48 percent annual inflation was released by statistic Canada in December

January 19th, 2022

Inflation hits 30-year high in Canada

Fergal McAlinden
other

The news could influence the Bank of Canada’s decision on its benchmark rate next week

 Consumer price inflation in Canada hit its highest level since 1991 last month, with that milestone arriving a week before the Bank of Canada is due to make its first policy rate announcement of 2022.

New figures released by Statistics Canada revealed that annual inflation was 4.8% in December, a result that was in line with economists’ expectations – but one that could still put pressure on the Bank to push forward its timeline for interest rate hikes.

That inflation rate was up 0.1% over November, meaning that it has now accelerated at its fastest rate for 30 years and signalling a ninth consecutive month in which the Bank’s target of 1% to 3% has been surpassed.

Some economists expect the Bank to raise its benchmark policy rate at next Wednesday’s meeting, a move that would see rate hikes begin much sooner than the current timeline of the middle quarters of 2022.

Read more: When will the Bank of Canada raise interest rates?

Silvana Dimino, a New York-based economist with J.P. Morgan, anticipated a 25-basis-point hike to 0.5% in the January 26 announcement, followed by as many as four further increases to leave the benchmark rate sitting around 1.5% by the end of the year.

That view was based on “heightened concerns” from the Bank that the output gap was closing more rapidly than expected, Dimino wrote in a note to clients, due to labour market dynamics and outperforming economic data.

The Bank has maintained its policy rate at 0.25% throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, although in recent statements it has pushed its forecast for rate increases forward from sometime in 2023 to the middle quarters of 2022 – possibly as early as April.

 

Copyright © 1996-2022 Key Media, Inc.

Hand work pays off to Goran Bucan biggest hit in 2021

January 19th, 2022

Goran Bucan brokers Vancouvers biggest commercial deal of 2021

Connie Adair
REM

Goran Bucan of Sutton Group Vancouver brokered the single largest commercial transaction in the Metro Vancouver area in 2021.

Bucan, the self-described middleman and the only broker involved in the deal, brought together property owner QuadReal Property Group and Keltic Canada Development, which purchased the 27-acre property for $300-million.

 

An aerial view of the properties involved in the $300-million transaction

“It was many addresses (5900 No. 2 Road; 6191, 6311, 6751 Westminster Highway; and 6651 Elmbridge Way, Richmond) but is a single transaction. One ownership. One deal. One contract,” he says.

It was a long, hard journey (finally completed on Dec. 9) that still has Bucan waking up early and wondering what could go wrong (something he did every day for 10 months) until he remembers the deal is done. It’s hard to wind down from being on high alert for so long.

A deal can fall apart at any moment and this one almost did three times, he says. “Off-market deals require a lot of work and patience. In the commercial world, things can happen. They’re not common but are more common than in the residential world.”

Two days before the end-of-November completion date (when the title is transferred and the deal is done), the insurance company decided it wanted to reassess the property due to the flooding in Abbotsford. That derailed the end-of-November completion date but the “executive team did a walk through and gave the green light,” Bucan says.

“Every day I had to have the patience for the vendors and purchasers even though they had had enough and wanted to call it quits. I had to gather every ounce of strength and patience and not freak out, insert patience into the buyers and sellers and convince everyone to push on. It takes a lot of grit.”

The purchaser had first approached Bucan two years earlier, asking if he had any properties “not on the market, not shopped around and of a significant size. I had a few properties and when this one came up (in conversation) they were interested. They were familiar with Richmond and liked it. With two million square feet, you could build a mini city.”

The next step was to talk to ownership to see if they had any interest in selling. “I knew the QuadReal owners and invited one of the executives from the ownership team to chat with the purchaser. The purchaser did a presentation…the deal started in March at that meeting,” Bucan says.

“As a broker, we’re advised to never put the buyer and seller in the same room because emotions kick in. It can also make the broker’s role not as significant,” he says. However with a deal of this size, he says it’s the most prudent and transparent thing to do.

Although it was stressful, it was a thrilling time. “The vendor always requires full confidentiality and I was excited but couldn’t tell anyone. Loose lips alert other brokers and buyers to the deal. Two other groups tried to jump in and steal the deal.”

