Monday, August 23, 2010 There are two million reasons for high prices in VancouverCity’s housing affordability problem boils down to too many people on too little land Monday, June 14, 2010 Home Buyers Facing Less CompetionCategories:Buyers,General,Housing,Market Statistics,Market Stats,Sellers,Vancouver,Vancouver Real Estate Vancouver, BC – June 14, 2010. The British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA) reports that Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) residential sales in the province declined 4 per cent to 7,950 units in May compared to the same month last year. On a seasonally adjusted basis, MLS® residential unit sales in the province declined 11 per cent in May from April 2010. The average MLS® residential price climbed 7 per cent to $498,294 in May compared to the same month last year.
“A slower pace of home sales combined with an increase in the inventory of homes for sale has quelled upward pressure on home prices,” said Cameron Muir, BCREA Chief Economist. A total of 54,362 MLS® residential listings were recorded in May, up 26 per cent from January on a seasonally adjusted basis. “Moderating market conditions in Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and Victoria are reducing the number of multiple offers as a greater selection of homes for sale lessons competition amongst home buyers,” added Muir. Year-to-date, BC residential sales dollar volume increased 50 per cent to $17.5 billion, compared to the same period last year. Residential unit sales rose 31 per cent to 34,619 year-to-date, while the average MLS® residential price climbed 14 per cent to $505,468 over the same period. For the complete news release, including detailed statistics, follow this link:www.bcrea.bc.ca/news_room/2010-05.pdf. Friday, June 4, 2010 May market offers buyers greater selectionCategories:Buyers,Buyers. Sellers,General,Market Stats,Market Update,News,Vancouver,Vancouver Real Estate May Statistics from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver...
The number of properties listed for sale in Greater Vancouver continued to rise in May, while the number of sales showed a year-over-year decrease.
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 3,156 in May 2010, a decline of 10.4 per cent compared to the 3,524 sales in May 2009; 5.1 per cent more than the 3,002 sales in May 2008; and 27.1 per cent less than the 4,331 sales in May 2007. May 2010 sales also represent a 10.1 per cent decline compared to last month’s sales. In terms of number of property listings, last month marked the third consecutive month during which more than 7,000 homes were listed for sale on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS®) in Greater Vancouver.
New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties totalled 7,014 in May 2010, a 48.2 per cent increase compared to May 2009 when 4,733 new units were listed, and an 8.3 per cent decline compared to April 2010 when 7,648 properties were added to the MLS®.
At 17,492, the total number of property listings on the MLS® increased 10 per cent in May compared to last month, and is up 28.2 per cent compared to this time last year.
"Prospective home buyers in today’s market have a broad selection to choose from in every property type. REALTORS® are telling us they’re working with buyers who are not feeling as rushed to make a decision as they did late last year and earlier in the year," Jake Moldowan, REBGV president said.
Over the last 12 months, the overall MLSLink® Housing Price Index (HPI) benchmark price for all residential properties in Greater Vancouver increased 16.7 per cent to $590,662 from $506,201 in May 2009.
"It’s important for those looking to buy or sell a home to remember that real estate is local and wise real estate decisions are made by those who understand current market conditions at the neighbourhood level," Moldowan said.
Sales of detached properties in May 2010 reached 1,256, a decrease of 10.4 per cent from the 1,402 detached sales recorded in May 2009 and a 4.4 per cent increase from the 1,203 units sold in May 2008. The benchmark price for detached properties increased 19.1 per cent from May 2009 to $810,175.
Sales of apartment properties reached 1,354 in May 2010, a decline of 7.1 per cent compared to the 1,458 sales in May 2009 and an increase of 8.8 per cent compared to the 1,244 sales in May 2008.The benchmark price of an apartment property increased 13.9 per cent from May 2009 to $398,783.
Attached property sales in May 2010 totalled 546, a decline of 17.8 per cent compared to the 664 sales in May 2009 and a 1.6 per cent decline from the 555 attached properties sold in May 2008. The benchmark price of an attached unit increased 14.8 per cent between May 2009 and 2010 to $500,339. Monday, May 31, 2010 Making the most of a small space - Focus on refitting your flexspaceIt’s the space that’s supposed to be a bonus in condominiums: the one marked "flex" or "storage" or even "multi-purpose" on the floor plans. The problem is, the space is often so small, it hardly serves any purpose at all.
Designer Erik Lauzon of Konstruk Design has seen how much of a disaster these rooms can be. "The flex room becomes a dump. People throw in stuff that they don’t know where else to put, or maybe they’re simply not ready to throw that stuff away."
