Archive for January, 2019

Vancouver immigrants spend $820K more on their homes

Wednesday, January 30th, 2019

Immigrants to Vancouver buying higher priced homes

Steve Randall
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

Immigrants to Vancouver are buying more expensive homes than Canadians in the city according to a new report.

Official figures from Statistics Canada shows that homes purchased by immigrants are worth on average a third more than those owned by Canadians.

This is based on stats for homes bought between 2009 and 2016 and reveals that immigrants own 5% of single-family homes, with an average value of $2.34 million, some $824,000 more than those owned by the average Canadian.

There’s a larger gap for those who moved to the city earlier and StatsCan says Toronto has not seen the same trend;  the average assessment value of single-detached houses in Toronto owned by recent immigrants is $892,600,  $43,300 higher than the average among Canadian-born owners.

The agency says that the current study “does not attribute changes in property prices in Toronto and Vancouver to any specific socio-demographic or economic factor. To disentangle the causal impact of these factors, comprehensive socio-economic information over many years would be required.”

It notes that ownership generally reflects the share of population that immigrants make up in each city.

The report suggests that immigrants may own more expensive homes as they may not have large savings in traditional retirement accounts or other investments. Cultural attitudes may also play a part.

Copyright © 2019 Key Media Pty Ltd

Vancouver office vacancy drops to lowest level since 2008

Tuesday, January 29th, 2019

The city’s office market has long made headlines for scant office availability

Tanya Commisso
Western Investor

Metro Vancouver vacancy has dropped to 4.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2018, and as low as 3.4 per cent in the downtown market. Demand has driven up prices to more than $50 per square foot for premium downtown space towards the end of the year. No new supply arrived on the market during this quarter, with new downtown office space not expected until 2020.

“With low vacancy in the downtown core, suburban markets will continue to see increased tenant interest,” reads the latest quarterly report by Colliers International

Indeed, suburban market vacancies are also plummeting. 

In Burnaby, vacancy decreased from 6.7 per cent to 5.9 per cent quarter-over-quarter. Availability has continued a sustained downward trend since the introduction of the SOLO District development in the Brentwood area. Vacancy prior to the completion of SOLO reached a high of 11.3 per cent in 2016. Average rents also increased from $13.61 to $15.07 quarter-over-quarter. 

New Westminster vacancy has decreased by nearly half of its five-year average of 12 per cent, to 6.6 per cent this quarter. Completion of Anvil Centre kick-started leasing activity in the downtown area. 

Premium, transit-accessible office space in Surrey is nearly impossible to come by, according to Colliers, causing the region’s Class AAA vacancy to drop from 8.1 per cent to 5.2 per cent year-over-year. New supply isn’t expected until 2021. 

Technology, education and real estate tenants represent the bulk of leasing activity, at 34.3 per cent, 17.8 per cent and 7.8 per cent, respectively. 

© Copyright 2019 Western Investor

Loblaws City Market to anchor massive downtown Vancouver post office redevelopment

Monday, January 28th, 2019

City Market will be part of the development’s 185,000 square feet of retail space, which will also include a food hall, gym, pharmacy, and dining options

Lindsay William-Ross
Western Investor

The former central post office in Downtown Vancouver is destined for a massive revamp, and the historic building will be redeveloped into retail and office space. Now the “Post” developer, QuadReal, has announced that the retail portion will be anchored by a large location of Loblaw Companies Ltd.’s Loblaws City Market.

CityMarket is the slightly upscale and urban brand of Loblaws, who also operate No Frills, Real Canadian Superstore, and T&T Supermarkets in Metro Vancouver. They have three current City Market locations in the area, in Park Royal (West Vancouver), Lonsdale (North Vancouver), and Arbutus (Vancouver). Their location in Richmond’s Ironwood area, at the former Fantasy Garden mixed-used redevelopment, closed last year after just a couple of years in business.

