, and meets California's strict energy-efficiency standards. I don't know Shafer's significant-other status, but his sleeping loft accommodates a double bed.
New York is home to the Prokops and their two cats. Compared to Shafer's home, the Prokops' Manhattan coop apartment is mansion-like at 175 square feet. They have given new meaning to the term "downsizing", starting out with a 1,600-square-foot apartment, then 900, now 175. The married couple plan to renovate their home this year, a process that likely won't break the bank or take much time.
Worldwide, the story is the same. Los Angeles is home to a growing number of small-unit condos and apartments, including the Rosslyn Lofts in the historic downtown. The 297 rental apartments range in size from 200 to 325 square feet. The homes add to the variety of mixed-income housing, which helps to attract a diverse group of tenants, enhancing the vitality and diversity of the downtown area.
Small is also big in Santa Monica, where space-efficient 375-square-foot apartments in a central location close to amenities are popular with renters. And in Edinburgh, Scotland, renters are flocking to 350-square-foot contemporary concrete-and-steel apartments, complete with balconies overlooking green space.
In Toronto, the city's smallest detached home, built in 1912, is only 330 square feet. It even has a backyard.
In 1990, Gordon Price lived for a month in a 290-squarefoot apartment at Drake and Seymour in downtown Vancouver because he wanted to see if such a small space was livable. Turns out it was.
"The apartment was absolutely livable for me. If the space is designed and proportioned to both day and night uses, it will be perfectly fine for all functions. In my case, the apartment's Murphy bed tilted up in the morning, replaced by a dining room table for the rest of the day," said Price, a former Vancouver city councillor and now the director of the Simon Fraser University City Program.
"It is important the apartment remains uncluttered, and the furniture is appropriately designed for the space. And you need lots of natural light, preferably from a floor-to-ceiling window," said Price.
"People who live in small spaces typically spend more time in the public realm -making use of parks and other amenities, eating in restaurants, that sort of thing. Because they spend so much time away from their apartments, it is important that their neighbourhood is clean, green and safe," said Price.
Tom Durning of the Tenant Resource and Advisory Centre is always happy to see an increase in the production of affordable rental units, particularly in Vancouver, where supply is tight and costs high.
Durning was quoted recently in this paper as saying, "Any rental housing is good housing these days."
Many groups -- including housing advocates, developers and governments -- will be watching to see how the Burns Block project fleshes out. So far, I believe all can agree it's not a bad experiment.
E-mail peter@gvhba.org. Saturday, February 6, 2010 A new book on Downtown Vancouver's Eastsideby Cory Raven on Sat, Feb, 6, 2010 04:08 PM
Reviewed by Tom Sandborn
From Saturday's Globe and Mail Published on Friday, Feb. 05, 2010 12:33PM EST Last updated on Friday, Feb. 05, 2010 5:46PM EST
Vancouver Special
By Charles Demers Arsenal Pulp, 272 pages, $24.95
A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and the Fight for Its Future By Larry Campbell, Neil Boyd and Lori Culbert GreyStone, 320 pages, $24.95
If Vancouver doesn't make you a little crazy with grief or laughter, you probably aren't paying enough attention. Canada's major Pacific port is getting a lot of attention these days, what with its lucrative globalized trade, the imminent arrival of the Olympic circus and the vertiginous excitement of a real-estate market on crack. Add to this the frequent shootouts as the city's drug gangs settle territorial disputes with AK-47s, and the quotidian comedy of errors as politicians from all three levels of government tap-dance and manoeuvre around the city's baffling problems, and you have an urban landscape guaranteed to appall and fascinate.
Vancouver is any writer's dream subject, whether the genre is poetry, such as Malcolm Lowry's searing visions of hell on Hastings Street, the novel, such as Timothy Taylor's comic masterpiece Stanley Park, urban history, such as the magisterial and entertaining works of Chuck Davis, or volumes of earnest social analysis, produced by the cubic yard during the city's tumultuous history. Here are two new contributions to the city's canon.
