3.22 acres retail centre sells for $21.35 Million located at Delta B.C

July 30th, 2021

North Delta 18-unit retail centre sells for $2.9M over assessment

The firm Real Estate Services Ltd
Western Investor

Nordel Centre, a 42,294- square feet shopping centre set on 3.22 acres with development potential in the heart of North Delta, sold for $21.35 million.

Property type: Retail centre
Location: 11146 84th Avenue, Delta, B.C.
Number of units: 18
Size of property: 42,294 square feet
Size of land: 140,263 square feet
Land size in acres: 3.22 acres
Zoning: C1
BC Assessment value (2021) $18.44 million
Sale price: $21.35 million
Date of sale: May 12, 2021
Brokerage: The Firm Real Estate Services Ltd., Delta, B.C.
Broker: Fraser Elliott

© 2021 Western Investor

1,174 square feet retail strata sells for $825,000 located at East Hasting Vancouver

July 30th, 2021

East Hastings 1,174-square-foot strata retail bought for $825,000

Corbel Commercial
Western Investor

The high-visibility Vancouver strata unit is close to the Pacific National Exhibition grounds and the Trans-Canada Highway.

Property type: Retail strata
Location: 3423 East Hastings Street, Vancouver
Property size: 1,174 square feet
Zoning:C-2C1 (Commercial district)
List price: $849,000
Sale price: $825,000
Brokerage: Corbel  Commercial, Vancouver
Brokers: Willow King, Marc Saul and Robert Tham

© 2021 Western Investor

1.12 acres multi-family rental sells for $9.3 million located at Chilliwack, B.C.

July 30th, 2021

Chilliwack 51-unit high-end multi-family sells for $9.3 million

Cushman & Wakefield
Western Investor

Condominium-quality rental building is close to downtown Chilliwack on a 1.12-acre lot.

Cushman & Wakefield, Vancouver, B.C., for Western Investor

Property type: Multi-family rental

Location: 9473 Broadway, Chilliwack, B.C.

Number of units: 51

Property size: 48,961 square feet

Land size in acres: 1.12 acres

Sale price: $9.3 million

Date of sale: July 15, 2021

Brokerage: Cushman & Wakefield, Vancouver, B.C.

Brokers: Don Duncan, Andrew Hutson and David Venance.

© 2021 Western Investor

0.90 acre industrial land sells for $12.33 Million located at Fraser Highway, Surrey, B.C.

July 29th, 2021

Surrey 0.90-acre development site sells over ask at $12.3 million

Fraser Elliott Group
Western Investor

Fleetwood-area strata-windup industrial property is in the new Surrey-Langley SkyTrain corridor and has OCP rezoning potential for a higher-density mixed-use development.

Fraser Elliott Group, Delta, B.C., for Western Investor

Property type: Industrial land

Location: 16055 Fraser Highway, Surrey, B.C.

Number of units: 16

Size of property: 18,200 square feet

Size of land: 39,472 square feet (approx.)

Land size in acres: 0.90 acres

Current zoning: CD/ 0.6 FAR (floor-area-ratio)

OCP proposed density: 2.5 FAR (6-storey)

Rezoning applied for: Three high-rise multi-family towers of 40 to 57 floors; and 87,000 square feet of commercial space.

List price: $12 million

Sale price: $12.33 million

Date of sale: July 23, 2021

Brokerage: Fraser Elliott Group, Delta, B.C.

Broker: Fraser Elliott

© 2021 Western Investor

New opportunity waving for Canadian recovering from pandemic

July 29th, 2021

The trillion-dollar opportunity you cannot miss

Mallory Hendry
other

Canada’s fastest-growing demographic: why you should ride the ‘retirement wave’

It’s no secret the COVID-19 pandemic was a boon for the housing market. Despite a steep drop-off in equity market valuations at the beginning of the pandemic, as businesses and consumers adapted, “you saw confidence turnaround – and turnaround in a hurry,” said TRREB’s chief market analyst and director of service channels Jason Mercer.

“In less than a year, we exceeded the peak we hit just before the pandemic was announced,” said Mercer, who offered insights on the future of the housing market at Home Equity Bank’s latest webinar, “How to Ride the Retirement Wave”.