For downtown Vancouver at The Post, City Market will be part of the development’s 185,000 square feet of retail space, which will also include a food hall, gym, pharmacy, and dining options.

The City Market “will provide a best-in-class shopping experience at The Post, with a large-scale grab-and-go section, café, cooking classes, and fresh meat, produce and bakery items,” according to Quad Real.

The Post is a massive re-purposing of Vancouver’s onetime central Canada Post building, which was completed in 1958. The West Georgia Street historic structure’s redevelopment is large-scale and noteworthy for several reasons.

“The Post is one of the most ambitious heritage redevelopments in Canada’s history,” explains QuadReal. “It celebrates the location’s Canada Post legacy through sustainable and adaptive reuse while at the same time prioritizing the needs of Vancouver’s emerging knowledge economy. Located at 349 West Georgia Street in a high-traffic area of Vancouver, The Post will include 1.13 million square feet of state-of-the-art office space in two new towers, surrounded by retail and public spaces.”

Amazon is set to take 35 per cent of that office space.

The phased construction has completion for The Post in 2022 through 2023.

© Copyright 2019 Western Investor

M3 announces pre-qualification tool, partnership with Purplebricks

Monday, January 28th, 2019

Homebuyers to gain real-time pre-qualification insight in minutes

Steve Randall
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

A new pre-qualification tool and partnership has been hailed a game-changer for mortgage brokers and homebuyers.

An exclusive agreement between leading mortgage origination firm M3 and burgeoning real estate brokerage Purplebricks (formerly ComFree) will enable homebuyers to gain real-time pre-qualification insight in minutes via Purplebricks.ca.

“M3’s partnership with Purplebricks Canada not only demonstrates our commitment and growing leadership in the digital lending space but is a true testament to the power of embedding innovation and technology into our thriving ecosystem to ensure consumers are better informed,” said Luc Bernard, Chairman and CEO, M3.

The pre-qualification tool will be available via Purplebricks.ca in Ontario, Manitoba, and Quebec (under the DuProprio brand) and through M3’s family of brands and broker sites.

“Thanks to M3’s foresight around innovation, this is the first of several significant building blocks for the organization in the self-directed digital home equity sandbox that will help customers seamlessly take the next step in their homeownership journey,” said Andre Boisvert, Chief Technology Officer, M3. “This is a big step for us and that’s why we are excited to work exclusively with an industry leader like Purplebricks Canada around this self-serve approach to create more value for customers.”

Purplebricks launch Purplebricks launched as a full-service real estate brokerage in Canada earlier this month as the ComFree network rebranded.

The parent company was founded in 2014 and after success in its native UK it expanded to Australia and the US.

Copyright © 2019 Key Media Pty Ltd

Winnipeg 14-storey residential building underway this year

Monday, January 28th, 2019

14-storey Arts District in Winnipeg to provide 119 units

Ephraim Vecina
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

With a $26-million federal investment, 14-storey Arts District will soon arise in Winnipeg.

The project, announced last week by the federal government and local officials, will help relieve some of the pressure for more space that caters to the city’s affordable housing needs.

Arts District is designed to provide 119 units for struggling middle-class families. Approximately 10% of the units will also be designed as barrier-free layouts.

“This investment is wonderful news for the Winnipeg middle-income families that will move into these new affordable rental housing units. It will contribute to build a foundation for their social and economic success as well as help create new jobs and stimulate our local economy,” according to Robert-Falcon Ouellette, Member of Parliament for Winnipeg Centre.

In Q3 2018, the median price of a condo unit in Winnipeg fell by 2.1% on an annual basis (down to $240,933). Despite this, affordability has been impaired by a considerable increase in condo fees, stemming from regulations mandating reserve fund studies for condo projects.

“Demand hasn’t been strong enough to keep up as those units come onto the market, and this has caused some downward pressure on condo prices,” Royal LePage Prime Real Estate managing partner Michael Froese said back then.