Vancouver Special is an entertaining and intelligent collection of essays by Charles Demers, a multitalented local stand-up comic, TV personality and social critic. (He's also recently published a debut novel, The Prescription Errors.) Demers writes with impressive erudition and wit about everything from the distinctive and graceless Vancouver residential design that gives the book its title to the city's approaches to racism, pot, anarchism, rich people and the homeless. There are, of course, a few passages in which his attempt to find the comic element in essentially serious subject matter comes off as strained, but these are mercifully few.
Demers also provides a wonderful guide to Vancouver's many neighbourhoods, a more pungent and nuanced account than you would get from the chamber of commerce, but a loving and accurate view of the city's dizzying diversity nonetheless. His portrait of Commercial Drive, one of the city's most interesting bohemian enclaves and his current home, is particularly vivid, but he is also impressive on Chinatown, the gay village along Davie Street and the Little India neighbourhood around Main and 49th. Readers who loved Stan Persky's classic book of Vancouver essays, Buddy's, or Bruce Serafin's Stardust, will find Demers's blend of acute observation, wit, intelligent reflection and lapidary prose similarly attractive.
One of the most moving chapters in Vancouver Special addresses the ongoing tragedy of the city's Downtown Eastside. The chapter opens with an account of a CBC-TV special that featured haggard drug addicts, the exploitative pharmacists who prey on them, pathetic anecdotes about petty crime and an interview with a hard-boiled cop who has grown old and cynical. The kicker to this otherwise unremarkable account, Demers tells us, is that the special ran six decades ago. Some urban nightmares seem to go on forever.
While Demers takes on the whole city, former Vancouver mayor and now Liberal Senator Larry Campbell, criminologist Neil Boyd and journalist Lori Culbert focus on the Downtown Eastside and its poverty and addiction-ravaged streets in A Thousand Dreams. They bring a rich body of varied experience to bear, and the book's lucid prose – most probably the work of Culbert, an award-winning Vancouver Sun writer – makes their policy suggestions and the storytelling that supports them equally accessible. Some of their stories horrify, especially the account of police and public indifference long after neighbourhood activists suspected a serial killer was preying on sex-trade workers in Vancouver.
The otherwise impressively fair-minded and persuasive work is marred by a few puzzling omissions that seem hard to explain as anything other than lapses into professional or political spite. Campbell's left-wing opponents within his own caucus during his term as mayor, for example, receive little narrative attention, and the explosive fracturing of his majority – which might have been able to do more to address the tragedy of the Downtown Eastside absent his heavy-handed leadership – does not, perhaps unsurprisingly, get the attention it deserves. And the work of Simon Fraser University researcher (and Neil Boyd colleague) John Lowman, which brilliantly documents the lethal stupidity of Canadian prostitution law, is mentioned only once, and parenthetically at that.
Most of the book's suggestions for reform – saner prostitution and drug policies, adequate social housing and more effective outreach to the vulnerable – are sound and have been heard before. What remains to be seen is whether we can muster the political will to make them work. If that long-deferred goal is finally achieved, books like these will have played a role in making it possible. In the meantime, no one in Vancouver, or the nation, should miss these two remarkable and valuable works.
Tom Sandborn is a writer and social-justice activist who has lived in Vancouver since 1967. Friday, February 5, 2010 January 2010 sees a balanced market in Vancouver Real Estateby Cory Raven on Fri, Feb, 5, 2010 11:56 PM
Housing supply and demand reach closer alignment in January
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Vancouver - Diverse selection and favourable interest rates continue to drive demand in the Greater Vancouver housing market.
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 1,923 in January 2010, an increase of 152.4 per cent compared to January 2009 when 762 sales were recorded and a 23.5 per cent decline compared to the 2,515 sales recorded in December 2009.
