At the Crossroads: B.C. Real Estate

Image by: Mark Atomos Pilon/Hubert Kang/Patrice Halley

With Vancouver real estate at a crossroads, it's time for a realty check.

B.C. real estate – and specifically Vancouver real estate – has long been subject to boom-and-bust cycles. Speculation arrived on the Granville townsite with the railway in the 1880s, flourished with the influx of investors from Asia in the 1980s and gave legs to the mortgage scams and leaky condos of the 1990s. This time round, easy credit fed the boom – most spectacularly stateside, but also extending to the U.K. and the emergent economies of eastern Europe and Asia. Vancouver took its place on the global stage as developers and marketers turned here for expertise in selling their latest projects, and in short order “super, natural British Columbia” became the best place on earth to buy property.

While the first cracks in the global property boom started appearing in 2005, it wasn’t until the bankruptcy of Lehman Bros. on Sept. 15, 2008, that the problem of tightened credit really hit home, cutting off the lifeblood of local developers – most notably Millennium Development Group, builder of the Vancouver Olympic Village – and driving a nail through the heart of consumer confidence.

In our 2009 review of the local real estate market, we look at three themes or projects that defined the boom – the international marketing of Vancouver, transit-related densification across the Lower Mainland and the landmark Olympic Village development – and ponder how well they might hold up in what could be the toughest year for B.C. real estate in over a decade.


After the Circus

A post-2010 vision for False Creek. Many expect the Olympic Village will prove to be a model sustainable community. Just don't ask about the money.

Hubs of Activity

How the growth of rapid transit is reshaping real estate across the lower mainland. The Canada Line is expected to give birth to several high-density communities, including near Richmond's Lansdowne station.

The Global Village


With housing markets across North America imploding, the question on the minds of B.C. realtors is, Where are the international buyers?

 

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Buyers are waiting for the recession to kick into high gear and run its course, with a view of buying smart in 2010 in the fall or early 2011.
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