Some properties are listed for maximum exposure by those who don’t mind if everyone knows what they’re up to, but a lot of ownership prefers to remain private and secret for various reasons. One is that they don’t want to be paraded around, or be embarrassed if the deal falls through,” Bucan says.

But the secrecy “creates prestige, a mysterious value. When the purchaser secures it, they feel like they have the golden cup in their hands. They captured something some hadn’t even heard of.”

Nothing will be done with the Brighouse Richmond area site in terms of redevelopment for five to eight years (in order to be fair to the existing tenants), if at all, he says. “Industrial land is scarce so it may be kept as is.”

There is potential for a significant development with mid-rise, low-rise, townhouses, businesses, offices, retail, day cares and a school. However that will require rezoning and a master plan. There are already many beautiful projects all around the Brighouse Richmond area.

Bucan’s is a Canadian success story. He was born and raised in Croatia and lived through a war for three years. “One thing you learn in war-torn countries is how to negotiate and barter. It’s part of survival.

“Three years into the war, his family moved to Vancouver. He was 14 at the time and completed high school then went on to earn his bachelor’s degree in business. Commercial banking was the plan but he says the “2007 (financial crisis) happened” so he went into residential real estate instead. However it wasn’t long before he became bored and stagnating isn’t his style.

In 2008, he became one of the youngest in B.C. to get all five licences (residential trading, rental management, strata management, mortgage and managing broker). “I could run an entire corporation,” he says.

“I was in residential real estate for five years and wasn’t good at selling condos. What I was good at was land assembly. It requires a lot of due diligence. You have to know the different areas and have an end goal in mind, have a purchaser in mind.”

Commercial real estate, he says, is “more engaging. It’s a lot more work prior to getting and selling the listing. Commercial is front-loaded heavy before even stepping in the door.”

His first deal, 10 years ago when he turned 30, was valued at $5 million and he says he progressed from there, having since put together billions of dollars worth of secret land assemblies.

For those interested in getting into commercial real estate, Bucan says “just keep going at it and never give up.”

© 1989 – 2022 REM Real Estate Magazine

Vancouver housing market continue to compete for fewer listings at higher prices in 2022

January 19th, 2022

Vancouver supply crunch poised to push prices higher in 2022

Ryan Garner
Livabl

 Following a record-setting year, the Metro Vancouver housing market should continue to see buyers compete for fewer listings at higher prices in 2022.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports the region saw a total of 43,999 home sales during 2021, a 42.2 per cent increase from the previous year and four per cent higher than the all-time sales record set in 2015. Last year’s sales total was 33.4 per cent above the 10-year average.

“With low interest rates, increased household savings, more flexible work arrangements, and higher home prices than ever before, Metro Vancouverites, in record numbers, are assessing their housing needs and options,” said REBGV economist Keith Stewart.

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Reduced supply has created competitive conditions across Metro Vancouver, with the housing shortage pushing prices to all-time highs.

The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver ended the year at $1,230,200, representing a year-over-year increase of 17.3 per cent. The benchmark price of a detached home crept over $1.9 million, while the condo benchmark sits at $761,800.

“Detached house prices are now up 22 per cent year-over-year, and condo prices are starting to catch up, rising 13 per cent,” said Vancouver realtor Steve Saretsky in a recent report. “It would not surprise me to see condos outperform detached houses in the year ahead.”

Metro Vancouver recorded 2,737 total housing sales in December, down 22 per cent from the previous month due to reduced supply, with new home listings failing to keep up with surging demand.

There were 1,945 properties listed for sale during December, a 50.9 per cent decrease from the previous month and 19.3 per cent drop year-over-year.

“In Greater Vancouver we are currently sitting at 4,900 active listings for sale as of the end of December. This is the lowest count on record, ever,” Saretsky said. “In other words, we are starting the new year from a record low inventory base. It will take many months, likely longer, to get inventory to healthy levels, let alone oversupplied.”

Detached homes are in short supply across Metro Vancouver, with months of inventory currently sitting at 2.5, although the inventory gap widens significantly as prices increase.

Single-family houses priced under $2 million are currently seeing only 0.9 months of inventory for sale, compared to 8.2 months of inventory for houses listed over $3 million.

“The number of qualified buyers begins to shrink when prices move north of $2 million so this could be a problem for the market moving forward, which is why I think price growth could be constrained this year,” said Saretsky.