In terms of historical perspective, January ranked as an average month for number of residential housing sales over the past decade, with higher sales in January 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2006.
Over the last 12 months, the MLSLink® Housing Price Index (HPI) benchmark price for all residential properties in Greater Vancouver increased 17.2 per cent to $573,241 from $489,007 in January 2009. This price is 0.8 per cent above the previous high point in the market in May 2008 when the residential benchmark price sat at $568,411.
“Although home prices in the region have largely returned to their previous peaks, we still see a significant number of first-time and move-up buyers in the market, thanks to low interest rates and the diverse range of properties available today,” Jake Moldowan, REBGV president-elect said.
“There is also closer alignment between supply and demand in today’s housing market. At 18 per cent, the sales-to-active listings ratio in January is approximately 10 per cent lower than we’ve seen in our market over the last six months,” Moldowan said.
New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties in Greater Vancouver totalled 5,147 in January 2010. This represents a 39.1 per cent increase compared to January 2009 when 3,700 new units were listed, and a 139.1 per cent increase compared to December 2009 when 2,153 properties were listed on the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) in Greater Vancouver.
At 10,218, the total number of property listings on the MLS® increased 14 per cent in January compared to last month and declined 26 per cent from this time last year.
“Looking ahead, it’s difficult to know exactly what the Olympic effect will be on our market in February, although I think it’s fair to say it should be a quieter period for home buyers and sellers and so, in fact, may be a good time for motivated buyers to search for properties,” Moldowan said.
In January, sales of detached properties increased 141.4 per cent to 705 from the 292 detached sales recorded during the same period in 2009. The benchmark price, as calculated by the MLSLink®
Housing Price Index, for detached properties increased 19.5 per cent from January 2009 to $788,499.
Sales of apartment properties in January 2010 increased 146.8 per cent to 891 compared to 361 sales in January 2009. The benchmark price of an apartment property increased 15.2 per cent from January 2009 to $385,487.
Attached property sales in January 2010 are up 200 per cent to 327, compared with the 109 sales in January 2009. The benchmark price of an attached unit increased 13.4 per cent between January 2009 and 2010 to $482,478.
Friday, February 5, 2010 Vancouver Realtor Cory Raven wonders if Vancouver can learn a lesson...by Cory Raven on Fri, Feb, 5, 2010 11:51 PM
Can Vancouver learn lessons from this developer/development? Vancouver is hoping to bill itself as the world's green capital, and it may just be time to do something drastic. Your thoughts?
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California developer introduces 'One Planet' ethic to this coast
"True sustainability' is the goal of 1,700-residence initiative north of San Francisco, not 'just a reduction in emissions'
By Kim Davis, Vancouver SunJanuary 30, 2010
If any organization has a truly global vision of sustainability, it's Bioregional.
The United Kingdom-based company has created an initiative called One Planet Communities. Those communities, now in place in several countries, are committed to reducing the ecological footprint of their residents to a truly sustainable level by 2020.
"The point of the One Planet program is to try to achieve true sustainability instead of just a reduction in emissions relative to something abstract like building codes or 1990 levels," says Greg Searle, executive director of BioRegional's North America office.
"The only real absolute that we know is that we have one planet and that there are nearly seven billion of us on a limited amount of bio-productive land. It's a kind of global speed limit that we're exceeding unsafely."
The One Planet initiative was inspired by BedZED, an urban eco-village Bioregional helped create in 2002 in the U.K. BedZED ended up being a living laboratory for ecological living, inspiring a new generation of design and public policy, Searle says.
"The One Planet program grew out of the observation that if we could create that much change in one country, just by building a small demonstration project, that we ought to challenge conventional ideas about sustainability with larger, more ambitious demonstration projects around the world."
Searle, a Canadian and an Ottawa resident, is One Planet's North American manager and a member of the organization's international steering committee.
