Archive for June, 2006

Want a waterfront cabin in B.C.? It will cost $1 Million

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

It’ll cost $1 million. Not only that, but you’ll be lucky if you can find one for sale — supply is scarce

Derrick Pe
Sun

This waterfront property on Bridge Lake in the south Cariboo is listed for $995,000. Lakefront property in B.C. is the most expensive in Canada

A Royal LePage report says demand for recreational property is high, fuelled by young professional buyers and baby boomers. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun file

British Columbians dreaming of owning a waterfront cabin should prepare to go rustic, or be willing to pay $1 million.

Royal LePage’s 2006 recreational property report says the average lakefront property in B.C. is touching $996,000, the highest in Canada. The next highest is in Alberta, where lakefront property will set buyers back an average of $900,000. The national average is $380,507.

British Columbians without $1 million to drop on lakefront near big population centres can still have their retreats — they just have to travel farther north and settle for something more basic.

Rudy Nielsen, a Vancouver-based recreational property developer, said one of his firms sold one-acre lots on Nicola Lake near Merritt for $400,000 to $500,000. On Clucus Lake near Prince George, he sold one-acre lakefront lots for $45,000.

“Put your cabin on, and you can get a prefab one for $140,000, and you’ve got a cabin on a lake for less than $200,000,” Nielsen said.

The Royal LePage report said demand for recreational property is high, fuelled by young professional buyers and baby boomers, and prices in most markets are still rising because supply remains scarce.

In B.C., the Royal LePage report focuses on Interior locations, where prices ranged from a low of $285,000 near 100 Mile House to a high of $999,000 to $4 million near Vernon.

The report defines a standard cottage as being three bedrooms and 1,000 square feet on a 100-foot lot.

Even those willing to bid as high as $996,000 could still be out of luck. The Royal LePage report is based on a national poll, which found that only 15 per cent of cottage owners were likely to sell their properties within three years.

B.C. skiers looking for a vacation retreat might have better luck. Royal LePage found the average price for a B.C. ski chalet is $370,313 compared with $512,500 in Alberta and a national average of $413,694.

However, when it comes to southern Interior lakefront, Riley Twyford, owner-broker of Royal LePage Downtown Realty in Vernon, noted that in his region, lakefront properties are no longer what most people would consider to be a cottage.

“There are people from Alberta who come out and buy them. . . and they’ll spend three weeks in the summer [there] and may well call it recreational property,” Twyford said. “But it’s not your little cabin on the lake type scenario.”

Paul Fabri, a market analyst for Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. in B.C.’s Interior, said the market for lakefront recreational property has exploded in the last five years, but there is only limited lakefront in the communities where most people want to be.

“But there has definitely been huge demand, and of course finite supply, and that’s pushing up prices,” Fabri said.

For that reason, Fabri added, the development is more “high-end detached homes, or higher-end multi-family homes on the lake.”

“You’re not going to see someone put a weekend cottage [on Okanagan Lake], because the land is so valuable.”

Twyford said many of his lakefront buyers are coming in from Alberta. “I guess it’s oil-and-gas money,” he said.

“We’ve had young families come out and spend in the high [hundreds of thousands of dollars] for property, and they’re not living in it, so that’s disposable income.”

Royal LePage said its report was drawn from the national poll, conducted by Maritz Research, and market analysis of prices, activity and trends in selected leisure markets across Canada.

Generally, the poll found that nine per cent of Canadians own recreational property with four per cent planning purchases, and another five per cent considering purchases within three years.

Of those considering purchases, 19 per cent plan on paying cash for their getaways.

For B.C., the focus is on 100 Mile House, Cranbrook, Kelowna and Vernon.

Vancouver developer Nielsen, who also owns the research firm Landcor Data Corp., said high prices are driven by proximity to the major buying markets: Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton, the regions he refers to as the “golden circles.”

Nielsen said the overall recreational market in B.C. is hot and prices are being fuelled by a limited inventory. He said only five per cent of B.C.’s land base is privately owned, and estimated that only about 10 per cent of individually titled properties in the province are recreational.

“We have an inventory shortage and we’re running out fast,” Nielsen said. “Everybody, including myself, is subdividing hard and fast [to create more].”

Stadium faces key problems

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

Five major issues identified by consultants

David Carrigg
Province

An artist’s rendering of the proposed Whitecaps’ soccer stadium on the waterfront east of Canada Place. Photograph by : Jon Murray, The Province

An ambitious plan to build a soccer stadium in Gastown, above the railway tracks, must overcome key problems before it can go ahead, says a city report released yesterday.

It recommends council back the project only if five major issues are dealt with:

– That an adequate street network be provided;

– That the risks associated with having dangerous cargo travelling under the stadium be resolved;

– That the proposal be reconfigured to ensure a better fit in Gastown;

– That the impacts on the livability in areas south of the rail lands be resolved;

– That the impact on future port lands development be resolved.

“It’s a difficult project and I hope we can make it work,” Coun. Peter Ladner said. “But I’ve been around Gastown and speaking with people, and there are a lot of problems.”

The Whitecaps Football Club has proposed a 15,000-seat, open-air stadium above a portion of rail yard it owns along the northern edge of Gastown.

The city hired four consultants to assess a preliminary proposal before the Whitecaps submitted a formal application for approval.