Condo listings fell 14 per cent month-over-month in December, while the months of inventory for sale has plunged to 1.5, dipping to its lowest point since August 2017.

“If you’re looking for a condo under $1 million then months of inventory falls even further, down to 1.1,” Saretsky said. “The name of the game is affordability. Everyone is struggling with housing affordability and so most of the demand is concentrated at the entry levels.”

 

© 2020 BuzzBuzzHome Corp.

Canadian housing starts down in December but remains at very high levels

January 18th, 2022

Canada housing starts CMHC reveals latest figures

Fergal McAlinden
other

Only one of Canada’s hottest markets posted growth in total SAAR starts

 Canadian housing starts were down in December, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), with a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) decline in single-detached and multi-family starts in urban areas driving the latest results.

The body revealed that the trend in housing starts was 260,567 units last month, a decline from 267,606 in November – although its chief economist Bob Dugan said that still represented a strong figure in historical terms.

“The six-month trend in housing starts was lower from November to December, but remains at very high levels,” he said in a Press release.

“For SAAR housing starts in Canada’s urban areas, both single-detached and multi-family starts decreased in December. On a positive note, actual urban housing starts were 21% higher in 2021, adding much needed supply.”

Read next: Canadian housing starts activity falls again

Dugan said that increase in actual urban housing starts, which was propelled by recovery from COVID-19 lockdown measures in 2020, was also caused by higher single-detached and multi-family starts, which rose by 28% and 19% respectively.

CMHC also noted that among three of the country’s hottest markets – Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver – the latter was the only one to post growth in total SAAR starts in December, again caused by higher multi-family and single-detached starts.

The body’s trend measure is a six-month moving average of the monthly SAAR of housing starts, which it uses to account for variance in monthly estimates and gain a more rounded view of Canada’s housing market.

Overall, the standalone monthly SAAR of housing starts across the country was 236,106 units last month, down from 303,813 in November – a decrease of 22%.

The SAAR of urban starts witnessed a 24% decrease (to 212,918 units) while multiple urban starts 

decreased by 29% to 157,687 units and single-detached urban starts stood at 55,231 units, a 4% decline.

 

Copyright © 1996-2022 Key Media, Inc.

National home sales jump 26.6% from the year before | CREA

January 18th, 2022

Housing starts slow in Canada amid record shortage of homes for sale

Bianca Bharti
other

The December pullback could add to concerns about soaring home prices
Housing starts clocked in at 236,106 in December on an annualized basis, a 22 per cent drop from November. Photo by Housing starts slowed in Edmonton in May due to a drop in multi-family project starts. DAVID BLOOM / Postmedia
The pace of new home construction slowed in December after soaring in November, as the country deals with a frothy real-estate market that pushed housing prices to record highs last year.
Housing starts clocked in at 236,106 on an annualized basis, a 22 per cent drop from November, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation reported Tuesday. The agency also revised November’s data up from 301,279 to 303,813 units annualized.
The numbers come on the heels of a report published on Jan. 17 that showed the country had the lowest supply of existing homes for sale on record. About 86,000 homes were left for sale at the end of December, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).

“Some easing in December’s starts data was expected, given the outsized November surge. On a trend basis, the pace of starts remains robust, stimulated by strong demand, low levels of unsold new inventories, and elevated prices,” Toronto-Dominion Bank economist Rishi Sondhi wrote in a client note.
December marked the slowest pace of new construction since the same month in 2020, but single-family home and multi-family home construction increased 28 per cent and 19 per cent respectively last year after depressed levels in 2020 due to COVID-19 shutdowns.
Construction of new homes in urban areas decreased by 24 per cent to 212,918. Housing starts for multi-unit dwellings in urban areas fell by 29 per cent to 157,687 units while single detached homes dropped by four per cent to 55,231.
The December pullback could add to concerns over the housing market’s ability to sustain price increases at its current pace. Economists at the Bank of Montreal this week described supply as the tightest they had “ever seen” in a note. Home prices have skyrocketed as the existing supply of homes on the market has shrunk while demand has grown. CREA reported that, nationally, the price of a home was $811,700 in December after adjusting for price volatility, a 26.6 per cent jump from the year before.

