Posted on
October 30, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

For centuries brass has been the metal of choice for door knobs. In recent years design trends have shifted to brushed nickel coated steel and recently to black coated steel. But there may have been a reason brass was popular for so long … it actually kills bacteria. As many infections can be spread by door knobs, it’s interesting to note that a brass knob (unvarnished) will disinfect itself in about seven hours. Steel, Stainless Steel and Aluminum knobs will never disinfect themselves.
This effect was discovered by Swiss botanist Carl von Nageli in the 1890’s and is known as the Oligodynamic effect. He studied how metal ions, even in low concentrations, are toxic to living cells and microorganisms, concluding that the metal ions of silver and copper and copper alloys interfere with their metabolism.
You might think that shiny stainless steel door knob would be a better antibacterial than a grungy-looking tarnished brass one. Think how many times you have seen stainless steel knobs in hospitals, they must know a few things about germs, right? In fact, brass (being a copper alloy commonly 65% copper/35% zinc) is germicidal. Stainless steel (being an iron alloy (88% iron/12% chromium) is not.
If you want to get the most disinfectant benefit from your brass door knobs you have to remove the coating that manufacturers put on them to keep them shiny. Paint stripper will do the trick. You’ll have to polish once in a while if you want them to be shiny, but they also look very nice if you let them age to a beautiful patina. Here’s to beautiful brass.
Posted on
October 29, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
We have listed a new property at 661 DOLLARTON HWY N in NORTH VANC.
VIEW, VIEW, VIEW of the BURRARD INLET.. This 13600 sq.ft property high on the street near Deep Cove has one View that you will never lose. Currently tenanted to long term tenants. Attn Investors buy now and hold till later and build or Builders come one and come all.. Hard to find this type of property with this View in this area.. Home has 6 bedrooms, tons of storage, lots of parking, needs some TLC.. Please allow some time to view..
Posted on
October 29, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
1) Halloween Is The Second Highest Grossing Commercial Holiday After Christmas
What used to be just a singular holiday with minimal things to purchase has turned into an entire "Halloween Season." Between decorative lights and lawn ornaments, elaborate costumes and loads of candy, the average American spends a pretty penny on this fall holiday. However popular Halloween has become, the recession has affected spending for this year's spooky night. Spending is down, according the the National Retail Federation. Shoppers will spend an average of $56.31 on the holiday compared to $66.54 in 2008. Some ways people are cutting down include making homemade costumes, using last year's decorations and buying less expensive candies. For the children's sake, let's hope everyone doesn't resort to giving out apples and pennies. Didn't you just hate that as a kid?
2) Harry Houdini Died On October 31, 1926
The famous magician was killed (accidentally) by a McGill University student named J. Gordon Whitehead who was hitting him in the stomach repeatedly as part of a stunt. A week later he died of peritonitis from a ruptured appendix. Despite acute appendicitis, Houdini refused to seek medical treatment.
3) There's A Phobia For That
Samhainophobia is an intense and persistent fear of Halloween that can cause panic attacks in sufferers. Other relevant phobias for this time of year: wiccaphobia (fear of witches), phasmophobia (fear of ghosts), and coimetrophobia (fear of cemeteries).
4) The First Jack-O-Lanterns Weren't Made Out Of Pumpkins
They were originally hollowed-out turnips. The modern practiced mutated from the Irish tradition of carving faces of the the dead onto the gourds and putting candles inside to make them glow. These days your Jack-O-Lantern is most made out of a pumpkin, which most likely came from Illinois--a state that grew 542 million pounds of pumpkin in 2007.
5) One Quarter Of All The Candy Sold Annually Is For Halloween Night
Yes, no matter how much we eat for Christmas and Thanksgiving, Halloween has corned the market on candy. As a country we consume 20 million pounds of candy corn a year. Handing out Halloween treats is the perfect excuse to eat some too, as four-in-ten (41%) adults admit that they sneak sweets from their own candy bowl. And if you're a kid, hang on to your basket, because home is where the candy thief is as 90% of parents admit to sneaking goodies from their kids' Halloween trick-or-treat bags. But whether your stealing some, handing out some or having yours stolen, chances are you'll get your hands (or miss getting your hands) on a Snickers bar, it has been the number 1 Halloween candy for years.
Posted on
October 29, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

Effective - Adequate to accomplish a purpose; producing the intended or expected result.
VS
Efficient - Performing or functioning in the best possible manner with the least waste of time and effort.
