Real Estate profits | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Stacia Leech and Gary kent (garykent![]() |
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Date: Sat, 12 May 2007 14:34:38 -0700 (PDT) |
Hi all: I have had this message sitting in my 'draft' folder for a week, then today I saw Racheli's message and felt the time was right to send it. We are having a challenge in our community this year regarding the prices for home sales. The market in our area (Sunshine Coast - just north of the city of Vancouver on the mainland) has become over inflated due to our proximity to Vancouver and the desirability of this liveable community. We are blessed and cursed to be living in what the real estate industry calls the 'Golden Triangle" - Roberts Creek on the Sunshine Coast. Two members who are selling have priced their homes at the very top end of the market for the size/quality of their homes. We have been living in community since 2004. The homes were actually below market when purchased in Nov '03. This was due to a number of factors, the three important ones being: - We were on the cusp of the building materials and real estate market costs going up, our fixed price contract was likely 25% below what the cost would have been six months later. - The tremendous amount of skilled volunteer hours put into the project over the three year development process. - The skill and experience of our project manager. Our dream in the beginning was to have a range prices for the homes with some units being 'affordable'. This dream quickly evaporated in the cauldron of development. However during the three - four years of development the market rose and then eventually passed us we ended up with all units below market and the smaller one bedroom duplexes prices well below market and 'affordable'. One of the units being sold is listed, three years later, with and increase of $230,000 on the purchase price. The debate we are having in our community is where do values come into the pricing of cohousing homes? I understand that Cohousing has (always was in N. America?) become a middle class alternative to conventional housing. However the question we are asking is what is our responsibility to the greater community and to model a new way? The discussion in our group moves between: - on the one hand - that a seller HAS to price their home at max because of the market they are buying into and that we have every right to make such a large profit - that's what our society is all about, right? - on the other hand - that all home purchases (location, price, size & quality) are a 'choice'. I.e. we could choose to look for a home in this area, yet not necessarilyin the golden triangle (could be within 3 miles) that is of comparable size and quality and not price our Coho home at the max. In British Columbia we have a housing crisis. Young families cannot buy into the housing market without a minimum family income of CND$75,000 per/yr and single folk with only one income, particularly those working in the service industry can not even afford to rent here, never mind buying. This is having an effect on the supply of skilled and unskilled labour on the Sunshine Coast. This housing crisis puts the sustainability of our community at risk. Legally we are in the same situation as US cohousing communities - bare land strata does not allow for any restrictions to be placed on the selling price of homes. However morally and ethically it's a grey area in some minds. It's difficult to see someone make such a huge profit in three years that part due to our skilled volunteer work and difficult to see no benefit returning to the community. Also the homes now become totally out of reach of young families or people not in the highest wage brackets. Have any other communities talked about this elephant in the common house and were there any positive outcomes from the dialogue? Cheers, Stacia Leech Roberts Creek Cohousing www.robertscreekcohousing.ca _____ << ella for Spam Control >> has removed 5720 Spam messages and set aside 7405 Newsletters for me You can use it too - and it's FREE! www.ellaforspam.com
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Ground Breaking!! 5/19 Catya Belfer-Shevett, May 8 2007
- Re: Ground Breaking!! 5/19 Ann Zabaldo, May 8 2007
- Real Estate profits Stacia Leech and Gary kent, May 12 2007
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