Vancouver's laneway love-in: Little homes, big success - Action News
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Vancouver's laneway love-in: Little homes, big success

Vancouver's laneway house program is now in its sixth year, with over 2,000 small homes built on existing properties around the city and other municipalities following the city's lead.

More than 2,000 laneways now built, complaints down, and other municipalities following Vancouver's lead

Vincent Chan, Jasmine Lee and their two-year-old daughter, Hazel, in front of their East Vancouver laneway house, which sits on a property owned by Chan's parents. Vancouver and other cities in the Lower Mainland allow property owners to build small houses in their backyards if their homes back onto a laneway. (Salma Nurmohamed/CBC News)

It's not thesuper-high ceilingsor the ultra-modern designJasmine Lee and Vincent Chan love most about their home. The first feature they're eager to point out in their East Vancouver laneway house is thethird bedroom.

"It's super important," said Chan, 38."We needed it to be future-proof, and the third bedroom is key for the possibility of a second kid."

A townhouseseemed like the natural choice for the family of three,but in a city populated by condos and single-family homes, there were few to be found, and those that were out there were pricey.

So Chan, director of textiles withAritzia, said he floated the idea of a laneway house on his parents' East Vancouver property to Lee, a nursing unit clerk.

She agreed,his parents were thrilled, and a multi-generational living situation was born.

Average laneway homecosts $350K

In a city full of stories of families priced out of the city and driven out to the suburbs, the laneway house is a rare example of young families finding a way to cheat the city's exorbitant housing costs.

They get to live in a detached house without the price tag to match. Vancouver's benchmark price for a single family home is between $1.5 million and $2 million while a laneway home costs, on average,$350,000 to build.

With most of Vancouver's single-family neighbourhoods situated on streets with back lanes, there's ample room for homeownersto squeeze in a small house into the backyard.The downside is city rules forbid residents from selling these smallhomes.

Hazel plays in the family's third bedroom, currently being used as a playroom. The third bedroom was a big draw for the Chan-Lee family in a city where three-bedroom units are hard to find.

Chan'sparents owna home near Commercial Street, a trendy East Vancouver neighbourhood close to shopping and the SkyTrain. The size of any laneway home depends on the size of the property. In the couple's case, city regulations allowedthem to build a 940-square-foot home, which ison the larger side for laneway homes in the city.

One year after they moved in, Lee and Chanfeel they hit the laneway lotteryby having their own homein a great neighbourhood and with that coveted third bedroom and space to spread out.

"We wouldn't have had this amount of outdoor space with a condo or townhome," said Lee, 32.

'An incredibly successful program'

What started off as an experiment in creating densityhas blossomed into a distinctive feature of Vancouver's housing market.

In 2010, the first full year that permits for laneway homes were granted, the city approved 192 projects.There are now more than 2,000 little homes dotted around the city.

"It's been an incredibly successful program," said Heather Burpee, a senior planner with the city of Vancouver."It doesn't change the character of the neighbourhood by putting these units on the back, and you get some additional rental and housing stock."

At first, the city fieldedcomplaints from neighbours who felt spied upon from tall lanewayhouseshovering overtheir backyards. Now, city data shows the number of complaints has dwindled to just a handful each year, mostly parking related.

Chan looks through the upper storage cupboards in the kitchen of his family's laneway home. Storage cabinets line the walls, up to the ceilings, to make the most of the small living space.

Over the last sevenyears, the city has made some tweaks. The biggest change has been allowing more square footage on one level, which has discouraged ownersfrom building 1-storey homes that aren't as popular with the neighbours.

More 3-bedroom unitsneeded

Bryn Davidson, co-owner of Lanefab, a company that constructs laneway houses, said a city-wide policy that allows lanewayhomes to be built in any neighbourhood meansno single areahas beenimpacted more thanothers.

But Davidson said there's room for more improvements.

"In my ideal world, laneways would be 200 square feet bigger," he said.

That, he said, would allow all laneway homes to include that coveted third bedroom.

"That's where we're getting a lot of inquiries now from young families, but it's a challenge."

The next big upgrade, he said, would be to permithomeowners to stratify their properties and allow laneway homes to be sold separatelyfrom the main house.

The current rules mean those who add laneway homes to their property mayget the space they need but can't build equity.

As a result, many families are drawing up their own ownership agreements to get around this.

What's next

Several other cities in the Lower Mainlandhave followed Vancouver's density success and have their own laneway-type programs in place.

West Vancouver, the city and district of North Vancouver, andSurrey are among the municipalities that allow their own versions of laneway homes.New Westminster is close to approving aprogram.

In Vancouver, with laneway homes firmly entrenched in the building stock, the city ismoving on.

The focus now is moving from the laneway house to the laneway itself.

The goal is to change lanes from a place where people put out their garbage tomore vibrant, family-friendly social spaces.

Laneway homes cost a fraction of what a single-family home costs in Vancouver but can't be sold on the open market. Some families are getting around this by drafting their own ownership agreements. (Salma Nurmohamed/CBC News)