In my last column I discussed the present state of our real
estate market and how economic indicators suggest we're not in the midst of a
housing bubble at all.
I made the argument that limited buildable space and our
desirable location make for an environment that will maintain high housing
prices. What I didn't address was the repercussions of this lack of
affordability.
The Royal Bank of Canada's report on housing affordability
in Canada issued in August indicated that most housing markets across the
country are affordable or slightly "unaffordable" with one major
exception: Vancouver.
The L41 ultra-compact home by Vancouver architect Michael Katz anddesigner Janet Corne is a mere 220 square feet.Photograph by: Jon Benjamin, for the NEWS |
"By and large, the share of household budgets, taken up
by the costs of owning a home at current market values, remains close to
historical norms," said Craig Wright, senior vice-president and chief
economist with RBC. "However, extremely poor and rapidly eroding
affordability in the Vancouver-area market is somewhat skewing the national
picture."
RBC's report lists the affordability of owning a detached
bungalow as a measure of the percentage of pre-tax household income required to
service the costs of owning a home. Vancouver's index came in at a whopping
92.5 per cent. What this means is that the homeownership cost of owning a
typical detached bungalow in Vancouver, including mortgage payments, utilities
and property taxes, takes up 92.5 per cent of a typical household's monthly
pre-tax income.
What this outrageous number unequivocally states is that if
you're a typical household in Vancouver not already in the housing market, you
might as well forget about owning a typical detached home in the city.
I believe a solution to this conundrum can be found in the
so-called small house movement that has gained considerable momentum in recent
years. Architect Sarah Suzanka has been credited with starting this movement
with the publication of The Not So Big House in 1997.
Her thesis is a simple one: build smaller but build better.
She believes that the quality of a living space is not related to its size but
rather to the efficacy of its design.
Buildable land on the North Shore is all but gone and we're
left with few options. We can go up, of course, and this is a reasonable
solution in some cases but densification by building towers is very different
than the densification created by low-rise structures knitted more tightly
together.
The sense of community and neighbourhood created by these
low-rise models are far more intimate, and in my mind far more successful, than
the general anonymity of tower living.
A small home could be a stand-alone residence on a smaller
lot or be an additional structure on a lot with a home already on it (the coach
house concept). Either way, the small home increases density and affordability
without deteriorating the quality of a community.
For any of this to happen municipalities will need to amend
their existing zoning requirements to permit smaller scale construction. The
City of North Vancouver has bravely moved forward in this direction, recently
permitting the addition of coach houses on residential properties.
Smaller houses are a logical, economic and environmentally
sound solution for a city that is feeling growing pains. There's no question
that the singlefamily suburban model is being transformed. We live in a new era
where new models for living need to be entertained for the betterment of our
communities.
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