City of Winnipeg to offer $10K to Exchange condo buyers - Action News
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Manitoba

City of Winnipeg to offer $10K to Exchange condo buyers

City of Winnipeg is enticing people to buy condos in the Exchange District by offering a $10,000 forgivable loan.

City concerned developers are souring on further investment in region

City of Winnipeg to offer $10K to Exchange condo buyers

11 years ago
Duration 1:59
City of Winnipeg is enticing people to buy condos in the Exchange District by offering a $10,000 forgivable loan. CBCs Meagan Fiddler reports.

City of Winnipeg is enticing people to buy condos in the Exchange Districtby offering a $10,000 forgivable loan.

A report,passed by a vote of 13-3 at city council on Wednesday, recommendsthe loan as away to attract more residents to the Exchange/Waterfront area and breathe some life into a stagnant Downtown Residential Development Strategy (DRDS).

The report outlines concerns developers are beginning to sour on investing in those areas.

"The first units under the DRDGP came onto the market in late 2011 and have been marketed through 2012. Unit sales since inception have been lower than expected with many completed units remaining vacant and the development community is skeptical about further investment," according to the report. "A result is that sixadditional projects approved under the DRDGP may not proceed."

Ross McGowan,CEO of CentreVenture, the city's arms-length downtown development agency, saidthe way the loan works is thatanyone who stays in their condofor at least fiveyears won't have topay the money back.

"It would be a forgivable loan that we would register on your property," he said. "This is not intended as an investor flip. We truly want people to buy and to live in the downtown."

He expects,with more than 450 condo units available in the Exchange, the program could add 1,000 people to the area.And that, he said, could make setting up retail and grocery stores more viable.

Martin Maykut manages Qualicos Streetside Development Corporation. He said the type of people interested in moving downtown are young professionals, eager to shop and work near their homes.

"The most interest downtown has been the first-time buyer," said Maykut. "Theyre walking to work. Theyre going to the new restaurants and bars. Theyre using the amenities and being part of truly creating that downtown neighbourhood."

But some units come with high price-tagsedging toward the half-million-dollar mark.

Besides that, real estate agent Bill Thiessen says there are multiple barriers for people moving downtown.

"People are coming and saying, Oh, its beautiful. I love the suite, and then, OK, where do I park?" said Thiessen.

Couns. Brian Mayes, Russ Wyatt,and John Orlikow were the only councillors who didnt think the incentive plan was a good idea, with Orlikow sayingthe city is further subsidizing buildings it has already subsidized.

"I personally believe if the market isnt there then those developers have to lower their price," said Orlikow.

He added a lot of the condos were developed through incentive grants.

"I do wonder if we arent helping out some developers who might have misjudged the market," he said. "I cant prove that, but I wouldve liked to see the money spent in different ways."

Coun. Jenny Gerbasi said shelikes the plan because it will create tax dollars. The city isn't giving away money but actually creating revenues in the long run, she said.

Coun. Justin Swandel agreed, calling it money well spent.

The city will spend an estimated $2.5 million on the grants.