Lululemon founder's Kitsilano home worth more than $74M, according to B.C. Assessment - Action News
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British Columbia

Lululemon founder's Kitsilano home worth more than $74M, according to B.C. Assessment

Chip Wilson's waterfront mansion has increased in value by almost $1 million compared with the last annual assessment.

Most owners will see a 5% to 15% rise in values in this year's assessment even as market softens: agency

Chip Wilson's waterfront home in Kitsilano is once again B.C.'s most valuable residentail property, according to B.C. Assessment.
At just over $74 million, Lululemon founder Chip Wilson's waterfront mansion in Kitsilano is once again B.C.'s most valuable residential property, according to B.C. Assessment. (Google Maps)

New figures released by British Columbia's property assessment agency show the province's most valuable residential property, which is ownedby billionaire Lululemon founder Chip Wilson, is worth about $1 million more than it was in the previous year's assessment.

Wilson's seven-bedroom, nine-bathroom mansion on Vancouver'sKitsilano waterfront is valued at $74,089,000, an increase of 1.3 per cent or $942,000 from the previousyear, according to B.C. Assessment.

The peak valuation for the Point Grey Road property was $78.8 million in 2018.

The 2023 numbers,based on market valuations from July 2022, were posted online Monday.

The agency warned in December that 2023 assessments would likely not reflect the current market because of the six-month lag andthe effects rising interest rates and slowing sales are having on the residential property sector.

"As a result, your next property assessment will likely be higher than what the current market value might be, but that will be the same for everyone,'' assessor Bryan Muraosaid in a statement.

Rates for a conventional five-year mortgage have risen from about 3.5 per cent one year ago to almost six per cent.

Rows and rows of single-family homes are seen in this aerial shot of Vancouver.
B.C. Assessment's 2023 figures are based on valuations from July 2022. (Gian-Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

According to the latest data from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, homesales in the city were down almost 53 per cent in November 2022 comparedwitha year earlier, and down 15 per cent from October 2022.

Still, Murao said most property owners can expect to see a five to 15 per cent increase in their 2023 assessment.

Assessment notices will be mailed out to ownersthis month.

B.C. Assessment will be releasing more information on specific regions, communities and market trends on Tuesday.

With files from The Canadian Press