The big picture

Mercer predicts that, overall, the housing market will stay strong in the foreseeable future. He argues the key to housing demand is long-term population growth, strong employment levels, and increasing income, with Canada coming out of the pandemic on track to ramp up on all three. Although the labour market hasn’t made as full a recovery, due to harder-hit industries such as the arts, hospitality, and restaurants, Mercer is optimistic that as vaccine uptake increases and accelerates with second doses, those businesses “will start to pick up steam and recover into the fall.”

With borders reopening, immigration is expected to accelerate in 2022 and 2023, forming a tenet of the Canadian recovery plan. In turn, this translates into strong housing demand, both for ownership and rental. This is especially welcome news in the Greater Toronto Area and the Golden Horseshoe, where most population growth comes from immigration.

Inflation rates are the final piece of the housing demand puzzle, and with most homebuyers relying on mortgages, Mercer noted that it’s important to think about where borrowing costs are going.

“The Bank of Canada is laser-focused on inflation and keeping it around the 2% mark over the long term,” he said. While there is anticipation that the bank will raise interest rates at some point, the OFSI stress test means homeowners are accounting for a substantial margin of safety and, therefore, are well-positioned to manage any increase.

As it stands, Mercer noted, interest rates are still quite low and – coupled with the expected population growth in the next few years – will continue to have a positive effect on housing demand.

 

“Riding the Retirement Wave,” which drew the largest audience Home Equity has seen so far in its series of webinars, also featured Sue Pimento, vice president of referred sales at Home Equity Bank. Pimento highlighted the current market focus on first-time homebuyers and Millennials, explaining that, instead, savvy real estate professionals should be looking to the older demographic, both to help their clients and their business’s bottom line.

“A trillion dollars – that’s how much home equity there is,” said Pimento, adding that with 42% of all homeowners in Canada north of 55 years old but almost all of them – 93% – preferring to age in place, “it’s a problem for anybody who makes their living listing and selling houses for that demographic.”

That’s where the CHIP Reverse Mortgage comes in as the ideal solution for Baby Boomer clients – and the brokers that work with them to make the most of their Golden years.

“Everybody has figured out downsizing doesn’t work – not very many people can yield enough money to retire on, unless they move hours outside of their neighbourhood,” Pimento said. “No wonder they don’t want to list their home.”

CHIP addresses the problems around funding retirement, offering this demographic the option to age in place or “right-size” their home by taking advantage of the growing equity in their homes. It can help those who want funds to help their children with a down payment, finance the purchase of a vacation home, upgrade before sale to increase their profit, or purchase an investment property.

“It’s simply a mortgage with optional payments,” Pimento said. “It’s a tax-free way of accessing equity to finance retirement, among other things, with very little qualifying criteria.”

Presenting the potential effectively

Pimento said real estate professionals have to decode the demographic – something Home Equity Bank, with over 35 years working with homeowners 55 and over and $5 billion under administration, is very good at. You need to give them permission to use the equity, as they’ve spent their whole life paying off their mortgage and lecturing their kids about not being in debt, Pimento noted. The Baby Boomer generation wants to maintain their dignity, control, independence – and their lifestyle. Present the reverse mortgage opportunity to them so that they see the potential as clearly as you do, letting them know they have the most popular Canadian financial plan at their fingertips.

“You have a house, you paid it off, congrats!” Pimento said. “But now it’s time to finance your retirement.”

To learn more, tune into Sue and Jason’s full conversation on “How to Ride the Retirement Wave.” For more information and insight, be sure to explore Home Equity Bank’s full webinar series which was created in response to the pandemic to engage partners and provide education and industry insights, and will continue to grow throughout 2021 and beyond.

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B.C. court ordered to release list also for their privacy and safety concern

July 27th, 2021

Strata council ordered by B.C. court to release list of all owners to one of its members

Susan Lazaruk
The Vancouver Sun

The strata refused, citing privacy and safety concerns, and said it was not in the best interests of the strata community. But the law obligates strata to compile a list and to distribute it when asked, a tribunal ruled

Do you know the names of your neighbours and do they know yours?

A B.C. condo owner went to court to force his strata council to hand over a list of names of all other strata lot owners in his development, after the council refused his request.

A civil resolution tribunal member agreed with the owner. Citing B.C. law, it ordered the strata to compile the list and provide it to the owner, over council’s protestations of privacy and safety concerns, including worries the list could be used for criminal purposes.

“The strata has provided no valid justification for its refusal,” ruled Chad McCarthy.

Ken Johnson several times last year requested an “owner contact list” that he is entitled to under B.C.’s Strata Property Act.