If it’s something that hasn’t been used for more than a year, it’s time to get rid of it, according to Lauzon. He also says that identifying a purpose for the space is the first step to getting junk under control.
"If you’re going to use it as a storage room, that’s fine," Lauzon says. "But don’t try and use it as a workspace, too; there isn’t enough room for that. If you’re going to do work there, get rid of unnecessary clutter, and make it minimalist and usable."
Lauzon is applying his strategies to two condos where the flex spaces are completely inflexible. Joelle Guerin knew space would be a challenge two years ago when she moved from her two-bedroom apartment in Burnaby, B.C., to a condo in downtown Vancouver.
"I must have looked at more than 30 places listed as being one-bedroom-and-dens, or one-bedrooms-plus-flex," she says with a laugh. "I pretty much drove my realtor crazy!"
Guerin ended up with a home close to her workplace, but had to make a lot of adjustments during the transition. She bought all new furniture, including a storage bed that holds a lot of household items. She also bought a six-by-two-foot desk, which dominates the storage room.
"It (the room) has become a catch-all for random things. I put paperwork down, and it piles up until I clean it out every few months. I’ve tried to decorate, but there’s no point. I don’t even go into it unless I’m throwing something in, and when people come over, I make sure I pull the door closed."
The small size of the space has forced Guerin to pare down how much paperwork she keeps around, and Lauzon says that’s a good start.
He also says Guerin should start using the large, black, framed pegboard over the desk to better display keepsakes or lists of tasks she has to tackle. Lauzon says it would be a better use of space to centre the desk and pegboard in the room. That would then leave enough room on the right hand side to put up six brightly coloured wall-hung folders to deal with paperwork, with titles like "not so important", "important", and "do this right now".
On the opposite wall, Lauzon suggests creating a photo wall with black and white photos, matted in white, to up the chic factor. He would paint the entire room in a soft grey tinged with green, which goes well with the existing carpet. Designers are increasingly using grey as a neutral colour.
"If she doesn’t need the door, she should take it off, especially since it’s such a small space," says Lauzon. "Making the interior of the room visible is an incentive to keep it organized and you get rid of the dead space. You could also put a little bit of overhead shelving in." He estimates the total cost at between $300 and $500.
Don Genova’s flex space will likely cost more, and be more of a challenge to rehabilitate. The freelance journalist also teaches food and travel writing, and has all of the accoutrements to match.
"I’m a pack rat when it comes to magazines and newspaper articles and cookbooks, because it’s nice to show a hard copy to my students," Genova says. "Then there’s all of the photography and audio equipment, and regular office stuff like a printer, an external hard drive, and a modem."
He needs all of the table surface he can get for marking and his various projects, which means his wife is exiled to work on either the dining table or a small side table in the living room.
Genova says there is definitely some stuff he can get rid of, but his wish list for the flex room includes better shelving, better lighting, and two workspaces. The room also gets hot, so he needs a fan, and he’s tired of tripping over electrical cables and accidentally unplugging equipment.
Lauzon says the first thing he would do is to have Genova consider taking advantage of digital technology to store his CDs, or to archive more of the magazines and newspapers."The books are fine. In fact, they’re quite nice, if they’re displayed properly," says Lauzon.
To fulfil Genova’s wish list, Lauzon would build a long, L-shaped table along the left and centre walls of the room, with storage drawers underneath. Genova would have the long portion, which would be close to nine feet of table surface. The short portion of the ’L’ would be a little thinner, and be designated for his wife. The table would also include small niches to corral all of the equipment cables.
Lauzon says he likes overhead fans, but believes it’s difficult to find a stylish one that also incorporates good lighting. Instead, he suggests that Genova use a slim and quiet tower fan in the corner of the room where there is no table surface.
All of the books and knick-knacks could go into overhead cabinets extending right to the ceiling, taking advantage of the nearly nine-foot ceiling height in the room. Recessed pot lights could be tucked into the underside of the cabinets, with additional task lighting above the defined workspaces.
Lauzon says Genova could either go with custom cabinets, or some very stylish and inexpensive high gloss white shelving from Ikea. Adding in or removing doors would also affect the cost. Lauzon says the room could be completely revamped for $3,000 to $6,000.
Article written by Claudia Kwan, Vancouver Sun Tuesday, April 20, 2010 Vancouver slashes Olympic Village social housingArticle from CBC News about the Olympic Social Housing ...
The City of Vancouver is slashing the number of social housing units in the Olympic Village in order to raise more cash from the troubled project, Mayor Gregor Robertson is expected announce Tuesday afternoon.
