Real eState
Vancouver real estate: Concord Pacific floats new renderings for prime Molson site – Vancouver Sun


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The lots are currently assessed at $223 million, but, of course, would be worth exponentially more if they were rezoned by the City of Vancouver to allow for Concord’s plans.
Concord owns other large, prime sites where the sale price paid at the time builds in a hope or calculation that the city will approve rezoning to justify the cost beyond what the current zoning allows.
It bought the Westin Bayshore site in Coal Harbour next to Stanley Park in 2015 for around $290 million.
In August, Concord paid around$1 billion for the St. Paul’s Hospital site on Burrard Street in downtown Vancouver. Vice-president Peter Webb said the current zoning allows for about 1.9 million- sq. ft of residential density and commercial development.
Concord executives have long said the goal at the old Molson site is to eventually build a mixed-use, residential community with some tech office spaces even though the property is zoned M-2 industrial.
Since early 2019, there has been a city-wide review of industrial land to look at how the economy and employment opportunities are impacted by zoning. It’s expected to continue into 2021-2022.
Matt Meehan, a senior vice-president of development at Concord Pacific, said in the past that “our site is not open for putting rezoning applications until they finish that report.”
An external advisory group for this review last met in July 2020. A breakout session that examined industrial spaces tabled the importance of protecting industrial land, but also said there “should be a focus on how the industrial sector can work with the tech sector.”
With a file from John Mackie
Real eState
European real estate stocks hammered by banking turmoil – Financial Times
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Real eState
A massive chunk of Toronto's Kensington Market is now for sale at $24 million – blogTO
A large portion of Toronto’s eclectic Kensington Market community is on the chopping block, with a group of properties hitting the market for a combined $24 million, and potential plans to redevelop the site with a new mid-rise building.
Realtors are shopping a group of seven properties around that includes 23 Saint Andrew Street plus 25 through 35 Kensington Avenue, located just northwest of the Dundas and Spadina intersection.
The document circulating mentions the possibility of purchasing additional properties at 21 and 23 Kensington Ave plus an easement lot attached to 23 St. Andrew, which would add 0.173 acres to the site and increase the developable footprint to 0.66 acres.
The site is currently home to a collection of Victorian semi-detached homes with commercial frontages and includes a handful of businesses such as vintage store Fashion Old and New.
If sold off, it is expected that the new owner of the properties would redevelop the site with a higher-density development, and the document specifically notes the potential for an eight-storey building on the land.
Toronto’s Official Plan does indeed designate this pocket of the city for mixed-use development, though, like pretty much everything else proposed under the city’s archaic zoning by-laws, any mid-rise plan would require a rezoning to move forward.
The site is located within the planned Kensington Market Heritage Conservation District (HCD), which aims to conserve the area’s cultural and built heritage. This would likely only prove a small speed bump in any redevelopment plans, as new development is still permitted in an HCD as long as it adheres to the surrounding style.
Real eState
Federal Government Amends the Foreign Buyers Ban Regulations – British Columbia Real Estate Association
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On March 27, 2023, the federal government announced amendments to the Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act’s (the Act) accompanying Regulations, effective March 27, 2023. The Act was passed in June 2022 and the regulations came into force January 1, 2023.
Here’s what you need to know about the amendments to the Foreign Buyers Ban.
Enable more work permit holders to purchase a home to live in while working in Canada.
The amendments allow those who hold a work permit or are authorized to work in Canada under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations to purchase residential property. Work permit holders are eligible if they have 183 days or more of validity remaining on their work permit or work authorization at time of purchase and they have not purchased more than one residential property. The current provisions on tax filings and previous work experience in Canada are being repealed.
Repealing existing provision so the prohibition doesn’t apply to vacant land.
Repealing section 3(2) of the regulations, so the prohibition does not apply to all lands zoned for residential and mixed use. Vacant land zoned for residential and mixed use can now be purchased by non-Canadians and used for any purpose by the purchaser, including residential development.
Exception for development purposes.
This exception allows non-Canadians to purchase residential property for the purpose of development. The amendments also extend the exception currently applicable to publicly traded corporations under the Act, to publicly traded entities formed under the laws of Canada or a province, and controlled by a non-Canadian.
Increasing the corporation foreign control threshold from 3 per cent to 10 per cent.
For the purposes of the Prohibition, with regards to privately held corporations or privately held entities formed under the laws of Canada or a province and controlled by a non-Canadian, the control threshold has increased from 3 per cent to 10 per cent. This aligns with the Underused Housing Tax Act’s definition of ‘specified Canadian Corporation’.
While the BC Real Estate Association (BCREA) welcomes these amendments because they provide greater flexibility to newcomers and businesses seeking to contribute to Canada, we remain opposed to the legislation’s highly political and largely non-evidential assertion that foreign ownership plays a significant role in Canadian housing attainability.
The federal government’s need to amend this policy demonstrates its overly hasty policy-making process. The negative unintended consequences that necessitated the amendments could have been mitigated with proactive, fulsome sectoral consultation. The negative fallout from this legislation once again highlights a concerning trend at all levels of government to implement policy affecting major economic sectors without adequate advance sectoral consultation.
BCREA is committed to continuing our advocacy efforts calling for the establishment of a Permanent Housing Roundtable to bring together all stakeholders in the housing sphere and help address its challenges with an inclusive, holistic and innovative approach.
To subscribe to receive BCREA publications such as this one, or to update your email address or current subscriptions, click here.





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