On the whole, however, Froese stated that “Winnipeg’s housing market has been very resilient, buoyed by the region’s stable and diverse economy.”

“Inventory has crept higher, and sales activity has fallen slightly from the strong 2017 market, but home prices have remained steady. The market is relatively affordable across a wide variety of housing types, which is a positive environment for buyers.”

Copyright © 2019 Key Media Pty Ltd

National sales had the worst decline in 10 years

Monday, January 28th, 2019

CREA: Overall home sales in 2018 fell by 11%

Ephraim Vecina
REP

Updated numbers from the Canadian Real Estate Association indicated that overall home sales in 2018 fell by 11.1% annually, making this the largest year-over-year drop since the height of the recession in 2008.

This also followed a 4.64% shrinkage in 2017. Earlier this month, the organization warned that the impact of B-20 will continue to reverberate this year, especially apparent in both sales activity and base prices.

CREA predicted that overall sales will fall by another 0.5% in 2019, and average home prices to crawl up by just 1.7% (up to $496,800).

This possibly points to a trend of slowdown that could threaten long-term economic stability with a dangerous chain reaction.

Said vicious cycle might manifest because for every successful home sale, approximately $64,000 in spin-off economic activity arises, by CREA’s estimates.

Moreover, an estimated 3 transactions are already equivalent to the economic activity resulting from 1 new job.

“Spin-off activity is typically general household purchases, furniture and appliances, moving costs, renovations, and professional services (financial, legal, real estate, appraisal, etc.). Those professional services represent nearly half of the spin-off dollar value,” Better Dwelling explained in its analysis of the CREA data.

Copyright © 2019 Key Media Pty Ltd

Housing affordability key issue for upcoming federal election

Monday, January 28th, 2019

Shots fired ahead of election

Neil Sharma
REP

With the federal election just under 10 months away, housing affordability appears destined to become a key issue, with the Liberals being the latest party to fire a shot across the opposition’s bow.

“Their front-end loading plan is a recipe to bankrupt housing providers right across the country,” Liberal MP Adam Vaughan said of the NDP’s proposal to build half a million units of affordable housing.

Last Monday, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh suggested that the half-million units could be subsidized by removing the GST from the cost of their construction. While that proposal has been met with some skepticism from housing experts, Vaughan’s comments are baffling to some.

“I’m not sure what he means by bankrupted,” said Jeff Morrison, executive director with the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association. “I’ve never known anyone to go bankrupt from getting money.”

However, building 50,000 units per annum without so much as a strategy seems unrealistic, says Greg Suttor, a senior researcher at the Wellesley Institute.

“That is more or less equivalent to a quarter of total production of housing by the private sector in Canada,” said Suttor.

Singh also accused the Liberals of resting on its laurels instead of solving the housing crisis, but in late 2017 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a 10-year strategy to add up to 60,000 new affordable units and repair 240,000 existing ones.

Last week, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said that the federal government is exploring ways to help millennial-aged Canadians become homeowners, although he did not offer additional details.

The Conservative Party has also been critical of the government’s housing policies. Last year, the Deputy Shadow Minister for Finance declared the party’s intention to make B-20 a contentious issue leading up to the Oct. 21 election.

“It will be an election issue, absolutely,” said MP Tom Kmiec, who tabled two motions last year to study B-20, both of which were rejected by the Liberals.

“This is an affordability issue. The Bank of Canada is raising interest rates, and I don’t fault them for it, but rules like B-20, and then provincial rules, are compounding and make it unaffordable for young people to get into their first home.”

With files from The Canadian Press

Copyright © 2019 Key Media Pty Ltd

Zillow fights back against Canadian critics

Monday, January 28th, 2019

Zillow makes money from its advertising model

Danny Kucharsky
REM

In early December, Zillow announced that it had signed listing agreements with nine additional brokers and franchisors in Canada, including HomeLife Real Estate Canada, Sage Real Estate and Your Choice Realty. They join Century 21 Canada and several other Canadian real estate companies and brokers who previously agreed to send direct listing feeds to Zillow.