Policy-makers are already gearing up to tackle what some deem a housing crisis. In the last federal budget, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government outlined $2.5 billion and a reallocation of $1.3 billion to speed up and support 35,000 affordable housing units.
The Bank of Canada will begin raising interest rates this year, which should cool demand.
“When the central bank turns its eye to inflation again, I do think that will trigger a flattening in the market,” Phil Soper, chief executive officer at Royal LePage, told Financial Post’s Larysa Harapyn last week. “We’ve got a shortage of housing in this country so there’s constant upward pressure on home prices.”

Lack of housing supply is acute, especially in Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba, according to a report by Bank of Nova Scotia chief economist Jean-François Perrault. Those three provinces fall below the national average of houses per capita, which is 426 units per 1,000 people. To meet the national average, Ontario would need to build more than 650,000 homes, Alberta 138,000 and Manitoba 23,000.
“While these efforts are all welcome, what will matter most at the end of the day is actual progress in increasing supply in a responsible manner,” Perrault wrote of government measures. “History suggests that we have not been very good as a country in achieving this. Let’s hope current initiatives mark a solid break from past performance.”

© 2022 Financial Post

Vancouver house was assessed at $3.9 Million which is for sale at $11 Million

January 18th, 2022

Why this rundown Vancouver bungalow is listed for $11 million

Jaonne Lee-Young
The Vancouver Sun

The property is just one block from the corner of West 41st and Cambie — an inner street where developers are looking to build condos
The house at 481 West 40th Ave. in Vancouver is assessed at $3.9 million, but is being listed for sale at $11 million. Photo by NICK PROCAYLO /PNG
A new real estate listing for a rundown Vancouver bungalow has some observers chattering over its dizzying asking price of $11 million.
The four-bedroom, two-bathroom old-timer is currently assessed at $3.866 million.
The property is not on a busy arterial, but is just one block from the corner of West 41st Avenue and Cambie Street, across from the Oakridge Centre redevelopment.
These “inner streets” are a new frontier of sorts, and there may be more of these asking prices as sellers target developers who have long-term plans to build condos, say experts.
“Developers are looking to land bank,” or buy and hold properties for future use in prime areas, said real estate agent Abraham Yung, who has the $11-million listing on West 40th.
A potential buyer could also later purchase the two adjacent single-family lots with the goal of applying to rezone and use the entire site for a low-rise or even taller apartment building.
Investors did the same in previous phases of developing the Cambie Corridor, when single-family homes along Cambie Street and King Edward were sometimes sold for more than double their assessed value.
Intersection at Cambie and 40th Ave in front of the house assessed at $3.9 million which is for sale at $11 million. Photo by NICK PROCAYLO /PNG
“For anyone in the real estate industry, it’s not surprising,” said Jacky Chan, president of BakerWest Real Estate, which markets pre-construction property developments.
The 2018 Cambie Corridor Phase 3 Plan indicates that “the overall concept plan” includes building heights of 13-storeys or higher for this location. Another more detailed document that was described as a proposed plan in March 2018 gave specific housing options, showing that 15-storey and 18-storey towers could be possible for the area if they are 100-per-cent secured rental with 20 per cent below market rental units.
Chan said there is currently an active development on Manson Street, west of Cambie, that is also on an “inner street” north of West 41st Avenue where there had been six single-family lots.
A rezoning application was submitted last November, proposing two 18-storey buildings with 392 rental units where 20 per cent of them are below market, plus a childcare facility.
“That is what this ($11 million) listing is fishing for,” said Chan. “That would be the best comparison.”

 

© 2022 Vancouver Sun

Supply shortages have become a critical issue for the Canadian housing market

January 17th, 2022

Housing affordability likely to get worse before it gets better as listings hit all-time low

Stephanie Hughes
The Vancouver Sun

‘There are currently fewer properties listed for sale in Canada than at any point on record’

 The number of newly listed properties fell about three per cent from November to December. Photo by National Post

Canadian home prices rose by more than 17 per cent in 2021 but listings ended the year at an all-time low, according to December data released by the Canadian Real Estate Association on Monday.

CREA said sales in December were up by 0.2 per cent month-over-month, but down 9.9 per cent from a record level posted in December 2020. The number of newly listed properties fell about three per cent from November to December.