The strata refused, saying he “didn’t provide an adequate reason” and it had concerns about disclosing strata lot owners’ personal information, which includes names, strata lot and mailing addresses, and information on parking stalls, storage lockers and unit entitlements.

The strata passed a motion last summer confirming its refusal to provide Johnson with the list and at a December hearing with Johnson said it wouldn’t release the list to anyone.

But section 35 of the Strata Property Act sets out a strata’s obligation to “create and retain certain records” and section 36 says “on receiving a request from a strata lot owner, properly authorized tenant, or other person authorized by an owner or authorized tenant, the strata must make available” such a list, McCarthy wrote.

The strata had owner information in individual owners files but not in a separate list and it wanted Johnson to bear the cost of compiling it.

The strata also argued disclosing owner contact information could harm those “who have experienced abusive relationships or who have sensitive jobs, such as policing.” It also said it had concerns the list “could be used for criminal purposes.” The strata also noted the information was publicly available elsewhere, such as in the land titles office.

The strata said “disclosure of the list was not in the best interests of the ‘community’” and some owners wanted their names left off.

The tribunal noted the strata had a “statutory obligation” to have an owner contact list under the law and the strata was therefore in violation of the Act. He also said no one had the right to be excluded and an owner doesn’t have to provide a reason for wanting the list nor does an owner “need to demonstrate that his request is in the best interests of anyone.”

“Nothing before me demonstrates that the strata has a valid basis for refusing Mr. Johnson’s owner contact list request,” wrote McCarthy. He noted B.C.’s privacy laws allows for such a list.

He ordered the strata to comply within 21 days and to pay Johnson’s $225 in tribunal fees.

Neither party could be reached for comment.

© 2021 Vancouver Sun

B.C. estimates nearly 20 percent of the eligible population are unvaccinated

July 27th, 2021

COVID-19: Unvaccinated British Columbians may face limits on where they can go

Joanne Lee-Young
The Vancouver Sun

Dr. Bonnie Henry said there may be examples where imposing workplace vaccination requirements makes sense for businesses

B.C. health officials are hoping a fresh immunization campaign will get more British Columbians vaccinated against COVID-19, while hinting there could be consequences for those who choose to remain unvaccinated.

‘Vax for B.C.’ is aimed at reaching the more than 900,000 unvaccinated British Columbians, and making it easier for them to get a jab by bringing clinics near work places, lunch spots and vacation areas like beaches.

“The next two weeks are critical to our immunization campaign and, more importantly, to protecting our province and putting the pandemic in the rear view mirror,” the provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, told a news conference on Tuesday.

B.C. has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world — with more than 80 per cent of eligible people vaccinated with the first dose and 61 per cent fully immunized — but with new cases on the rise because of the more-transmissible Delta variant, Health Minister Adrian Dix and the head of the vaccine rollout, Dr. Penny Ballem, said there’s more work to be done.

“We want to reach these people,” said Ballem. “They’re across the province and range from nearly 15 per cent unvaccinated in Vancouver Coastal to another 30 per cent in the Northern Health authority and in between in the other health authorities.”

On Tuesday, the province reported 150 new COVID-19 cases with about two-thirds of these, or 95 cases, in Interior Health. That’s an uptick from 112 cases on Thursday and just under 100 each on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Under the new vaccination push, drop-in clinics, mobile clinics, and pop-up clinics at community events will be set up in dozens of communities across the province. People who want to get vaccinated will be able to go to walk in and get their first or second shots without an appointment. The requirement for there to be 56 days between the two shots has now been lowered to 49 days.

While some jurisdictions are seeing upticks in vaccination rates after deciding to require proof of vaccination for travel by train or for entry to bars, gyms and restaurants, Henry said vaccination in B.C. would continue to be voluntary and focused on giving “everybody all of the opportunities to make that choice.”

She did, however, hint at the possibility of escalating tactics.

“It is a choice to be immunized, but there are consequences for people who are not immunized and that’s going to be more important for us as we head into the fall, as we know this virus will increase and we’re likely to see other respiratory viruses,” said Henry. “We’ll be looking at the measures that we need to put in place to protect people, particularly those who are most vulnerable.”

Henry said there may be examples where imposing workplace vaccination requirements makes sense for businesses. “If I was running a nightclub, I would want to make sure that my staff are protected. Yes, we absolutely can say, ‘to come in here, you have to be immunized.’ That gives people the level of comfort that they are in a safer environment.”