“We’ve only been live since early October (in Canada) and we’re actually ahead of where we thought we’d be,” says Zillow Group chief industry development officer Errol Samuelson, adding Zillow is “making really great traction in signing up brokers and getting more and more listings on the site.”

Zillow.com now has more than half a million unique Canadian users per month. Launched in 2006, Zillow Group’s apps and website brands receive an average of more than 186 million unique users every month. The Seattle-based company reported more than US$1 billion in revenues in 2017.

But Samuelson said in an interview that many reader comments on REMOnline.com and opinion pieces by industry executives published in REM “are saying things that simply are untrue” about Zillow.

One common falsehood, he says, is that Zillow uses Canadian listings as a way to farm leads, which Zillow then sells back to Realtors.

“It is always free,” Samuelson responds. “There’s no cost for an agent or a brokerage to have their listings displayed on Zillow” and “the listing agent never pays for leads off their own listing.”

For no charge, he says, agents can include photos in their listings and provide profile information about their specialties and the areas they serve. Links allow consumers to email the listing agent or click over to the brokerage or franchise website and there is prominent branding for the brokerage and the agent.

“To me, having an opportunity to get additional exposure (and) better tools in the hands of consumers, feels like a net positive,” Samuelson says in response to criticisms about Zillow.

Samuelson says Zillow makes money from its advertising model, called Premier Agent, that allows up to three buyers’ agents to advertise in a local geographic area and appear on a listing.

“The model is if you’re a buyer’s agent and you’d like to connect with consumers who you might be able to represent, you can do that by paying, but it’s always free for the listing agent and the listing broker.”

He adds that the Zillow site clearly delineates between listing agents and Premier Agent ads and that “a lot of agents would agree that it makes good sense for a buyer to have representation from an agent who is not the listing agent.”

Samuelson says Realtors in the U.S. are advertising on Zillow because “they get fantastic returns on investment.” Those who advertise with Zillow “make several times the dollars back that they spend in advertising “and many have shifted to the platform from other advertising mediums, such as newspapers, homes magazines and bus stops ads.

“The Zillow ad platform is a really effective way for agents and brokers to grow their business and do it more cost effectively than some of the methods that agents and brokers might be using in Canada today.”

Samuelson says Zillow plans to show recent Canadian house sales data in areas where it is legal to do so. “We’re going to show it because it’s what buyers and sellers, Canadians, say they would like to see. But we would only do that if it’s appropriate in that local jurisdiction.”

For example, he notes that Zillow does not display sales prices for Texas because of a non-disclosure law in the state that does not allow sales prices of properties to be displayed without owners’ consent.

Joel Shears, director of industry development for Zillow Group, says claims that Canadian laws and real estate board regulations will not be followed on Zillow listings are not true. “We have Canadian counsel who advise us on provincial and federal regulations.  When we sign agreements with Canadian boards, franchisors or brokers, we use Canadian versions of our agreements where the governing law is in Canada, not the U.S.  With our two new Canadian industry veterans as well as myself involved, we take working with boards and brokers and adhering to local laws and real estate practice very seriously.”

Critics such as Beverley Varcoe, broker with Royal LePage Your Community Realty in Aurora, Ont., are not convinced.

“Just Google Zillow complaints, Zillow lawsuits, Zillow fake listings and so on,” Varcoe says. “With such a large company, no wonder they can’t stay on top of updated and accurate listing information.  When I checked Zillow in the GTA, within five minutes I found two fake listings for condo projects that were cancelled.  The agent is posting fake listings to look for buyers.  So here we go with an unregulated website and false information. This is a situation that will need serious research now and in the future.  How are Canadian companies going to enforce any rules?”