Those are the definitions of the two terms. For the last couple of weeks I have been asking myself how to streamline my business, and not be up at 6am checking out the new listings that expired just 6 hours earlier, and conversely not be up till 1 am writing blog posts, much to the chagrin of my girlfriend as she sleeps, as I make a lot of noise going back and forth to the kitchen to get a snack.
I like to think of myself as a technology geek, and have an app for everything. Need to access a contract from my phone from 10 years ago (my first year in the business)? No problem. Need to scan and fax a contract to another realtor using nothing more than my iPhone? Done. How about having my client in China, and his wife in Germany sign the same contract, but they don't have a printer or scanner, or any fancy apps? Easy Peasy.
Here is the problem, I dream (actually nightmares) of Dropbox, Docusign, PDF Expert, etc etc etc. I fear I am going to develop carpel tunnel syndrome sooner than I should by my constant clicking of that round button on the bottom of my square phone....when is enough enough?
I have some rules that I created for myself, to try not to be one of those zombies you see on the Walking Dead.
1) No phones at the dinner table
This one is self explanatory, drives me nuts.
2) I never answer my phone when with a client.
This one comes with an explanation...(Most clients can attest, getting me on a phone call is probably as easy one of us as dialing up Ryan Gosling to see what he's up to. I have a theory behind this.....hear me out. As much as it can be frustrating to get 4 rings and get my lovely voicemail, that same client knows I give them the same respect when we are in a meeting, or showing houses etc, they will never see me zip away and be 'that guy' (you know, the loud talker, finger in his ear to get maximum hearing call quality). I actually use this as a point in my initial meetings with people, and after I explain it, most clients get it, respect it, and actually like it. That being said, if you need to get a hold of me asap as that neighbours house you wanna buy just went up for sale, I respond to email/text within the hour (normally minutes). I think instead of the old school signs with Realtors smiling as wide as they possible can (yes I mean Eddie Yan) pretending they are on the phone, we need to update those ads to realtors sending an email on their tablets.
3) Never negotiate an offer via text/email
This coming from me, you know its important. Running 10 minutes late for a showing?, send a text. Want to know if this listing is still available? Send away! Asking your client if I can do an open house this weekend, start typing. Negotiating an offer with another agent, explaining why you are offering the price you are, why your clients chose that date for possession, explaining their conditions and terms......PICK UP THE PHONE. Negotiating was never meant to be done over text/email. In fact I prefer to meet the other agent face to face, in one of our offices. You would be surprised how much easier it is.
Cellphones, tablets, apps, make us more efficient, 100%, but do they make us less effective? So often these two things get confused. There is a time and place for everything, and again, I am 100% pro technology but at what point do we become less effective?
This summer I remember going to a wedding and 'snapchatting' most of the ceremony so that I could watch later, send to friends (because after a few beers I figure everyone would want to see videos of 2 people they don't know cut cake right?). My beautiful (she may read this, gotta cover all my bases) girlfriend reminded me 'nicely' that I didn't need to video every part because, well.....I was THERE. The best line she said was 'Why would you want to watch a wedding out of a 4 inch (my screen is 4.7 inches for her information) when you could just watch it'. I hate to admit it, but she was right. Very efficient, zipping videos out in 10 second snippets to anyone that would watch, but how effective was it?
Applying this principle to work, there are times when being effecient is great, but I can tell you this, my old school aunts and uncles aren't going to hire you to sell their house, replace their roof, or do their taxes if you send them an invitation to your blog (irony right?) , maybe invite them for a cup of coffee and chat in person,
just my 2 cents.
Paul
Posted on
October 17, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
We have listed a new property at 429 9847 MANCHESTER DR in Burnaby.
COMPLETED REMODELLED - 2 bedroom and den unit at Barclay Woods. Kohler Fixtures, concrete counter tops, hardwood floors, closet organizers.. and the list goes on and on... Nothing to do but move in. Great for first time buyers or investors, as rentals are allowed. Laundry on the same floor. Well maintained complex all re-piped and updated.. Within walking distance to Lougheed Mall and Skytrain. You will not be disappointed with this unit.
Posted on
October 16, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
Please visit our Open House at 43 2200 PANORAMA DR in PORT MOODY.
Open House on Saturday, October 17, 2015 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
EXECUTIVE STYLE - Corner Half - Duplex style townhouse located at "The Quest". NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE IN. Unit has 4 bedrooms and 4 bathroomS on 3 floors. Features include large en-suite, walk in closet, high ceilings on main floor, south east exposure to enjoy your morning coffee on the deck off the dining room, or the larger deck off the Rec Room downstairs, 2 Car garage, tons of storage and all this is a well run complex. Don't wait. Showings Oct 17th and 18th from 2-4pm on both days.
