Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Experts See Some Relief For Vancouver's Tight Housing Market By Late 2018

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2017 11:38 AM
    VANCOUVER — A real estate association watching Metro Vancouver's tight and costly housing market predicts conditions should begin to ease by the third quarter of 2018.
     
    The British Columbia Real Estate Association says home builders are responding to a lack of available homes across the region by dramatically increasing multi-family housing starts.
     
    Starts across Metro Vancouver surged 40 per cent to 22,700 units in 2016, while the report says an estimated 19,700 multi-family homes were started so far this year, and a further 19,000 units are forecast in 2018.  
     
    The association's report says data on estimated completion times of the developments suggests available suites in new apartment projects should rise from fewer than 4,000 units per quarter in 2016 to about 6,000 by late next year.
     
    Most of the units are pre-sold, but the report says renters who are buying homes will free up needed rental suites, while owners moving to new units will bolster a scarce supply of housing as their former properties go on sale.
     
    The study says a surge in multi-family completions isn't the only solution for housing affordability in Metro Vancouver.
     
    But it says a significant increase in the supply of homes can help keep a lid on climbing rents and house prices.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Arrest Nunavut Man Who Evaded Them For Almost Three Months

    RCMP Arrest Nunavut Man Who Evaded Them For Almost Three Months
    CAPE DORSET, Nunavut — RCMP from Cape Dorset in Nunavut say they have arrested a man who evaded them by living outside the community for almost three months.

    RCMP Arrest Nunavut Man Who Evaded Them For Almost Three Months

    Vancouver Cops Catch Distracted Driver Twice In 8 Minutes, Issue $736 In Fines

    Vancouver Cops Catch Distracted Driver Twice In 8 Minutes, Issue $736 In Fines
    A driver in Vancouver needed just eight minutes to rack up more than $700 in fines and eight demerit points, all because of a reluctance to put down the phone.

    Vancouver Cops Catch Distracted Driver Twice In 8 Minutes, Issue $736 In Fines

    Woman Struggling With Husband's Parkinson's Asks Premier: 'Get Me A Doctor'

    Woman Struggling With Husband's Parkinson's Asks Premier: 'Get Me A Doctor'
    HALIFAX — Theresa Zukauskas says she wants Nova Scotia's premier to find her husband a family doctor as she struggles for the third time in five years to ensure he has proper care for his Parkinson's disease.

    Woman Struggling With Husband's Parkinson's Asks Premier: 'Get Me A Doctor'

    RCMP In Kamloops, B.C., Probe Suspected Targeted Shooting That Claims One Life

    RCMP In Kamloops, B.C., Probe Suspected Targeted Shooting That Claims One Life
    Witnesses report hearing numerous shots outside a Kamloops home at about 7:30 Thursday evening.

    RCMP In Kamloops, B.C., Probe Suspected Targeted Shooting That Claims One Life

    Woman In Coquitlam Dies After Being Knocked Over By Driver Of Mobility Scooter

    Woman In Coquitlam Dies After Being Knocked Over By Driver Of Mobility Scooter
    Mounties say an 86-year-old woman was bumped by a man driving an electric scooter at the corner of an intersection on Sept. 15.

    Woman In Coquitlam Dies After Being Knocked Over By Driver Of Mobility Scooter

    Rally Against Racism

    Rally Against Racism
    “We cannot let a single resident of Canada feel that they don’t receive the full complement of human and civil rights.” A message from Ohana that seems simple enough and overtly obvious and yet necessary in light of recent rallies.

    Rally Against Racism