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Making room for Amazon is Canada's and Toronto's housing challenge: Don Pittis

Making the list of 20 finalists for the Amazon prize has drawn attention to Canada and Toronto. But being a magnet for tech stars requires a revolution in how Canadian cities grow.

Canadians must get past NIMBYism and 'socialism for the rich' single-family housing

The houses of Toronto's historic Draper Street are being surrounded by condos, and that's good if Canada wants to make space for the tech economy whether Amazon comes or not. (Don Pittis/CBC)

Ever sinceCanada made the short list for Amazon's second headquarters, the majority view seems to bethat the company would never choose a non-U.S. location.

But whether Amazon comes or not, the idea has raised a crucial issue for Toronto and other Canadian cities hoping to attract high-tech employers. Where are all their high-tech workers going to live?

"I think that's our Achilles heel," says James McKellar, who is part of a movement trying to transform Toronto's and Canada's property market to permithigher density in the innersuburbs where people want to live.

Downtown boom, suburban sprawl

Bizarrely, despite a downtown building boom,as urbanconcentrations sprawloutfrom the hub to overtake nearby farmland, the population density of our metropolitan areasis actually declining.
Despite highrise developments in city cores, suburban sprawl means population densities in many of our biggest urban areas like Saskatoon, shown here, are declining. (Google Maps)

McKellar, director of theBrookfield Centre in Real Estate and Infrastructure at York University's SchulichSchool of Business, says expanding the sprawl isexactly the opposite of what modern cities need to cope with the new industrialization based onhigh-tech brainpower.

By solving the problem, Canada could get out in front of other high-tech citiesincludingSan Francisco, Boston andSeattle, which facea similar housing shortagefor similar reasons.

Socialism for the rich

"In the long term, our biggest competitive advantage to attract these smart people is good housing," says McKellar. He cites the "socialism for the rich" argument proposed by University of British Columbia economist Tom Davidoff, whichsees single-family housing protected by municipallawsas an unfair consumptionof public wealth.

While Vancouver may face a relative shortage of building space due to its mountainous setting, cities like Toronto haveplenty of land in the most desirable areas. The shortage is purely acreation of restrictive zoning rules.

That creates a characteristic patterna concentration of soaring highrises in areas such as downtown where zoning restrictions are weak, and low-density sprawl in the outer suburbs. Most of the city's land in the inner suburbs and outer core is used up by thelow-density single family homes that got there first.
Luxury condos under construction in Toronto's downtown may be suitable for Amazon's youngest workers but in most of the city, medium density is blocked by single-family zoning. (Don Pittis/CBC)

"Here is a city protectingold neighbourhoods for whatever reason and it's shutting out all of the people that we need to drive our economy," says McKellar.

Blanket restrictive zoning that treats every lowrise residential neighbourhood as if it were a precious historic relic creates perverse incentives for developers.

The enormous effort required to overturn zoning rules means they are motivated to build extreme highrisesrather than more moderate five-to 10-storey buildings that would better fit the residential ambience.

Just this month California lawmakersattempted to solve that conundrum with a new bill lifting manyzoning restrictions on high-density lowrise buildingsnear major public transit corridors.

Zoned for economic growth

That may be what cities likeToronto need. There is nothing wrong with preserving small blocks of the city with truly extraordinary or uniquehistoric character, goes the argument.

But for other areas, especially those bestserved by expensive transit systems fundedby all taxpayers, zoning would be changed to allow the right to build high-density lowrise to anyone who can assemble blocks of property.

Screams of protest from single-family homeowners might be muffled when they realizethat newly zoned land would shootup in value. But whether NIMBY protestors like it or not, McKellarsays, the economic health of Canada's biggest cities depends on the change.
An office and condo building rises in a former residential neighbourhood.
Amazon may or not come to Toronto, but to prosper the city must make room for other high-tech companies including Shopify, which has reportedly staked out the majority of the office space in this mixed-use building. (Don Pittis/CBC)

OneCanadiancitythat has successfullymergedhigher density into its housing mix is Montreal, says Royal Bank of Canada economistRobert Hogue. But that may partly be because landlords who own so much of the property are more agreeable to densification. That could give the cityan advantage in the next round of technology expansion.

"Montreal has been a tenantcity for just about forever," says Hogue. It makes finding good housing easier for young people starting their careers.

But that historical difference is just one reason cities like Toronto and Vancouver, where people tend to buy instead of rent, can't easily change.

Boom to glut

There is recent evidence that a concerted building boom can catch up with property demand, as downtown Los Angeles follows parts of New York into an apartment glut. But, barring a severe outside shock to the economy,Hoguedoesn't see that happening anytime soon in Canada's biggest cities.

According to RBC's latest quarterly report onhousingaffordability the ratio of housing costs to incomeCanadian homes are getting harder to own, and Torontois one of the places most affected. Yet condos prices continue to rise with demand.With the economy strong and unemployment at a two-generation low, that won't change.
Much of downtown Toronto is a construction site. Builders just can't satisfy the demand for housing, pushing prices ever higher. (Don Pittis/CBC)

"This increase in the immigration target nationwide shouldn't be underestimated in its impact for the economy at large,but particularly for the housing market and for markets like the GTA which attracts a large share of immigrants," says Hogue."I think it does put pressure on the housing stock."

So if Amazon orother high-tech firms docome and their high-priced talent starts bidding up Toronto's undersupplied property market, the important questionmay not be where they will live.

If Canadian cities don't change the way they build new housing, the question will be:Where willthe rest of us live?

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysis from Don Pittis