Posted on
October 16, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
Please visit our Open House at 1302 295 GUILDFORD WAY in PORT MOODY.
Open House on Saturday, October 17, 2015 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
The 'Bentley' built by BOSA. Stunning south views, 180 degrees. This bright and open concept layout features REAL Brazilian Cherry Hardwood throughout. Stainless steel appliances, large private balcony is perfect for entertaining. Spacious master bedroom fits all size furniture. Pets/Rentals are also allowed! Steps away from trendy boutiques, food markets, restaurants, Rocky Point Park and nearby Burrard Inlet. This building offers wheelchair access, an exercise center, a beautiful lounge for your relaxation, a bike room, in-suite laundry, a meeting room and secure underground parking/storage locker. The pride of ownership shows in this immaculately maintained unit. Call today for your private viewing.
Posted on
October 14, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
We have listed a new property at 43 2200 PANORAMA DR in PORT MOODY.
EXECUTIVE STYLE - Corner Half - Duplex style townhouse located at "The Quest". NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE IN. Unit has 4 bedrooms and 4 bathroomS on 3 floors. Features include large en-suite, walk in closet, high ceilings on main floor, south east exposure to enjoy your morning coffee on the deck off the dining room, or the larger deck off the Rec Room downstairs, 2 Car garage, tons of storage and all this is a well run complex. Don't wait. Showings Oct 17th and 18th from 2-4pm on both days.
Posted on
October 10, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
Please visit our Open House at 102 331 KNOX ST in NEW WEST.
Open House on Saturday, October 10, 2015 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Located in the desirable neighborhood of Sapperton in New Westminster on Knox Street & Buchanan Avenue. This is a contral location that is clsoe to public transit, IGA, restaurant Royal city shopping centre, coffee shops,medical services,, schools, library, recreation and more! Direct access to highways allows an easy commute to surrounding destinations including Richmond, Ladner & Surrey. Spacious floor plans, sepeaate dining rooms, in-suite storage and large balconies. Ground level unit has a private garden patio that is fully fenced and perfect f r relaxing and enteraining
Posted on
October 6, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
We have listed a new property at 1302 295 GUILDFORD WAY in PORT MOODY.
The 'Bentley' built by BOSA. Stunning south views, 180 degrees. This bright and open concept layout features REAL Brazilian Cherry Hardwood throughout. Stainless steel appliances, large private balcony is perfect for entertaining. Spacious master bedroom fits all size furniture. Pets/Rentals are also allowed! Steps away from trendy boutiques, food markets, restaurants, Rocky Point Park and nearby Burrard Inlet. This building offers wheelchair access, an exercise center, a beautiful lounge for your relaxation, a bike room, in-suite laundry, a meeting room and secure underground parking/storage locker. The pride of ownership shows in this immaculately maintained unit. Call today for your private viewing.
Posted on
October 6, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
Please visit our Open House at 1302 295 GUILDFORD WAY in PORT MOODY.
Open House on Saturday, October 10, 2015 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
The 'Bentley' built by BOSA. Stunning south views, 180 degrees. This bright and open concept layout features REAL Brazilian Cherry Hardwood throughout. Stainless steel appliances, large private balcony is perfect for entertaining. Spacious master bedroom fits all size furniture. Pets/Rentals are also allowed! Steps away from trendy boutiques, food markets, restaurants, Rocky Point Park and nearby Burrard Inlet. This building offers wheelchair access, an exercise center, a beautiful lounge for your relaxation, a bike room, in-suite laundry, a meeting room and secure underground parking/storage locker. The pride of ownership shows in this immaculately maintained unit. Call today for your private viewing.