The $1 billion dollar luxury condominium complex on the south shore of False Creek was supposed to include 252 social housing units.
But a city staff report has recommended that the number be cut in half because of the huge cost overruns for the social housing component of the development, CBC News has learned. The original budget for the social housing units was $64 million dollars, but the construction ended up costing $110 million.
A staff reports says selling the units doesn't make sense, because the city would have to spend millions to upgrade them to market standards, and the development already contains hundreds of units that are being sold to the public.
So instead of selling them off, the other 126 units will be rented out at market rates, with preference being given to essential service workers, such as police and fire crews who work in the city, and want to continue living close to downtown.
The city took over the entire project after its New York-based financiers pulled out during the financial crisis of 2008.
City staff are cautiously optimistic they will break even on the complete project once the units are sold and rented, and taxpayers won't be on the hook for any losses. Friday, April 16, 2010 Protecting your privacy while listing homeArticle by Anna Vozza in the Vancouver Sun...
Selling your home may be difficult, considering that you must open your doors to potential buyers. Your privacy and security may become an issue when showing your home to buyers, so it is important to consider all your options before you welcome someone into your home.
For many individuals, it is very important for them to protect their privacy, while others are simply concerned that buyers will make assumptions about them and judge them instead of simply judging their home. However, the importance of protecting your privacy is all the same and that goes for anything personal from financial information, such as check books to banks statements and personal letters. Private documents: Is it snooping to open a drawer? Not if the drawer is part of a built-in such as a kitchen cabinet or a dining room china cabinet. Buyers can innocently tug on a drawer to inspect its construction or depth and find important documents that you might not intend for anyone to see. If you have a lock on your file cabinet or desk drawer, now is the time to use it.
Don't leave mail where anybody can find it. Lots of sellers leave piles of opened mail neatly stacked on the kitchen counter. Buyers could find out how much you owe department stores or other credit cards. They can tell if you're late on your mortgage payments or other bills.
Remove diplomas and wedding photos from walls: Remove personal effects from your walls. From diplomas and religious artifacts to wedding certificates and personal photos, don't provide buyers with any personal information about yourself or your family. De-personalizing is also an important move to make when staging your home for sale anyway, so you can actually accomplish two things by removing the personal effects from your home.
Wedding photos might give away the seller's religion, as do certain religious artifacts left in the home. Buyers can be prejudiced. Don't give buyers a way to form any opinion about you at all. Don't let buyers form ideas about you from the type of music you like or the literature you read.
Don't leave your computer up and running during showings. Gaining personal information from your computer takes only moments for a professional hacker or thief, so be proactive and shut your computer down before your guests arrive.
Before you put your home in the market, prep it, empty out drawers, stage closets and pack up anything remotely personal including medications. Disassociate yourself with your home - remind yourself that it is a house - a product to be sold on an open market that is bound to see plenty of new faces throughout the term of the selling process. Thursday, April 15, 2010 Home Lisitings Reach All-Time HighArticle written by Steve Ladurantaye, Globe and Mail...
The Canadian realestate market reignited in March, with the number of new listings skyrocketing even as the number of sales and average prices crept toward all-time highs.
February data from the Canadian Real Estate Association showed sales and prices moderating as supply began to creep back into the market, but March numbers suggest Canadians are feverishly jumping into the market to sidestep tougher mortgage requirements in effect Monday April 19 as well as to avoid new taxes being introduced in Ontario and British Columbia in June.
There were 97,663 homes put up for sale last month, a 20-per-cent jump from the previous high set in March 2008. A total of 233,402 listings have been booked since the beginning of the year, the most for any first quarter on record.
New listings are important because they can help moderate sharp price increases that occur in a sellers' market as buyers are forced to compete for what little inventory is available. That hasn't happened yet, however, with sellers still in control in most of the country.
The national average price also spiked in March, hitting $340,920 – just $300 short of the all-time high reached last October. Compared to a year ago, the average price has gained 17.6 per cent. CREA said 49,256 homes were sold, the second highest for any March and 40.8 per cent higher than March 2008.
“Negotiations still favour sellers during the home buying process in a number of major Canadian housing markets,” said Georges Pahud, the association's president. “[However,] the rise in new listings mean that buyers may shop around more before making an offer.”
In the first quarter, seasonally adjusted sales hit 130,072 homes, the fourth highest level on record. That's a 3.4-per-cent decrease from the fourth quarter, when a sizzling market spurred talk of a bubble among economists and pushed the Federal government to enact tougher mortgage rules to ensure consumers would be able to afford their mortgages should interest rates rise.
