affordability, gentrification and adaptation in vancouver, canada

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Affordability and Livability in Vancouver, BC An analysis of discourse and adaptation Wes Regan Urban Land Institute Cascadia Conference 2014 Portland, Oregon

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Page 1: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Affordability and Livability in Vancouver, BC An analysis of discourse and adaptationWes ReganUrban Land Institute Cascadia Conference 2014 Portland, Oregon

Page 2: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

So…who’s this guy?

Page 3: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada
Page 4: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Trivia time!

Alex asks: Which city consistently ranks as the most livable in North America and occasionally THE WORLD?

Page 5: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

That’s right! It’s Vancouver

Page 6: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

!Double Jeopardy!

Alex asks: “What’s the most expensive city in North America in which to live? New York? Los Angeles? Vancouver? Toronto?

Page 7: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Right again! Vancouver is North America’s most unaffordable city

Page 8: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

But we lose to Hong Kong for the global unaffordable housing title

Page 9: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

This is usually what happens when we come in 2nd place

Page 10: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Some context…

Page 11: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Some more context…

Page 12: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Rising Home Values - Stagnant Incomes

Page 13: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Rising Home Values - Stagnant Incomes

“The average income in Metro Vancouver in 2009, was only $41,176, according to Canada Revenue Agency statistics. In Vancouver proper, we are getting by on $43,911. However, Richmond residents are barely scraping by at $33,350 a year — the lowest average income in the region, followed by Burnaby, with an average of $34,961…With the average selling price of a detached house in Vancouver at $1.116-million, the incomes do not.”

- For Vancouver, housing and income don’t add up, Kerry Gold, Globe and Mail, June 7th 2013

But it’s not just our housing that’s expensive…

Page 14: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada
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Page 18: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Would you like some extra debt with your cappuccino?

Page 19: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

So who’s buying? Who’s driving up those prices??

Page 20: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

The China Syndrome….

Page 21: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

“Nowadays, I tell you, when you open the door selling a house, 99% it’s Chinese,” she said, doing her best to summarize the situation between calls on her cellphone.

“That’s why I have to talk fast – my schedule is so busy!”

Business In Vancouver

Page 22: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada
Page 23: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada
Page 24: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Vancouver’s real estate market has been “Globalized”

Page 25: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

So how about “the locals” (who moved from all over the world to live here…)

Page 26: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

“There are so many people with great skill sets, really the emerging leaders of this city, who are leaving because they can’t have kids and live here,” says Tremain. “They can’t afford the accommodation.

It’s partly a generation gap, where all these people came of purchasing age at a point when the market took off. It’s just bad luck, bad timing.”

Page 27: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

An exodus is perhaps exaggerating…people are still moving here, and staying here.

Page 28: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

The ones who have stayed, or moved here, are truly innovative and adaptive

Sharing economy also a response to affordability crisis?

Page 29: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

COV and Developers are creating various cubby holes and bunkers for these 20 and 30 somethings

Page 30: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

City Responding in Innovative Ways

Laneway housing (carriage house etc.)

Page 31: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Container housing, drives down costs improves proforma

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Page 33: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Some others aren’t taking it so well

Page 34: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

The downward (or Eastward) pressures of high livability and low affordability

The overall housing and affordability crisis is putting pressure on low-income areas (EastVan) where the gentrification debate has been raging for the past few years as development creeps eastward…

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“THE VISION VANCOUVER–CONTROLLED council has tried to mollify residents who've expressed outrage over the community-planning process.”

Page 38: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

DTES Local Area Plan

Page 39: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Significant changes to density and heights via “urban villages”

Page 40: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada
Page 41: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Summary…Local income levels and rising house values are out of

synch – but there are several other influencers of affordability (child care, tuition, $15 glass of wine etc)

Qualitatively we feel China, or wealthy Chinese, have something to do with our never-ending rising house values – but that’s a bit of a touchy issue and has been reframed to some degree as “Globalization” of our real estate market

Global pressures are creating local innovations in both housing and built form, zoning and land use, and local use of resources (sharing economy)

Also creating a class based narrative of gentrification as development moves East and residents resist change or are priced out

“Nowhere else to build”

Page 42: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Thank you

Page 43: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Bonus extra slides…

Page 44: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

What are our options?Diversify housing (more co-op

housing, co-housing, laneway housing, micro lofts etc.)

Senior levels of government pitch in more for social housing

Increase incomes (Econ Dev? Welfare?)

Foreign ownership tax, luxury tax, flipping tax, raised fees

Vancouver Housing Authority just formed

Page 45: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Drive down costs and improve pro-forma?Wood frame buildings Container housingRelax parking requirements DLCs and CACs (Value capture

tools)Permit facilitation and permit

bundling

Page 46: Affordability, Gentrification and Adaptation in Vancouver, Canada

Drive up incomes?Firm attraction (VEC)Increase Minimum Wage? Living Wage?Reduce barriers to local SMEs

◦Split assessments◦Mitigate “hot spots” (Tax Commission)◦Floor plate size for retail requirements in

Dev.◦Permit facilitation◦Reduction of permit trigger thresholds