Posted on
October 4, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

Conditions continue to favour home sellers across *Metro Vancouver’s housing market. The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that residential property sales in Metro Vancouver reached 3,345 on the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) in September 2015. This represents a 14.5 per cent increase compared to the 2,922 sales recorded in September 2014, and a 0.5 per cent decrease compared to the 3,362 sales in August 2015. Last month’s sales were 32.9 per cent above the 10-year sales average for the month. “Residential home sales have been trending at 25 to 30 per cent above the ten-year sales average for most of the year. The number of homes listed for sale hasn’t been keeping up with the demand,” Darcy McLeod, REBGV president said. “It’s this dynamic that’s placing upward pressure on home prices, particularly in the detached home market.” New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties in Metro Vancouver totalled 4,846 in September. This represents a 7.9 per cent decline compared to the 5,259 new listings reported in September 2014. The total number of properties listed for sale on the real estate board’s MLS® is 10,805, a 27 per cent decline compared to September 2014 and a 0.8 per cent decline compared to August 2015. “At no point this year has the number of homes listed for sale exceeded 14,000, which is the first time this has occurred in the region since 2007,” McLeod said. The MLS® Home Price Index composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver is currently $722,300. This represents a 13.7 per cent increase compared to September 2014. The sales-to-active-listings ratio in September was 31 per cent. Generally, analysts say that downward pressure on home prices occurs when the ratio declines below the 12 per cent mark, while home prices often experience upward pressure when it reaches 20 per cent, or higher, in a particular community for a sustained period of time. Sales of detached properties in September 2015 reached 1,272, an increase of 0.2 per cent from the 1,270 detached sales recorded in September 2014, and a 24.3 per cent increase from the 1,023 units sold in September 2014. The benchmark price for a detached property in Metro Vancouver increased 18.9 per cent from September 2014 to $1,179,700. Sales of apartment properties reached 1,529 in September 2015, an increase of 28.7 per cent compared to the 1,188 sales in September 2014, and an increase of 50.2 per cent compared to the 1,018 sales in September 2013. The benchmark price of an apartment property increased nine per cent from September 2014 to $415,100. Attached property sales in September 2015 totalled 544, an increase of 17.2 per cent compared to the 464 sales in September 2014, and a 23.1 per cent increase from the 442 attached properties sold in September 2013. The benchmark price of an attached unit increased 8.1 per cent between September 2014 and 2015 to $518,600.
Posted on
October 4, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
As the city is deluged with permit applications for new houses, laneway houses, garages and renovations, bad behaviour is also on the rise.
Homeowners and builders are increasingly pushing boundaries on what’s allowed in order to speed the process. Because of a massive spike in residential permit applications, the city has seen a 74-per-cent overall monthly increase in stop work orders issued this year compared with last year.
Stop work orders are typically issued to homeowners when work is being done without a permit. As of the end of August, Vancouver had issued an average of 20 stop work orders each month this year.
“We just have a huge number of permits coming up – new homes, commercial, you name it. We have very high construction values and an increase in numbers, so that is part of the problem,” the city’s chief building official, Pat Ryan, said. “That’s putting a lot of pressure on city staff to keep up with everything.”
The spike in permit applications is mostly due to major increases in residential work. And the majority of the stop work orders have been for residential jobs as well, he says.
As a result, the city is hiring extra staff to respond to the problem. Chief city planner Brian Jackson said he’s in the process of reviewing the situation.
“The increase [in stop work orders] is due to the frustration out there and the slowness of our approval of permits, so people have gone ahead and started work without them,” he said Thursday. “So we are trying to address that. We are meeting with the city manager today. The current situation is unacceptable to our employees, to our department, to our management and certainly to council.
“When you look at the total number of dwellings approved to date in 2015 compared [with] the total number approved to the end of August, 2014, we are up almost 1,000 residential units. This is in all [housing] categories.”
Currently, the maximum fine for working without a permit is $5,000. In a housing market in which the average house is priced at $2.23-million, that sort of fine is pocket change. Mr. Ryan says the real deterrent is the time delay that follows a stop work order. Basically, if you break the rules the city will spend more time issuing you permits and inspecting your work.
“If someone is doing work without a permit, obviously there is potentially more of a problem,” Mr. Ryan said. “It’s going to be a more thorough check, because the trust is gone.”
Mr. Jackson said the increase in stop work orders is exacerbated by new regulations, such as the required deconstruction of old homes that are demolished, or better energy or wheelchair-accessibility requirements. Also, earlier this year there was an intense crackdown on projects that were supposed to have sprinkler systems. The regulations mean it takes more time to get a project through the system.
“[Stop work orders] are rising faster than we’d like,” he said. “That’s why we have to get the permitting system back to functioning the way it was in 2013.
“And that’s why I’m requesting additional permanent staff,” he added.
If the fines were an actual deterrent, there would be fewer attempts at illegal, potentially unsafe work, and the city would save money on the administrative costs associated with having to respond to bad behaviour. As well, there would probably be more trees standing. About half the city’s tree canopy is on private properties, and as a result the city’s once amazing canopy area has shrunk to 18 per cent. Unbelievably, Toronto has a bigger tree canopy than Vancouver.