That consultants’ report — dubbed the High Level Review of the Whitecaps Stadium Proposal — was handed to council on May 15.

It says “the proposal as submitted has significant flaws.”

“These cannot be resolved if the concept is not revisited in some fundamental ways.”

It said the problems relate to urban design, impact on adjacent heritage buildings, impact on the future development of port lands, stadium functionality and access.

Whitecaps president John Rocha said he remains upbeat about the proposal.

“You could think, ‘Geez, this is not positive,'” Rocha said. “But it’s been simplified for us. We can now work with the city and staff to request a time frame. We’d love it [to be] ready for 2010.”

Rocha is confident the Whitecaps can address all the issues raised. The city has been in discussions with the Whitecaps since 2003, when former mayor Larry Campbell asked the organization if it was interested in building a stadium in the city.

An initial plan to develop the field on city-owned land in the False Creek Flats fell through and last July the Whitecaps bought a large stretch of waterfront land from CP Rail.

Council will vote on the staff recommendation at meetings on June 27 and 29.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

Wi-fi opens up new world of home-computing security woes

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

Jim Jamieson
Province

As Internet connectivity expands through wireless networks, and home and office work environments blur, malicious hackers will continue to threaten consumers and businesses alike, a computer security strategist says.

Andrew Berkuta of global-security company McAfee said wireless networks often provide a smorgasbord of opportunity for hackers — whether they are set up in the home or in metropolitan areas.

“A lot of people buy a [wireless router], plug it in and if it’s working, it must be fine,” Berkuta said yesterday in an interview.

“People have to be educated to harden up their systems, make sure their security is turned on.”

More than a third of wi-fi networks in London, New York, Frankfurt and San Francisco had basic security features turned off, according to a 2005 survey of the networks by RSA Security Inc.

The survey said companies are exposing themselves to “drive-by hacking,” where snoopers walk or drive around cities targeting vulnerable wi-fi networks. As if Internet surfers didn’t have enough to worry about, Berkuta said a feature built into some newer computers provides another potential access point for hackers.

Called “Wake on LAN,” the feature is a network standard that allows a computer in sleep mode to be brought up to full power remotely and asked to complete tasks.

If not configured properly, it can leave a computer vulnerable to hacking, Berkuta said.

Berkuta said that because so many home computers are now being used partly for work activities, the advice for both businesses and consumers is similar: Use an up-to-date security product that addresses every type of threat.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

Recreational Property Report

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

B.C.’s shoreline retreats most costly

Province

With summer holidays just around the corner, Royal LePage had some bad news yesterday for British Columbians looking to buy recreational property.

The average price for a waterfront, land-access cottage in B.C. is the highest in Canada, an astounding $996,900 and well above the national average of $380,507, according to the 2006 Royal LePage Recreational Property Report.

That average price was followed by Alberta at $900,000, Quebec at $483,333 and Ontario waterfront cottages at $454,960. The cheapest waterfront cottages were in Newfoundland, with an average price of $85,000.

By comparison, the national average price of a standard, two-storey home is $340,956.

Canadian recreational-property prices continue to increase in most markets as demand remains strong and inventory remains scarce, said the report.

The annual report says tight market conditions are expected as current cottage owners plan to stay put and young professionals enter the market in “droves.”

A large percentage of people are willing to spend more on their recreational property than on their primary residence. “We’ve got many segments of the population all looking for very few available properties,” said Royal LePage Real Estate Services president and CEO Phil Soper.

“It’s predominantly a result of an increase in disposable income. Our economy across the country has done very well and continues to do well. Employment levels are very high. There’s also what economists call the ‘wealth effect,’ which is the perceived or paper wealth that people have gained from the rise in value of their principle property [home].”

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

Pile-driving din finally packs it in

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

Ashley Ford
Province

Over the last 13 months, Vancouver Pile Driving has thumped in 1,443 land and marine piles –with the deepest, a marine pile, going down 56 metres — at the new convention- centre construction site in Vancouver’s Coal Harbour. Finally, residents will no longer have to endure the daily noise. Photograph by : Les Bazso, The Province

Aaah! The sounds of silence.

Downtown Vancouverites who have been living with a ringing in their ears for the last 13 months can now rest easy.

The massive pile-driving program for the Vancouver Convention Centre Expansion Project has been successfully completed.

Vancouver Pile Driving has thumped in 1,443 land and marine piles, with the deepest, a marine pile, going down 56 metres.

“The completion of pile driving represents a major milestone in the construction of the expansion,” said Russ Anthony, president and project director of the $565-million development.

“It’s been a unique and sometimes challenging site for pile driving, particularly as we’re building over both land and water. In addition, much of the site is fill and contains almost 100 years of debris, everything from broken concrete to rail lines and docks.”

“The pile driving was a disruptive but necessary part of the project,” Anthony acknowledged

“However, we’re building a unique facility on one of the world’s most spectacular waterfronts. As a result, we want to thank our residential and business neighbours for their ongoing support.”

He said the ambitious project is on schedule. Foundation concrete is being poured and the steel frame for the centre will start to rise this fall.

The project, to be completed in 2008, will triple existing convention space and serve as the international broadcast and media centre for the 2010 Winter Olympics.

© The Vancouver Province 2006