“There are currently fewer properties listed for sale in Canada than at any point on record,” said CREA’s senior economist Shaun Cathcart in the release. “So unfortunately, the housing affordability problem facing the country is likely to get worse before it gets better.”

The national average home price stood at $713,500 in December, coming off a record $720,000 in November. That marked an increase of 17.7 per cent over December 2020. The MLS® Home Price Index, CREA’s tool for assessing home prices and trends, saw an even bigger jump, up a record 26.6 per cent year-over-year as a lack of supply continued to put upward pressure on housing. CREA’s benchmark home price hit a record high of $811,700 in December.

 

 

“With the housing supply issues facing the country having only gotten worse to start 2022, take any decline in sales early in the year with a grain of salt because the demand hasn’t gone away, there just won’t be much to buy until a little later in this spring,” CREA chair Cliff Stevenson said in the release. “But when those listings eventually start to show up, the spring market this year will almost certainly be another headline grabber.”

While the winter months usually see a lull in market activity, the real estate industry has been experiencing a heated market.

“The winter so far has been boisterous,” Phil Soper, chief executive officer at Royal LePage, told Financial Post’s Larysa Harapyn last week. “Volumes have been higher than typical at this time of year. It looks a lot like the winter of 2020 … and I think that is the theme that’s going to carry right through the spring market.”

 

 

Christopher Alexander, president of RE/MAX Canada, told the Financial Post that listings tend to be lower during the holiday season, but he was taken aback how few listings there were.

“Typically, it’s a normal time of the year for listings to be low,” Alexander said. “But I am surprised to see even a lower amount of listings than previous years, and previous normal years … because prices are have gone up so much. So, it’s a big challenge.”

Alexander pointed to the supply crisis, which is putting further pressure on affordability.

“It’s becoming clearer and clearer that we haven’t planned properly enough for our population growth,” Alexander said, adding that Canada has high immigration targets without a plan to house the newcomers. “We’ve got a serious challenge here. I think a lot of the hype that we’re hearing recently about investors and taxes like the home equity tax is all a big distraction, in my opinion, from the real issue and that is we don’t have a solution to our supply challenge.”

Supply shortages have become a critical issue for the Canadian housing market. A report by the Bank of Nova Scotia found that Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba have the lowest housing stock per capita, exacerbating affordability issues.

“Policymakers are starting to say the right things, but now they have to act to change this course we’re on,” CREA’s Cathcart said. “An aggressive national push to build more homes is what will address the issue, but it will probably have to be a greater amount of building than anything we’ve ever undertaken. A touch over the status quo won’t cut it.”

 

2022 Vancouver Sun

Proposed surtax is expected to annually raise up $5.8 Billion to improve housing affordability

January 13th, 2022

Canada can’t just tax its way out of its housing conundrum

Murtaza Haidef
other

 The surtax would disproportionately target those living in detached homes in Toronto and Vancouver

A real estate sign that reads ‘For Sale’ and ‘Sold Above Asking’ stands in front of housing in Vaughan. Photo by REUTERS/Mark Blinch/File Photo

The idea of an annual surtax on properties valued at more than $1 million has been revived by a recent report whose authors believe the tax will lower housing prices, and the funds generated can be invested to improve housing affordability.

 

The Canada Mortgage Housing Corp. (CMHC) funded the report by Vancouver-based Generation Squeeze, a group advocating for intergenerational fairness and led by Paul Kershaw, a professor at the University of British Columbia.

The report recommends an annual progressive surtax be applied to the value of a dwelling that exceeds the $1-million threshold. For example, if a property’s assessed value is $1.25 million, a 0.5 percent annual surtax will be applied to $250,000, thereby generating $1,250 annually. The surtax rate rises to one per cent on the amount exceeding $2 million.

The surtax is expected to annually raise $4.5 to $5.8 billion that could be directed to fund projects to improve housing affordability. Despite being an annual tax, the report recommends the amount be deferred until the property is sold.

 

The owner of a dwelling with an average valuation of $1.72 million over 10 years would be required to pay an estimated $36,000 in surtax at the time of sale, barring any interest charges. The deferred amount accumulates to $162,000 for a dwelling with an average value of $3.1 million over a 10-year period. If the owner dies, the accrued tax will be owed by the deceased’s state.