Mr. Jackson said an increase in fines would be something to consider, perhaps an amount “proportional to the value of the building.” For legal reasons, the city couldn’t raise them sky high, but they could be much higher.
“The amount of the fines may be one of the reasons why it’s not much of a deterrent when dealing with a multimillion-dollar house. A $5,000 fine is a drop in the bucket compared [with] the contractor being able to deliver a house on time to a client.”
It appears the high cost of Vancouver housing is directly linked to contractors pushing through with illegal work to meet their budgets. Other municipalities such as Burnaby, North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Coquitlam, Langley and Richmond have not experienced a similar increase in stop work orders this year. But the pace of development in those communities has not increased significantly this year over last. Burnaby’s chief building inspector, Patrick Shek, said the city issues about 350 to 400 permits for new homes and renovations a year. Only Delta’s planning chief, Jeff Day, mentioned an increase of about 5 per cent to 10 per cent in building and renovation permits.
“South Delta and North Delta are definitely busier than last year,” he said.
Meanwhile, some Vancouver residents are turning to vigilante tactics in an attempt to curtail illegal work. In June, one Dunbar resident got between a tree cutter and his chainsaw. The man had already removed several trees from a neighbour’s yard legally, with a permit. Under the developer’s instruction, he was proceeding to remove three more tall trees that were supposed to be protected. The woman, who didn’t want to be named, phoned the police and the city, and then grabbed the chainsaw away from the man. As other neighbours gathered around, she caused quite a commotion.
“[The developer and tree cutters] were absolutely beside themselves that I had tried to stop the work. They were furious,” she said.
A police officer arrived and ordered the cutter out of the tree, even though the officer couldn’t actually stop the work since it wasn’t a criminal act. It was only when a city staffer showed up that the illegal tree removal work was shut down. The owner faces fines of up to $10,000 per tree, and potential other costs.
The house, at 3854 West 38th Avenue, also had a stop work order put on it when the city discovered unpermitted work being done. It now sits half-finished, the wood framing exposed for months, and its forest of trees mostly cleared. There is what’s left of the three, sad 30-foot-tall trees, with most of their limbs lopped off. The site has gone from a charming house with a garden to a neighbourhood eyesore.
The woman has written to the city to raise the fines, especially considering that the house cost about $2.7-million.
“The $10,000 fine per tree is not a deterrent. It almost encourages you to cut them down,” she said.
Mr. Jackson said he’ll also be reviewing aspects of the tree bylaw and requesting changes in the next month.
Added Mr. Ryan: “You want the work done properly, by experienced tradespeople with appropriate permits. You may try to save a bunch of money, but it could cost you a lot more in the end.”
Posted on
October 4, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
VANCOUVER — The Bentall Centre, with its four distinctive office towers and mall, is being put up for sale by its majority owner, Ivanhoé Cambridge Inc.
The offering, which has not yet been listed but was confirmed Wednesday by Ivanhoé Cambridge, will likely be one of the largest transactions in the Vancouver’s history, according to observers.
The buildings, built between 1969 and 1981 and located between Burrard and Thurlow and Dunsmuir and Pender streets, have long been the epicentre of Vancouver’s central business district; the towers at Bentall 1,2,3 and 4, ranging from 21 to 35 storeys, house many of British Columbia’s established businesses and law offices.
The sale will attract interest from major investors around the world, said Arthur Lloyd, Ivanhoé Cambridge’s executive vice-president of office for North America.
“We believe there is appetite from global institutional investors seeking stable returns in core assets such as Bentall Centre,” he said in a statement.
Ivanhoé Cambridge spokesman Sébastien Théberge confirmed the company was selling the Bentall Centre but declined to comment on the specifics or details.
The four buildings contain nearly 1.5 million square feet of office space, along with 53,000 square feet of retail space underground. The complex is co-owned by Ivanhoé Cambridge Inc. and Great West Life Assurance, one of the original investors in the project.
How the sale will be arranged given the shared ownership is unclear, but such co-operative ownerships usually have buy-sell clauses that require one partner to first offer to the other partners. In this case Great West Life owns 40 per cent each of Bentall 1,2 and 3, and 25 per cent of Bentall 4, according to real estate experts with knowledge of the arrangement.
Calls for comment to GWL Realty Advisors, Great West Life’s real estate arm, were not returned.
The news surprised both the city and commercial real estate agents, who say the property is “irreplaceable” and is coming on the market at a strategic time.
“This is a big deal in a market that has been constrained for offerings like this,” said Kirk Kuester, the executive managing director of Colliers International. Kuester’s company isn’t involved in the listing but he agreed to discuss the impact of Ivanhoé Cambridge’s decision.