People who have received two doses of vaccine are significantly less likely to be hospitalized or to have severe illness, said Henry.

B.C. data shows 78 per cent of those hospitalized with COVID-19 now are completely unvaccinated, while another 18 per cent have only received one jab. The province estimates 906,772 people, or nearly 20 per cent of the eligible population, are unvaccinated.

The highest rates are in Northern B.C. with 32.5 per cent unvaccinated, and the Interior with 26.2 per cent, and the lowest in the Vancouver Coastal area at 14.8 per cent.

Henry said that the number of “people who are actually anti-vaccine or dead set against getting immunized is a very small percentage,” saying surveys estimate this group could include one or two per cent of people who have never been immunized, with that number possibly rising to five per cent for the COVID-19 vaccine.

Fewer than five per cent of new COVID-19 cases are among the fully vaccinated, said the B.C. Centre of Disease Control.

© 2021 Vancouver Sun

A record-breaking real estate markets in Great Vancouver

July 26th, 2021

Greater Vancouver real estate record broken with new $42M private sale

Amy Judd
other

A new Greater Vancouver real estate record has been broken with a new private sale recently.

Sotheby’s International Realty Canada said the sale of the Belmont Estate is now the region’s highest single-family residential sale on a single lot.

A listing for the property says the sale price was $58,000,000.

B.C. Assessment shows a sale for the home occurred on July 9. It was a cash sale for $42,000,000.

“Belmont Estate represents an iconic piece of Vancouver history,” Christa Frosch, listing agent with Sotheby’s International Realty Canada said in a release. “From the moment it was listed, it attracted steady local and global buyer enquiries, a reflection of the property’s pedigree, as well as enduring, underlying consumer confidence in Vancouver real estate.

“Ultimately, this bespoke estate was purchased by Canadian buyers. It is truly one of the most exceptional residential offerings, not only in Vancouver but in all of Canada and beyond.”

Hot spring real estate markets across B.C.

Hot spring real estate markets across B.C – Apr 8, 2021

Read more: Demand for Metro Vancouver real estate remains high as prices grow, board says

The house on Belmont Avenue is situated on 1.28 acres and is 21,977 square feet in size.

It has five bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, an elevator, indoor pool and sauna, six-car garage and a private entrance in the in-law’s suite.The three-level garden is inspired by the gardens of The Palace of Versaillein Paris, according to Sotheby’s, and includes Indigenous, mature sequoia trees, golden spruce, maples and a hobby orchard. 

The view from the Belmont Estate. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada

A look at the decoration inside the Belmont Estate in Vancouver. Sotheby’s International Realty

Canada 

A look at the staircase inside the Belmont Estate. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada

The view from the Belmont Estate in Vancouver’s Point Grey neighbourhood. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada

 

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Belmont mansion sold for the highest price ever in the region for a single family detached

July 26th, 2021

Vancouver real estate: Mansion sold for $42M, well below the asking price but still a record high

Kendra Mangione
other

 VANCOUVER — A Vancouver mansion sold this month for what realtors described as a record-breaking price was purchased well below what its owners were asking.

Representatives of Sotheby’s International Realty said last week the mansion known as the Belmont Estate sold for what was the highest price ever in the region for a single-family detached home on a single lot.

But the company refused to provide any details of the sale to CTV News, citing the privacy of both seller and buyer.

Sotheby’s would only say that it sold for more than the previous record of $31.1 million, and a public listing showed the asking price of $58 million. This was down from when then-owners Joseph and Rosalie Segal tried to sell the home for $63 million several years earlier.

Sotheby’s would not say whether the home sold at, above or below listing, nor would the company say whether it was for sale under the same owners.

According to documents through BC Assessment, the mansion was sold on July 9 – a cash sale for $42 million.

Documents show that, prior to this sale, it had been bought for about $7.1 million in 2009, suggesting the owners who previously tried to sell the mansion at $63 million in 2017 were the same as the owners who accepted the much lower $42 million this month.

The five-bedroom, 12-bathroom estate was also listed in 2020 for $58 million, but the listing was pulled down. Records suggest it did not sell at that time.

Sotheby’s Christa Frosch would not provide many details on the buyer or buyer of the 21,977-square-foot home except to say that they are Canadian.