Sales activity in Ontario, Quebec, and Newfoundland & Labrador rose to new records in the first quarter, but the gains were moderated by a sharp drop in sales in British Columbia as consumers began to be priced out of the market.
“The erosion of housing affordability is crimping activity in some of Canada's priciest markets in the lower mainland of British Columbia,” said CREA chief economist Gregory Klump.
“Higher mortgage interest rates and the rise in new listings may also soon reduce some of the urgency to purchase in Toronto. Sales activity in British Columbia and Ontario is expected to ease over the second half of 2010 once the HST comes into effect, pulling national activity lower. Rising supply and lower activity will take the steam out of the pricing environment following upbeat home sales this spring.”
Thursday, April 1, 2010 The value of working with a realtorAn interesting article from the Vancouver Sun...
Realtors provide a broad range of services, depending on their individual business models and the agreement between you and your realtor as to which services you want.
Depending on that agreement, services may include helping you determine the value of your home if you're a seller, or helping you establish a reasonable purchase offer if you're a buyer.
It may include listing a property for sale on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) to bring it to the attention of realtors working on behalf of buyers. It may include marketing a property on www.realtor.caor www.realtylink.ca,in a local newspaper, on signs, via open houses or other advertising vehicles. It may include seeking the realtor's help to negotiate the sale if you're the seller, or to negotiate a purchase price and conditions if you're a buyer. It may include seeking a realtors advice on conditions and appropriate subjects.
There are a lot of mays in the range of potential services, again depending on a realtor's specialties, i.e. residential, commercial, the types of services a realtor offers, and the types of services you choose. What's equally valuable is the level of protection you gain from hiring a realtor. Buying a home is the most significant purchase most people make in a lifetime. A realtor brings assurances and safeguards to the process.
Each stage of the transaction occurs in front of a well-regulated backdrop created over many years to protect the public. This includes realtor insurance, an assurance fund, and multiple avenues of recourse if someone feels their agent did not act in accordance with their professional and contractual obligations. Those avenues include the BC Real Estate Council and the appropriate real estate board. Here's a more comprehensive list of the protections that come from working with a realtor:
Standards, legislation and requirements
The real estate profession is one of the most highly regulated in the country. The Real Estate Council of BC is a regulatory agency established by the provincial government to protect consumers through the licensing of all individuals who practice real estate in the province. The conduct requirements for all real estate licensees and brokerages include:
1. Undivided loyalty. The brokerage must protect the client's negotiating position at all times, and disclose all known facts, which may affect or influence their decision.
2. Obey all lawful instructions of the seller.
3. An obligation to keep the confidences of clients.
4. The exercise of reasonable care and skill in performing all assigned duties.
5. To account for all money and property placed in a brokerage's hands while acting for the client. The above speaks to the minimum required under the Real Estate Services Act
Realtors are subject to a higher standard.
As Realtor duty to disclose
In 1991, the BC Real Estate Association, the provincial association for realtors, introduced the Property Disclosure Statement (PDS). This document is a detailed form that asks a property seller to disclose any defects to a prospective buyer. This document is not required by law, however, the realtors of BC decided to make the PDS (and its complementary forms, the Strata Property Disclosure Statement and the Rural Property Disclosure Statement) available to any client wanting to list a home on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS). The PDS can be legally incorporated into the Contract for Purchase and Sale. The PDS goes beyond current legal disclosure obligations and requires that potential problems be itemized for prospective buyers, such as buried fuel storage tanks, asbestos insulation, unauthorized rental suites, renovations done without a permit, moisture problems, unregistered easements or encroachments, and whether the home was ever used as a grow-op or drug lab.
Although the PDS is never a substitute for a thorough, professional home inspection, it is a great place for buyers to begin their due diligence investigation into any home they are hoping to purchase.
By choosing to create the PDS, the realtors of BC sought to provide the public with an additional level of certainty when they purchase a home.
Special Compensation Coverage
The Real Estate Compensation Fund Corporation is mandated within the Real Estate Services Act and provides protection for consumers who have lost deposit monies entrusted to a real estate licensee (or an unlicensed individual related to the brokerage, for example, a receptionist, director or officer) that is misappropriated, wrongfully converted, intentionally not paid or accounted for or obtained by fraud. As a condition of licensing, it is mandatory for all licensees to participate in the fund.
Transaction deposits held by real estate brokerages are protected by the Special Compensation Corporation and are held by the brokerage as the stakeholder until the transaction completes or the parties give instructions as to the disposition of the deposit. Deposit monies can only be removed from a brokerage trust account under specific circumstances. Check with your realtor for more information.