“We are in a market that is absolutely devoid of product in general, let alone trophy real estate, irreplaceable real estate, such as this. I mean you just don’t replace this kind of real estate,” Kuester said. “We continue to field inquiries from domestic, Canadian, foreign and international investors looking to acquire this kind of real estate and it just isn’t available.”
Vancouver’s Class A downtown business real estate is largely controlled by “less than half a dozen major institutional investors,” he said. “They are all looking to expand their holdings because economies of scale are ever so important when you own this kind of real estate.”
That demand, he said, will put the Bentall Centre sale off the charts.
“What is more relevant is that it will set a record in pricing — there is no doubt about it. We are at a point in time today where valuations are at all-time highs and supply is at an all-time low and liquidity is at an all-time high,” he said. “There is a massive, massive amount of liquidity in the capital market looking for these kinds of opportunities, which don’t exist.”
Kuester said he couldn’t estimate the total value of the offering.
However, by comparison, in 2009 German investment firm Deka Immobilien Investment GmbH bought the newer Bentall 5 building from a Quebec pension fund for $297 million. Three years later Deka sold it for $400 million to several Canadian pension funds whose investments are managed by Bentall Kennedy, a firm once related to the Bentall family, which built the original four buildings.
That sale in 2012 equated to about $686 per square foot, according to real estate reports. At that rate, Bentall Centre’s 1.53 million square feet would be worth just over $1 billion.
The Bentall Centre includes potential development of a fifth tower. Brian Jackson, Vancouver’s retiring chief planner, said there is unused development potential on the block that would allow a tall tower with a small floor plate.
Jackson was unaware that Ivanhoé Cambridge had decided to sell the block but he noted it is a significant development in the city’s business district.
“It is an enormous component of the downtown office supply and therefore maintaining part of that is very important,” Jackson said. “There is an opportunity for an office tower like the new Oxford tower, with a relatively small floor plate to fit in and among the other towers.”
Quebec-based Ivanhoé Cambridge, which has seen its total holdings jump from $31 billion in 2010 to $48 billion in 2015, has a number of major developments and properties in Metro Vancouver, including the Metrotower buildings in Burnaby and the Oakridge, Metropolis at Metrotown, Guildford Town Centre, Richmond Centre and Mayfair Centre shopping malls. It is also building the new Tsawwassen Mills shopping centre
Posted on
October 4, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
The real estate community in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley is gearing up for the largest and longest running blanket and warm clothing drive in these parts for the poor and homeless.
The 2015 collection marks the 21st year of the campaign, which started as a spontaneous action in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside by some realtors, according to industry spokesperson Fiona Youatt.
“What we do is we ask our members to ask their clients if they have any blankets or warm clothing they could donate,” Youatt told the Straight in a phone interview.
“And then we have volunteer realtors who collect these donations, sort them, and then take to local charities. And these are charities within their community, so it stays local. And also they’re given to charities that distribute the donations directly to the people in need,” the communications coordinator of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver explained.
The REBGV, Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, and Chilliwack and District Real Estate Board are partners in the annual blanket and warm clothing campaign.
In addition to blankets and clothing, scarves, hats, gloves, and new socks and underwear are included in the drive.
Last year, more than 17,000 blankets and clothing items were collected. Around 100 real estate offices participated in the campaign.
Youatt said that a number of realtors collect cold-weather articles all year round.
Posted on
October 3, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

The theme of this month's 350-member Manufactured Home Park Owners Alliance of BC (MHPOA) meeting in Harrison Hot Springs is: “It’s about the money.”
The topic is buzzing through B.C.’s 1,000 manufactured home parks, which are suddenly a hot real estate sector.
In 2014, 22 mobile home parks sold in B.C., with a total transaction value of $30.7 million, a 26% increase from a year earlier, according to data compiled by manufactured home park specialist Eugen Klein of Royal LePage City Centre.
“There are more buyers than sellers,” confirmed Al Kemp, executive director of MHPOA, which lists both park vendors and those looking to buy on its website.
Bill Summers, an agent with Abbotsford’s Lighthouse Realty, said for the first time he is seeing multiple bids on quality parks, especially anywhere near the Lower Mainland and southern Vancouver Island.
“People are realizing what a great investment they are,” Summers said.
Studies show the typical buyer is from the Lower Mainland or Vancouver Island and lives more than 500 kilometres from the park.