There are now One Planet communities in Portugal, China, South Africa, the United Arab Emirates, Australia, and most recently in the U.S.: the Sonoma Mountain Village, or SOMO, in Rohnert Park, Calif., just north of San Francisco.
The SOMO project has all-encompassing sustainability as its goal. Sonoma Mountain Village is a 200-acre, mixed-use, solar-powered zero-waste community, of almost 1,700 homes that aims to have every resident no more than a five-minute walk to groceries, restaurants, day-care and other amenities offering local and sustainable products and services.
Good intentions
When asked how the initiative differs from green-building programs such as LEED, and in particular LEED for Neighbourhood Development, Searle says One Planet is goal-driven rather than point-driven, but also works to inject sustainability into every aspect of the project. For example, one development in the U.K. not only ran a sustainable canteen for construction workers, it also encouraged them to bike to work.
"Just going to the highest level of a green-building rating system like LEED doesn't get you out of trouble [with carbon emissions] in the building category, and does very little to help the waste and transportation contributions that are often very significant," he says. At last year's Living Futures Conference, Bioregional and SOMO developer Codding Enterprises presented a study on the total carbon footprint of households in various green-building scenarios.
To live truly sustainably, the report said, U.S. households would have to achieve a 75-percent reduction in their total carbon footprint.
The study found that even households in an LEED for Neighbourhood Development platinum project -- the highest ranking possible -- achieved only an 18-per-cent reduction. Green buildings and smart-growth planning are important steps, says Searle, noting that while LEED works nicely with the One Planet program, green buildings alone are not nearly enough.
Rising to the challenge
Already frustrated by the process and results he was seeing in his own LEED projects, Geof Syphers of Codding Enterprises welcomed the challenge One Planet Communities offered when developing the Sonoma Mountain Village.
"Even in the very best-case scenario, under an LEED Platinum project, we were only reducing CO2 emissions by 15 to 20 per cent relative to the status quo," says Syphers. "Even if we were beating stringent codes by 40 per cent, and we're supplying half of the power with renewable energy, we're still providing the other half with fossil fuels and causing a net detriment to the planet."
Syphers says the One Planet framework was attractive, in part, because it lays out exactly what is needed to achieve sustainability. "It makes no claim that you'll succeed," he says, "but if you fall short, you'll know exactly what the gap is and why, and then they publish that widely.
"Instead of patting ourselves on the back for reducing waste by 89 per cent, we say we made good progress, but still have a long way to go, and if you can help us, that would be great. It allows real science to happen."
Progressive Reporting
An important tool in the One Planet program is a publicly available annual audit. Searle
describes this aspect as particularly timely in light of recent negative press over green buildings found to be underperforming. "Monitoring is generally a huge gap and it's rare to find a real estate developer that's willing to take risk over a 10-year period to have their progress reviewed. I think it makes a much better product for the consumer and raises the integrity and credibility of a project enormously."
Searle argues that we need to go into sustainable projects with the spirit that they are pioneering opportunities for us to learn what works, and perhaps more importantly, what doesn't.
Priceless Future
Both Searle and Syphers acknowledge that they cannot control the environmental impact residents have when the developer leaves the SOMO development, but when they consider the BedZED experience and others, they estimate that the design, planning and services of the development with help residents reduce their total direct carbon emissions by 83 per cent.
Perhaps even more impressive than this, or the development's enviable bells and whistles, are the great strides being made in changing policy and bylaw barriers.
"My main motivation is to first legalize this and enable it," says Syphers. From variances needed to narrow streets, to the three bills now pending to expand solar applications, Sonoma Mountain Village's greatest impact, like BedZed's, could well be in forging the way for others.
For more information on the SOMO's impressive attributes, visit sonomamountainvillage.com,worldchanging.com/archives/009448.html,or oneplanetcommunities.org
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun Wednesday, February 3, 2010 Vancouver prices rise, suburban sales levels taper offby Cory Raven on Wed, Feb, 3, 2010 04:03 PM VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver house prices reached a new peak level in January while the overall pace of sales across the Lower Mainland eased off the torrid pace seen in December, according to reports from the region’s real estate boards.