Shears responds: “Listings are not manually entered into Zillow; they generally come from a board, franchise or broker feed.  In the specific case mentioned, we identified an issue with one agent who was entering pre-construction listings in his office system, which were uploaded to the national franchisor as new residential inventory. As soon as we discovered this, our team reached out to the company, who agreed to either re-label the listings as pre-construction or remove them entirely as some of the projects were cancelled.”

Shears says Zillow is entering into agreements with real estate boards “so that we have a direct pipeline from the MLS so we can receive and verify data…We’ve signed several Canadian boards already and will continue to expand across the country.”

Varcoe is also concerned about the Zestimate feature, which offers estimates of the value of properties. Zillow plans to bring the feature to Canadian listings.

“What do we do now with this inaccurate information?” says Varcoe. “Buyers will start bringing in Zestimate offers. There were several class-action lawsuits in the U.S. over this issue from homeowners. They said it affected the value of their properties and caused a drop in their market value. Unfortunately, a judge ruled that it was an estimate and not a proper market evaluation. But the buyers saw price and value and didn’t read or understand that it was an estimate. Any brokerage that lists a Canadian property on Zillow will have to explain what is going to happen to their listing on this U.S. real estate portal.  How do you explain a listing price that is different from the Zestimate, especially if it is much higher or much lower?”

According to research conducted by Ipsos in Canada for Zillow, 89 per cent of Canadian home sellers say knowing how much homes in their community sell for is important to them. In addition, 96 per cent of Canadian home sellers say knowing the value of their home is important to them.

Canadian consumers are saying “that they’re very interested in recent sales in their neighbourhood and they’re very interested in what the value of their home would be,” Samuelson says.

Varcoe, an American who has been selling real estate in Canada for about 30 years, says, “The companies that have signed onto Zillow are singing the praises of how much it is going to do for the Canadian real estate industry.  This is supposed to embrace technology, but it only benefits the U.S. company.  Shouldn’t we be pouring all this money into our own Canadian technology and websites like Realtor.ca?  It is the envy of many Realtors around the world.”

Samuelson says Zillow is planning to make new features available. Over time, Canadian agents’ profiles on Zillow will contain reviews from buyers or sellers with written comments or five-star ratings and, where permitted, information about past sales agents have participated in.

This, Samuelson says, “provides more transparency than other sites.”

The goal is to provide consumers “with as much information as possible so they can make thoughtful, reasoned decisions about what they’re going to do in the real estate space.”

He adds, “a lot of consumers quite simply would prefer the mobile experience that we can deliver when you compare that to Realtor.ca.”

© 2017 REM Real Estate Magazine

Reasons why we should be optimistic for 2019 Vancouver real estate market

Saturday, January 26th, 2019

Tina Mak
other

Happy New Year! What a 2018 we had!  Real Estate turned from hot to cold.  Stock Market had bipolar behavior and believe it will carry onto this year as long as the trade war and technology cold war between US & China hasn’t resolved and now Canada is in the middle of it too.  

 

Let me share my view with you on what I think our Vancouver market would look like in 2019.  Politics play a huge part in the real estate market in my opinion both locally, nationally and internationally.  From China capital control, Canada mortgage stress test, Provincial foreign national tax, empty home tax, speculation tax to the recent Huawei CFO arrest.  This is too complicated for us to analysis.  Nobody could guess Canada would play a role in this dispute between the world 2 power house countries but unfortunately we are.  What is the great thing out of this? Vancouver is being mentioned daily on the global news for good or for bad.  Regardless of all the volatility, the storm will pass.  It might be difficult at times and a bit too much for the millennial to comprehend, it’ll be behind us sooner than you think.            

 

Let’s look at the facts that makes Vancouver special and real estate remain strong  in the long run.   

1) Canada economy is doing well.  Based on June 2018 statistic chart you see below, Canada unemployment rate has never been this low and BC is the 2nd lowest in the country.  December 7th report shown even greater figure, C. is at 4.2% 

 

2) Based on a report published in 2013, Chinese numbers in Vancouver, Toronto to double by 2031.    