The average rental vacancy rate in manufactured home parks is 0.8% – lower than that of B.C.’s conventional apartment rental market – according to Kemp, who added that it’s not uncommon for better parks to have zero vacancies for years.
Kemp said many park residents are seniors who take pride in their community and seldom move.
This consistency, combined with steady cash flow and relatively high yields, has drawn the interest of larger investors. Toronto-based landlord giant Canadian Apartment Properties Real Estate Investment Trust bought a manufactured home park last year on the Sunshine Coast, and B.C.’s largest public-sector pension fund, the BC Investment Management Corp., has invested heavily in the sector.
The large purchasers are looking for manufactured home communities with more than 100 pads that are on city services, but Klein said they also focus on portfolios of smaller parks if larger parks can’t be found.
Private, smaller investors, however, are the primary buyers of the smaller small-town parks that make up the bulk of the inventory, agents say.
Under B.C. residential tenancy regulations, park owners will be allowed to raise annual pad rents 2.9% in 2016.
Kemp said the MHPOA money message goes beyond the buying and selling of parks and is really about waking up municipalities and consumers to what he believes is a realistic solution to B.C.’s soaring house prices. About 60,000 people live in manufactured homes in B.C., he said, and they pay the lowest housing costs in the province.
A young family can buy a new manufactured home in Metro Vancouver for $120,000 and pay less than $600 a month for a pad rental, Kemp said. Older homes can sell for much less.
The MHPOA is lobbying the Union of BC Municipalities, urging city councils to use zoning and tax allowances to encourage manufactured home park development and upgrades. •
Posted on
October 3, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

Vancouver is expected to have the fastest growing metropolitan economy in Canada this year, according to The Conference Board of Canada's Metropolitan Outlook: Autumn 2015.
"Vancouver's economy is on track to extend its streak of strong growth this year. In fact, 2015 will mark the fifth time in the past six years that growth in the region has topped 3 per cent," said Alan Arcand, Associate Director, Centre for Municipal Studies. "The manufacturing sector will lead the way this year, but widespread gains are expected across all sectors of the city's economy."
HIGHLIGHTS
- Vancouver is on track to post the fastest economic growth among 13 major cities in Canada. Toronto andWinnipeg round out the top three performers.
- Vancouver's manufacturing sector is expected to grow by 8.6 per cent in 2015.
- Hit hard by the slump in oil prices, long-standing economic leaders Calgary and Edmonton face recession in 2015.
Vancouver's economy is forecast to expand by 3.4 per cent in 2015 and rise by a further 3.5 per cent in 2016.
The outlook for the local manufacturing sector is very strong, thanks to the start of a multi-billion dollar contract to build non-combat ships for the federal government at Seaspan's North Vancouver site. The export-oriented sector will also benefit from the lower dollar and growing U.S. demand. In all, manufacturing output is expected to grow by an impressive 8.6 per cent in 2015.
Robust growth is also forecast for the region's services sector. Three sectors are expected to post output gains above 4 per cent this year: wholesale and retail trade, finance, insurance and real estate, and business services. Rising income and employment will encourage consumers to keep spending and support growth in wholesale and retail trade, while the finance, insurance, and real estate sector will benefit from an active housing market.
Although construction output is expected to dip in 2015, the downturn is expected to be short-lived. Housing starts are expected to rise by 8.1 per cent to 20,800 units this year and remain near this level over the next couple of years. Similarly, non-residential construction will remain healthy, with work starting on a number of new projects and continuing on several others, including the Trump International Hotel and Tower, theVancouver International Airport, and the Port Mann water supply tunnel.
Toronto, Winnipeg, Halifax, and Montréal round out the top five spots of fastest growing metropolitan economies in 2015. These cities are all on track to post economic growth above 2 per cent. In contrast, long-standing economic leaders Calgary and Edmonton face recession.
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SOURCE Conference Board of Canada
Posted on
October 3, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore
The ad is for a tiny $40,000 house that is on display at the Shipyard Friday night market as part of a North Vancouver micro housing showcase.
Designer Ben Garratt said in an interview on YouTube that the total size of the small home is 150 square feet. Almost all of the materials used to build it are recycled and sustainable.
Garratt seems to especially pride the home on being chemical-free; all the wood is finished with hemp oil.