Errors and Omission insurance
Anyone licensed to engage in real estate in BC is required to have Errors and Omission Insurance. This provides coverage for professional errors. Recourse for the public
Both the Real Estate Council of BC and the 12 BC real estate boards have an investigatory and disciplinary process to deal with complaints. Realtors who are found to have breached either the legislation or REALTOR Code are subject to sanctions by their board and/or the Council.
Real estate boards deal with breaches of the REALTOR Code. The Real Estate Council of BC deals with breaches of the Real Estate Services Act.
The Professional Standards Department at the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) educates members about professional conduct, and resolves and mediates complaints and concerns of both members and consumers. Where a resolution isn't possible, files can be forwarded to the Board's Professional Conduct Committee for further review. The REBGV website is www.rebgv.org.
The Real Estate Council enforces entry qualifications, investigates complaints and imposes discipline under the Real Estate Services Act. The Real Estate Council of BC website is www.recbc.ca.
Realtor education
Realtors complete educational and licensing requirements and must be of good reputation in order to become licensed.
Realtors are committed to continuing education and consistently refine and improve their skills and professional knowledge through participation in the profession's required Professional Development Program.
Every two years, realtors must complete a required number of course credits as a condition of continued membership in their Board. These courses are designed to keep realtors up-to-date with new and changing information relating to real estate. As licensees, realtors are also required by the Real Estate Council of BC to complete a re-licensing education program every two years.
Friday, February 26, 2010 The Afterlife of Olympic VillagesHere is an interesting look at the after affects of the Olympic Village in Vancouver...
Among the lasting legacies for Olympic host cities are the villages constructed to house athletes and officials. After the final medals are awarded, how do cities capitalize on these massive remnants of their games?
or the 2010 Winter Olympics, about 3,000 of the world’s best athletes (and officials) took over a corner of downtown Vancouver, British Columbia — not to mention the little city that skiers and bobsledders created 70 miles north, in Whistler. Such Olympic villages can be billion-dollar creations that are in the world’s spotlight for just a few weeks.
So what happens to these glamorous villages when the athletes pack up their medals, memories and dirty laundry to fly home?
If the planners have done their homework and everybody keeps their promises, the villages are in for a long and productive post-games life. But that’s not always how it works out. Here’s our look at the afterlife of several villages from the past few decades.
Vancouver: The best (and costliest) village ever?
With its Olympic Village, Vancouver is certainly gunning for one of the most dramatic transformations of a site — and it looks like it may succeed. What the athletes may not know, as they enjoy the spectacular views across False Creek toward the Vancouver skyline and the North Shore Mountains beyond, is that city planners have hoped to transform this land since the 1970s. The Southeast False Creek area was the last remaining piece of undeveloped waterfront in downtown Vancouver. Most recently, its big tenant was the city’s public works yard.
That all changed with the Olympic Village — 18 midrise buildings with enough apartments to accommodate 2,730 athletes and officials during the Olympics, and an additional 350 during the Paralympics in March.
After the games, the ultragreen village (rechristened Millennium Water) will become the centerpiece of the larger Southeast False Creek neighborhood. The village’s 1,100 units will include 730 market-rate condos, 120 market rental apartments and 250 affordable rental apartments. (Many of the condos already have sold, for about $950 per square foot.)
Homeowners won’t be able to move in as soon as the games end, however. Once the village is handed back to the developer this spring, the buildings need to be touched up and retooled: Kitchens that were boarded up for the games so athletes couldn’t use them must be completed. Nice wood flooring must be installed (often right atop the carpeting in place for the athletes, which will be used as padding).
The apartments aren’t the only thing that will need to be altered: A 45,000-square-foot community center on the waterfront, which is now serving as the village mayor’s office during the games, among other uses, will be refitted with a day-care center, a restaurant, a nonmotorized boating center and a gym.
The goal is to create a complete community with all the things it needs, where none existed before. By 2020, city planners expect the Southeast False Creek neighborhood to be home to 16,000 people living in more than 5,000 apartments and condos. They’ll be able to enjoy 26 acres of parkland, including a new waterfront promenade, a public plaza and a community garden.
Sound good? It should. The Vancouver press has reported that the $1 billion project is $130 million over budget to date.
Article from Realestate.msn.com Wednesday, January 27, 2010 Stunning Vancouver Time Lapse VideoCheck out this stunning time lapse video of our beautiful city titled "Vancouver City". It is an music video an artistic collaboration between Innerlife Project and TimeLapseHD, and they have done an amazing job!
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