3) Click recent report on BC’s population passes 5 million.  Our population was only 3.292 million back in 1990.   

4) Interprovincial Migration:  Based on the latest report released on June 5, 2018, BC and ON were the principal beneficiaries of net interprovincial migration in 2015/2016. Read Internal Migration Overview for details

5) International students: Click Canada is home to nearly half a million international students for details.  Approximately 150,000 of them are in Vancouver.  Increase in International students becoming Canadian Permanent Residents. 

6) How does interest rate affecting the market?

Interest rates fluctuate mostly as a result of trying to keep economy stable.  Keep prices stable that is, to make sure inflation doesn’t get out of control.  Therefore, GOOD NEWS FOR BUYER.  Housing price will be stabilized.   

7) Best City in the world to live:

Best time to buy? 

Well, you might think Tina said this because she would like to make a sales…Well, I don’t blame you to think that way but please read the graph below from the real estate board from 1977 to 2018.  I and a handful of my investors bought back in 2008 when majority of my clients decided to hold and wait…Many of them came to me afterwards said I was smart and regretted they didn’t listen to me.  I am not smart, I pay attention to the global news and how things affecting Vancouver.  History told us the next peak always higher than the previous peak.  We can’t time the lowest nor the peak of the market.  Warren Buffett quote: Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful”.  I only encourage buyer to buy whatever they can afford.   

Developers pulling back from developing because of the uncertainty.  It will affect the construction start up numbers which means less products will be built.  This would turn into pend up demand when the market turns around with less inventory.  

Who buys what? 

 

First time buyer and upgrader: Perfect time for you guys.  No bidding war & lots of choices.  

 

Americans reside in Canada:  Americans might be exempted to pay US tax when they reside and earned their income in Canada.  This will encourage the Americans who work in Canada settling in Canada and buy properties. Read New bill could lessen tax woes for Canadian residents with US citizenship.

 

Investors: Well, this is the only group I’d offer different advise.  To be very honest, Vancouver doesn’t provide any return on investment anymore with the high acquisition costs and low to negative returns on investment.  If you invest in Vancouver, you can only wait for capital gain.  With all the taxes we have in place, our taxation policy is even more complicated than the US now.  So my question to you is “Can you think outside the box?”  I’m sure you understand what “Diversification” and “Don’t put all your eggs in the same basket”.  So, would you consider US? 

Is Vancouver a tax haven city? 

Not anymore.  Click The world’s favorite new tax haven is the United States to understand why.  Sounds disbelievable? Well, this became the fact after Canada became one of the 109 countries participating the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) organization in global transparency for tax purposes.  Canada started reporting in September 2018.  US is the only developed country refused to participate.   

 

Tina Mak P.R.E.C (est.1992) Founding President of Asian Real Estate Association of America, Vancouver Chapter 

The Grand at Willow Creek 27358 32nd Avenue Langley 47 one-to-three-bedroom homes by Apex Western Homes

Saturday, January 26th, 2019

The Grand at Willow Creek takes an amenity-rich location in Aldergrove

Simon Briault
The Vancouver Sun

The Grand at Willow Creek

Project location: 27358 32 Avenue, Langley

Project size: 47 one-to-three-bedroom homes ranging in size from 668 to 1,240 square feet and priced between $288,800 and $541,900 until Feb. 15 (After Feb. 15, homes will range from $288,900 and $552,400)

Developer: Apex Western Homes

Architect: Jordan Kutev Architect Inc.

Interior designer: Creative Design Works – Mae Suffron

Sales centre: 27358 32 Avenue

Hours: noon to 5 p.m. on weekends; Mon — Fri by appointment

Sales phone: 604-857-1866

Website: http://www.willowcreekaldergrove.com

The lack of affordable housing options in the Lower Mainland is no longer news. It’s a problem that has been spreading throughout the region in recent years, with families, businesses and communities all feeling the effects.