Records show the home was purchased by a company incorporated earlier this year under the name 1307876 B.C. Ltd. The company’s director is Peter Chung, a doctor who is CEO of Primacorp Ventures.

That company describes Chung as an “entrepreneur, philanthropist, and diplomat…with businesses in education, real estate, health care and social enterprise.”

Frosch did not answer questions from CTV News about how long it typically takes to sell a house in this price category, saying only that it involves finding the right buyer, and that sometimes that means a house stays on the market longer than something more affordable to the general public.

The estate in Vancouver’s Point Grey neighbourhood is 20 years old, according to the listing, and took more than five years to build.

Among its features are a stone waterfall, elevator, wine cellar, ocean and mountain views, indoor pool, library and six parking spaces.

See more photos and read more about the estate at 4743 Belmont Ave. in last week’s coverage.

 

 

© 2021  All rights reserved.

Strata complex has 28 surveillance camera and 30 fob access point for purposes

July 23rd, 2021

Condo surveillance went too far, says privacy watchdog

Jeremy Hainsworth
Western Investor

Hidden cameras, tracking key fobs, sharing private video data on strata owners and guests represent excessive use of surveillance, report says

 Yaletown strata complex has 28 surveillance cameras and 30 fob access points. |File photo

Hidden cameras, tracking key fobs, sharing private video data on strata owners and guests represent excessive use of surveillance, report says

B.C.’s privacy commissioner has told a Vancouver strata corporation to stop using security surveillance system data for purposes other than which it was collected.

And, the strata was told, some data collected through its door key fob system was inappropriate.

“I find the degree of intrusiveness is high since the cameras run 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, wrote Lisa Siew, an Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner adjudicator, in a June 29 decision. “The continuous collection of this information can have personal and social effects on individuals while they are under surveillance.”

Siew approved collection and use of personal information for enforcement of garbage disposal bylaws, for prevention and investigation of property damage in the parkade area and to create and update a key-fob inventory.

Apart from those points, Siew told the strata to stop collecting and using personal information through its video surveillance system, to stop collecting and using personal information through its key fob monitoring system and recommended the strata provide owners and residents with a complete list of all the video camera locations.

A resident complained the Yaletown strata had violated the Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) by inappropriately collecting, using and disclosing personal information obtained through the systems. 

The complainant also alleged the strata was not adequately protecting the personal information.

The complainant alleged the strata “recklessly released the personal information including contact information and signatures of all lot owners without consent when including the list of people who attended an AGM.”

In response, the strata accused the resident of capturing the personal information of other individuals without consent by providing a photo of a computer screen allegedly showed “FOB use in real time.”

Siew stressed PIPA doesn’t explicitly prohibit the use of video surveillance by strata corporations, but because of their “arbitrary invasiveness,” such systems should only be used after less privacy-intrusive measures have failed to address a serious problem.

First, Siew said providing evidence to the commissioner of the issue under discussion was appropriate.

The strata corporation consists of 176 strata lots, including townhouses, divided between two complexes. The surveillance camera and key fob systems were updated in 2015. There are 28 cameras inside and outside and 30 fob access points.

The strata had investigated the resident for a rule violation. During that investigation, video surveillance footage of the complainant and his guests was allegedly shared with others.

He further alleged strata council members and others were viewing video surveillance footage of individuals in the hot tub.

He said he was actively monitored in real time and that the strata wanted to use cameras to monitor traffic in the garage and to catch people discarding cigarette butts.

“The organization appears to be collecting personal information from cameras hidden throughout the interior and exterior of the building and it uses personal information for undisclosed reasons,” the decision said.  

Further, it said, the strata introduced a rule to deny elevator access, and thus unit access, to residents who violated the strata’s rules and bylaws. 

The complainant explained the rule is implemented by “using the key-fob database information to deny access to the elevators by deactivating people’s key fob.”

Siew found the fob system collected personal information “clearly about identifiable individuals” and stored it in a database.

“It would clearly be a simple matter for the organization to use video surveillance footage, the concierge’s observations or eyewitness accounts to determine the identity of the person using a key fob at a specific location, date and time,” Siew wrote.

Further, she said, any visitors to the strata complex such as guests of owners or residents, couriers, delivery drivers or tradespeople will be affected by the organization’s collection of personal information.

And, she said, while some of the notification signs in the building about surveillance were sufficient, she said the strata bylaw about data collection was insufficient.

 

© 2021 Western Investor