Posts by Abundant Housing Vancouver
Our monthly happy hour is here!
This Thursday, April 9, at the Rogue in Waterfront Station. Starts at 5 pm, drop by when you can!
Let's celebrate spring by thinking about what new beginnings the year could bring for housing action in Vancouver!
"...growth in advanced economies has become increasingly biased toward knowledge-intensive activities that prefer large cities. Second, Canada’s urban regulations make it unusually hard for those cities to grow."
YIMBY Edmonton councillor reading landlord Facebook groups about the effect of new housing supply on the housing market:
“I don’t think anyone expected this many units to hit the market at the same time”, “tenants have options”, “you have to be realistic about pricing”, “free months of rent”.
If developers always build up to the maximum (density, height, etc.) that’s allowed in your city, that’s a sign that your zoning rules are substantially restricting housing supply.
Come say hi and meet some pro-housing neighbours at AHV's pub night!
This Thursday, March 12! At the Rogue in Waterfront Station, starting at 5 pm.
Whether you're a regular or a first-timer, we hope to see you there!
Vancouver's long overdue first Official Development Plan will be considered at a public hearing, starting Tuesday, March 10th, at 6pm. This post describes the plan and how to send your support, and critiques!
Wealthy buyers in Manhattan are merging 2-3 townhouses into one mansion. It's just the tip of the iceberg, and a dramatic example of how not building housing makes existing housing less affordable.
www.bloomberg.com/gr...
On "growth should pay for growth": homeowners are all too happy to accept higher property values (created by growth in population, jobs, and public infrastructure), but refuse to pay for the costs that make growth possible. Is that fair?
Douglas Todd: Jarring 18-storey tower on leafy Vancouver street a sign of the out-of-scale times About 10 steel-and-glass highrises, much like the one proposed for Yukon and 14th, are set to arise among character homes within the Broadway plan zone. https://vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/douglas-todd-18-storey-tower-vancouver-out-scale-times
Douglas Todd: Hundreds of quiet east Vancouver side streets upzoned for six-storey apartment blocks Some residents in the vast Rupert and Renfrew area did not know their pleasant side streets had been upzoned for six- to eight-storey apartment blocks. It calls into question the city of Vancouver's murky "engagement strategy." https://vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/douglas-todd-hundreds-of-quiet-east-vancouver-side-streets-upzoned-for-six-storey-apartment-blocks
'Monstrosities' or the evolution of housing? Multi-unit buildings on single-family lots gain traction in B.C. cities The number of multi-unit developments on single-family lots is increasing in B.C. neighbourhoods dominated by single-detached houses. Opinions vary over what these changes will mean for communities. https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/multiplex-feature
Anakin/Padme meme I oppose this building because it's too tall It's just this building, not all new housing? You are not against all new housing, right?
A storey in four acts as captured by local news media:
18 storeys is too high, we’d be fine with 4-6 storeys
6 storeys are too big, we'd be fine with multiplexes
Multiplexes are monstrosities, we are fine with existing post-Second World War bungalows
...
Funded inclusionary zoning is great.
Unfunded inclusionary mandates are a tax on new housing.
Trying something to help visualize land usage per household (which I think is one of the most useful ways to think about cities)
Hotels are a much more efficient way to accommodate temporary visitors than full-year whole home rentals. Building them helps address the housing crisis and benefits both visitors & residents.
Edmonton stays with 8 homes per lot!
Vancouver will get there some day!
valentine's day isn't just for couples, it's also a day to celebrate love. for instance, i would love it if housing prices came down.
ICYMI: The Problem with Public Hearings
From the people that brought you "Where are the schools for all these new homes?"
Coming soon to a public hearing near you
"We should build less school"
Our monthly happy hour is tomorrow, Thursday February 12! Starting at 5 pm at Rogue in Waterfront Station.
Whether you're a regular or a first-timer, this is a great way to meet some pro-housing friends and neighbours. Hope to see you there!
Are "pre-rebuttals" a thing, like "pre-zonings"?
If so, here's a pre-rebuttal from @jensvb.bsky.social and I to the latest argument that supply doesn't matter (from CCPA, sigh).
The Key: Doubling up is the demographic indicator demonstrating our shortage. homefreesociology.com/2025/07/06/h...
Feb. 26 in Squamish: Prominent local journalists Justin McElroy, Tyler Olsen & Jennifer Thuncher will discuss what works covering local elections.
A lot has changed in 4 years, but in our experience, people still want to hear about why rent is too high.
"the biggest problem is likely increasingly strict land use regulation in the West. Peng estimates that this has gobbled up almost all meagre technological gains, and accounts for about 40 per cent of the productivity dearth."
https://council.vancouver.ca/20260203/documents/rr1.pdf#page=194
Based on realistic scenarios given the current development pipeline, Rennie, in a report for the City of Vancouver's ODP, projects Vancouver will have around 875,000 residents by 2034.
council.vancouver.ca...
A screenshot of a Facebook Marketplace-style listing for a rental property. The main photo shows a modern, two-story duplex or townhouse with a dark metal upper siding, light brick lower level, and two separate front entrances with concrete steps. Title: 3 Beds 2.5 Baths - Townhouse Price: $1,650 / Month Location: 12772 114 Street NW – Calder, Edmonton Key Details: Described as a "BRAND NEW" main floor suite in a multi-family building. Available February 1, with an incentive offering up to 1 week early move-in for free.
A table titled "Row Housing / Duplex Housing / Semi-detached Housing / Single Detached Housing (excluding heat and water)". The table compares two rental metrics for different unit types: AMRR (Average Market Residential Rent) for 2024 and MARR (Maximum Allowable Residential Rent) for 2025, the latter being calculated at 80% of the AMRR. Bachelor: AMRR $1,051 | MARR $841 One-Bedroom: AMRR $1,187 | MARR $950 Two-Bedroom: AMRR $1,423 | MARR $1,138 Three-Bedroom: AMRR $1,681 | MARR $1,345 Four-Bedroom: AMRR $1,967 | MARR $1,573 Five-Bedroom: AMRR $2,301 | MARR $1,841 Six-Bedroom: AMRR $2,692 | MARR $2,154
This brand new 3 bedroom home in an 8-unit townhouse is going for less than average market rent at $1,650.
That's rezoning for housing choice in action!
The $113-million mess of a community centre I wrote about this week is 100% funded from “development charges.” It is going in a neighbourhood with zero population growth.
In part, these charges are a tax on newcomers to subsidize existing wealthy homeowners.
globalnews.ca/news/1163476...
ICYMI (gift link for the first few clickers):
How ‘single exit stairway’ buildings could make cities better and safer
New from me: A brief for @rooseveltinstitute.org on the logic of YIMBY policymaking and its applicability to other domains. What principles underlying the YIMBY agenda are transferrable to thinking about energy, healthcare, and other areas? Short 🧵 to follow. rooseveltinstitute.org/publications...