But Ray Vesely, principal owner and CEO of Apex Western Homes, believes he’s found an affordable neighbourhood in Aldergrove in the Township of Langley.

It’s here that Vesely is building The Grand at Willow Creek, an apartment building of 47 one-to-three bedroom homes. There are 12 different plans to choose from, with homes ranging in size from 668 to 1,240 square feet and priced between $288,900 and $552,400.

“My personal background is that I’m a glazer and a carpenter by trade,” Vesely said. “I used to do framing and all that and I’ve been in the construction industry for more than 30 years now.”

“Apex Western Homes has been around for 20 years or so,” Vesely added. “We’ve been doing custom-made houses for the last 10 or 15 years and I have been having real struggles with staffing issues because of the lack of affordable housing: it’s just too expensive for many people to live here. I’ve also been on the planning commission for the City of North Vancouver and so I know that affordable housing is really a crisis for this region.”

Vesely said it was his first-hand experience of affordability issues that led him to expand his business into multi-family housing, starting with an apartment complex in Mission that is a 10-minute walk to the West Coast Express train station. He cited public transit as one of the key factors in the development of new affordable communities.

“We don’t want to kill the housing industry, we want to make it affordable for people to get to downtown or wherever they need to go,” Vesely said. “Transit is really the key to affordability.”

“The other thing apart from having good transit links is just to find somewhere that’s offers value for money,” Vesely added. “(Aldergrove has) a great little village atmosphere. I love it. It reminds me of places like Edgemont Village in North Vancouver or Dunbar on the west side of Vancouver.”

The Township of Langley has big plans for the area and has been busy building up the community’s range of amenities, including a new recreation centre and the proposed redevelopment of Aldergrove Mall.

The Grand at Willow Creek offers easy access to grocery stores, shopping, parks and green spaces, two elementary schools, a community centre and multiple dining options. These include Station House Pub & Grill, Fox & Hounds Pub Restaurant, Hirame Sushi, Brick Alley Restaurant, Pho Nguyen Vietnamese and Cactus Club. There’s also a dental clinic, a medical clinic, a yoga studio and a gym nearby.

The homes at The Grand at Willow Creek feature wide-plank European laminate hardwood flooring and high-efficiency Whirlpool stacking washers and dryers. All homes will be fully pre-wired for in-home security systems. The building will also include gated and brightly lit underground parking with video surveillance, as well as ample and convenient visitor parking.

Kitchens feature cabinets in white Shaker style or wood-tone European style, as well as quartz stone countertops with coordinated ceramic tile backsplashes. The Samsung stainless steel appliance packages feature french door refrigerators with bottom-mount freezers, slide-in convection oven ranges with five-burner ceramic cooktops and microwave hood fans. There’s also pot lighting with modern classic pendants over islands or eating bars, under-cabinet task lighting and built-in waste and recycling bins.

Main bathrooms and ensuites have square-edge cabinets and quartz countertops, snow white tiled surrounds and large-format floor tiles. Ensuite bathrooms feature five-foot frameless glass showers, water-saving dual-flush toilets and wall-mounted light bars.

Luxury finishes and local amenities aside, Vesely comes back to the issue of affordability as one of the key benefits of The Grand at Willow Creek, particularly for young families who are looking to get into the market for the first time.

“Affordability is one of the most attractive things about it for sure,” he said. “The stress test [federal guidelines introduced in 2018 to cool the Canadian residential mortgage market] has brought everybody down. People are having to lower their expectations from what they used to be able to qualify for in terms of mortgage financing. Whatever people used to be able to afford, it’s now one or two hundred thousand less. They’re looking for more affordable options and we’re able to provide that here.”

The sales centre for The Grand at Willow Creek is located on site at 27358 32 Avenue and is open from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays and by appointment from Monday to Friday.

© 2019 Postmedia Network Inc.