Specs on the house include:
- A 30 inch by 30 inch stainless steel tub and shower
- Incinerating toilet, which means it doesn’t have to be hooked up to sewage – there’s no tank or pumping required
- Reclaimed cherry cabinets in the kitchen, granite countertops, induction cooktop and apartment-sized fridge
- Insured as a travel trailer by ICBC for $260 a year, giving you the freedom to roam
- Formaldahyde-free plywood
- Double glazed windows and doors
- Loft can fit a king-sized bed
- Sliding ladder for loft offers easy access
Posted on
October 3, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

A company in Toronto, Sotheby's International Realty Canada, believes that the Instability on the Chinese stock market is going to be a cause why buyers from mainland China will turn to Canadian luxury real estate come this fall, according to the Huffington Post. The realtor also foresees that in Toronto and Vancouver, there will be an increase in sales volume of homes that are valued more than $1 million. On the other hand, it thinks that the luxury market in Montreal will be stable while Calgary's will slow down because of the dwindling price in oil.
Moreover the company attributes the sales growth in Canada's two hottest real estate markets to the demand from international investors together with scarce inventory, the historically low interest rates and the increase in consumer confidence.
However, it is expected that in Calgary sales likely will continue to wane because the performance in Calgary's luxury real estate market is inseparable with the conditions of the oil and gas industry, which reportedly also has an effect on employment and migration.
Meanwhile, volatility on the global stock markets is expected to lead to an influx of international buyers looking to snatch up top-tier Canadian homes - particularly buyers from China, where the economy has shown signs that it is slowing.
"Canada in general is seen as an oasis of political and economic stability," according to Elaine Hung, the company's vice-president of marketing. Furthermore she believes that this is true even if Canada's economy slipped into a recession in the first semester and the oil prices continue to negatively affect Western Canada.
"There's been a lot of concern about the Canadian economy and uncertainty about what's going to happen next, but certainly when it comes down to real estate, what we've seen - particularly in the major metropolitan markets of Vancouver and Toronto - is that people are very, very confident in the real estate market itself," she added.
Posted on
October 3, 2015
by
Paul Liberatore

Soaring real estate costs are pushing some Canadian cities to embrace laneway housing, touted as the future of affordable living in urban centres.
But as the properties become more popular and balloon in value, questions are beginning to arise about whether current insurance practices are sufficient.
Home insurer Square One Insurance says it has been fielding so many recent calls about laneway homes - most of them in Vancouver - that it's started offering a separate product created specifically for the structures.
"Now, because of the high price of real estate, the whole concept of laneway housing has changed," Mirkovic said. "When you're looking at a laneway home that the owners have invested $200,000 or $300,000 dollars to build, that's a very significant investment."
Converting a back alley parking garage into a residential structure is one way for homeowners to offset the cost of pricey real estate by generating rental income. However, not all Canadian cities allow for laneway homes to be built.
Vancouver is a notable exception. The city has issued over 1,000 permits for laneway homes since 2009. In Calgary, city officials are launching a pilot project that will allow laneway homes to be developed along one of the city's streets.
As square footage in Canada's hottest real estate markets becomes pricier and developers look for new ways to squeeze housing into tight spaces, laneway homes are likely to grow in popularity. That could force insurers to rethink their policies.
Currently, most insurance companies - including Aviva Canada, Intact Financial and TD Insurance - cover laneway homes under the same policy as the main property and don't offer a separate insurance policy for the structures.
Mirkovic says that could be problematic in certain circumstances - for example, if a natural disaster occurs that affects both the main structure and the laneway home. In the aftermath of such incidents, building replacement costs may soar due to a phenomenon referred to as "post-event inflation."
In that situation, Mirkovic says, "the demand to build new homes or rebuild homes has gone up dramatically because there are thousands of people who need to rebuild their homes, and the supply is low. There's only a certain amount of building supplies readily available; only a certain amount of contractors who can build homes."
A home that cost $300,000 to build could cost $500,000 to rebuild. Typically, the insurance policy would cover the difference - but in the case of a laneway home, it might not, Mirkovic says.
"If you're insuring something as a detached structure you only get coverage up to the limit specified, which might be up to $300,000, but if it actually costs $400,000, you're out of pocket for the extra," Mirkovic said.
There could be drawbacks, however, such as two deductibles instead of one. In some instances, premiums may be higher as well, Mirkovic said.
Mike Shepel recently opted for Square One's laneway housing package to insure a rental property he purchased in Vancouver. Knowing that replacement costs are guaranteed to be covered in the event of a disaster such as an earthquake provides him with security, Shepel said.
The physician said he plans to use the same product to insure his second rental property - another laneway home - as well.
"They're really cute little places," Shepel said. "It's a unique way to get more homes into the community … It really does feel like a small, little comfy cottage, where you feel more independent.
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