In Metro Vancouver, the benchmark price for a single-family home, the average price for typical homes sold, hit $788,499, some 20 per cent above January a year ago, when prices were still falling during the economic downturn, and two per cent above the previous peak of $771,250 in May of 2008.
That new high, however, was driven mostly by the sales of higher-priced properties in specific municipalities, Robyn Adamache, a market analyst for Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., said in an interview.
“Mostly, the areas above [the peak] are the west side of Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond and the Tri Cities,” Adamache said.
In the rest of Metro Vancouver within the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver’s territory, house prices are still below their previous peaks.
While the bounce-back has been rapid, Tsur Somerville, a real estate expert at the University of British Columbia, said the new highs are less concerning given that mortgage rates remain at near record lows.
“That carrying cost and monthly mortgage payment is still down [from peak levels],” Somerville, director of the centre for urban economics and real estate at the Sauder School of Business at UBC, said in an interview.
“We’re not at the point where we’re freaking out again [about high prices], but it bears watching.”
Somerville added that with overall sales cooling a bit in January compared with last December’s high level, the rate of price growth is likely to slow as well.
Sales across the Lower Mainland in January eased off their December pace.
In Metro Vancouver, realtors recorded 1,923 sales through the Multiple Listing Service in January, which was more than double the number of sales in the same month a year ago, but off almost 24 per cent from the pace of sales in the previous month.
In the Fraser Valley, realtors saw 981 sales through the Multiple Listing Service in January, off 22 per cent from December, but still more than double the number of sales from the same month a year ago when markets across the Lower Mainland had nearly ground to a halt.
“Sales are not declining,” Somerville added. “But we’re slowing the rate of [sales] growth to something that makes more sense.”
He said January’s sales, while below 2005 levels, the region’s peak year for transactions, the month was still on par with 2006 and 2007, which were busy years on the region’s historical scale.
Somerville guessed that some of this year’s reduction in sales may be Olympic-influenced. Condo owners who are renting their properties out for the Games are more reluctant to list them for sale until the event is over.
Jake Moldowan, president-elect of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, said January was still a busy month for realtors.
He added that a substantial rise in new listings in January was “refreshing for us, because we were getting short of product again.”
Homeowners put 5,147 properties on the market in January, which was 139 per cent more than were listed in December, and was 39 per cent higher than in January 2009.
Sellers listed 2,941 properties for sale in January, a near doubling from the number of new listings put up for sale in December.
The benchmark price for a Fraser Valley single-family home, the average value of typical homes sold, hit $500,931 in January, up almost 11 per cent from the same month a year ago, but still slightly below peak levels.
• PRICE POINTS
Lower Mainland real estate markets saw prices jump again in January, in some locations beyond previous peak levels to new records. Below are some year-over-year examples of benchmark prices, which are average prices for typical homes sold.
• Metro Vancouver
Single family: $$788,499 +20%
Townhouse: $482,478 +13%
Condominium: $385,487 +15%
• Fraser Valley
Single family: $500,931 +11%
Townhouse: $317,719 +8%
Condominium: $243,470 +10%
Source: Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, Fraser Valley Real Estate Board
depenner@vancouversun.com
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun Wednesday, February 3, 2010 I have sold a property at # 203 1680 W 4TH AV in Vancouverby Cory Raven on Wed, Feb, 3, 2010 04:22 AM
I have sold a property at # 203 1680 W 4TH AV in Vancouver.
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010 I have sold a property at # 903 7225 ACORN AV in Burnabyby Cory Raven on Wed, Feb, 3, 2010 04:22 AM
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010 I have sold a property at # 428 2008 PINE ST in Vancouverby Cory Raven on Wed, Feb, 3, 2010 04:22 AM
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