The report argues the surtax would affect only nine per cent of Canadian households whose dwelling values are estimated to be more than a million dollars.

The report’s surtax was recommended by a tax policy workgroup mainly comprising academics from Alberta and B.C., but it’s essentially the brainchild of Kershaw. He first introduced the idea in an article in the Canadian Tax Journal in 2018, and estimated the tax would annually generate $16 billion.

 

The proposed surtax is essentially an additional property tax, which is likely to irk municipalities that are already revenue starved because they are entitled to only 10 cents of each dollar paid in taxes in Canada.

The report indicates the same surtax rate would be applied on all properties irrespective of location. That ignores the differences in property taxes paid by residents of different municipalities. The 2018 article noted a dwelling valued at $1.25 million in Vancouver would have paid $3,085 in property taxes. A one per cent surtax (as recommended in Kershaw’s 2018 article) would have added $2,500 to the property tax bill.

A similarly valued property in a suburban municipality in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) pays more than $10,000 in property taxes, over three times the tax in Vancouver. Yet these properties would be subject to the same additional surtax, ignoring the glaring difference in base property taxes.

 

The surtax would also disproportionately target those living in detached homes in Toronto and Vancouver. Consider that 75 per cent of the 54,757 detached dwellings sold in the GTA in 2021 exceeded the $1-million threshold. It is not hard to imagine the proposed tax net would catch three out of four detached dwellings in the GTA.

Furthermore, the $1-million club does not have a sizable presence in less populous provinces, though affordability concerns are no less acute. Besides, how would one justify spending taxes raised primarily from detached dwellings in Toronto and Vancouver in other jurisdictions?

 

Generation Squeeze, despite being well meaning, is pitching millennials against seniors, or children against parents. Their definition of intergenerational fairness implies we should reduce income taxes on the young and increase wealth and property taxes on seniors.

Kershaw’s 2018 paper minces no words in drawing the boundary lines between the young and the old as he argued that “the cohort retiring today expects more in taxation from its children than it paid for its parents’ generation when elderly.”

Creating false and unwise binaries in society by pitching one cohort against another is not our definition of fairness. Nor do we find wisdom in making urban living even more expensive by targeting owners of detached homes in Toronto and Vancouver or by depriving municipal governments of the ability to regulate realty taxes.

 

Working from the assumption that “$1 million remains a sign of substantial affluence by recent historical standards,” ignores that family-friendly housing in Toronto and Vancouver is beyond this arbitrary threshold. Furthermore, such dwellings are equally likely to be occupied by middle-class families.

Any proposal to deflate values of the most significant asset owned by middle-class families will struggle to gain mass acceptance. No wonder half the participants who contributed to the report did not agree with the “premise that housing prices need to stall or fall to restore affordability.”

 

© 2022 Financial Post

39,175 square feet multi family development sells for $12 million

January 13th, 2022

Surrey 0.8-acre land assembly sells for nearly three times assessment

Re/Max 2000 Realty
Western Investor

Five-lots assembled in Guildford area with potential for high-density residential development sold for $12 million.

Property type: Land assembly

Location: 14076,14066,14056,14046 and 14036 103A Avenue, Surrey, B.C.

Number of lots: 5

Land size: 39,175 square feet

Land size in acres: 0.899 acres

Zoning: RF

Potential: Multi-family development of 2.5 to 3 FSR (floor space ratio), under OCP.

BC Assessment value: $4.53 million

Sale price: $12 million

Date of sale: November 11, 2021

Brokerage: Re/Max 2000 Realty, Surrey, B.C.

Broker: Sonia Khari

© 2022 Western Investor

0.4-acre industrial building sells for $10.6 Million located in 1250 East Pender Street Vancouver

January 13th, 2022

East Vancouver 0.4-acre industrial site trades for $10.6 million

Macdonald Commercial
Western Investor

The East Pender Street property includes a vacant 16,368-square-foot industrial building.

Property type: Industrial

Location: 1250 East Pender Street, Vancouver

Size of building: 16,368 square feet

Size of land: 19,506 square feet

Land size in acre: 0.448 acres

List price: $10.9 million

Sale price: $10.6 million

Date of sale: January 25, 2022

Brokerage: Macdonald Commercial, Vancouver, B.C.

Broker: Nick Goulet
 

© 2022 Western Investor