'Feeling squeezed out': Will a move to save Vancouver's housing past compromise its future?
Criticism pushes planning official to 're-calibrate' controversial character home program
In a city where "bulldozer-bait" homes can fetch close to $3 million, Vancouver'schief planner is faced with a choice that could shape the city for decades to come.
Are up to 12,000pre-1940 homes an immense swathof the city's housing supply worth preservingat the expense of a younger generation of people whofeel they'll never be able to afford them?
"We've sort of poked a hornet's nest," Gil Kelleytold CBC News in front of a nicely restored homea few blocks from city hall.
Four months into his new job, the former city planner of San Francisco and Portland, Ore.,acknowledged he's been buffeted by complaints about Vancouver's character home review.
Freeze creativity
Many homeowners, developers, pro-density groupsand even key heritage advocates are all pushing back hard against the "preservationist"plan now under discussion.
The proposal would discourage owners from demolishingpre-1940shouses that the city deems to have character value.
Any new home built on the site would have to be significantly smaller, a move that would limit development options.
In return for keeping the old home and fixing it up, the city would grant some extra space for renovations and a larger secondary unit orlanewayhome on the same lot.
Many argue the planwill not only freeze creativity in some of the city's nicest, priciest neighbourhoods, it will also become far more difficult for the city to build up so-called gentle density, such as townhouses, duplexes and family-focused housing that is now missing and desperately needed.
"The younger generation is feeling squeezed out," Kelley said.
"So opening up new options for affordability and different living option choices for them is really critical even as people here who are older are trying to hang on to what theyalready know."
Roughly 1,000 homes aretorn down every year in Vancouver. Atleast two-thirds of them were built before 1940.
Hencethe urgency from the preservation lobbyfor the city to move fast to protect what's still standing.
Owners feel punished
There are already similar character guidelines in effect in oneneighbourhood, Grandview-Woodlands, but residentSiobhan Jackson says they've taken a toll on property values.
"The real data on the house next door is that it reduced the value by 15 per cent," said Jackson, whose neighbour's house wasre-listed and sold for less money after the city determined it has"character features"on the exterior.
What's inside?
"I didn't see there was room for other factors to be considered. Is the home safe? Will it fall down in an earthquake?We are actually now putting people in homes that may not be safe," she told CBC News.
The city already has a heritage registry that includes some 2,200 homes with some form of historical significance.
The designation makes them harder to tear down. But in exchange, ownerscan receive some compensation for maintaining them, such as relaxed bylaws to allow additions.
Gentle density needed
Perhaps the most intense resistance has come from pro-density groups that argue building less on expensive land is counterintuitive when more housing stock is badly needed.
"It's not that we're against character at all. We just want to be able to live in those homes," said Rachael Selinger, who joined a packed kitchen table discussion on the character review inan east Vancouver condo.
Stepping back
Kelley, the planner at the centreof the supercharged debate, hinted he's being swayed by those who argue saving older homes won't help a new generation.
"We have to step back and re-calibrate the program," he told CBC News."We've got to go neighbourhood by neighbourhood
"If it's a teardown, would we allow replacement with a duplex?"
Kelley never answered his own question, but for Vancouver's traditional single-family neighbourhoods 65 to 80 per cent of the city that could signal the first tentative step towards arealignment.
In evaluating the best strategies to save the city's past, he acknowledges the process ended up underscoring the difficulties of living here in the present.