Archive for July, 2005

Vancouver’s house-sales – will the price bubble burst

Monday, July 18th, 2005

Chad Skelton
Sun

HANDOUT PHOTO The Vancouver Convention Centre Expansion Project (image added at centre of the phtoo) is part of the building boom leading up to the 2010 Olympic Games. Many attribute some of the sizzle in Vancouver real estate to excitement fuelled by the Games.

For all those who think Vancouver’s housing boom will never end — that the Olympics, our limited land base, or our growing population will keep house prices rising for a long time to come — it’s worth taking a look at what happened in Sydney, Australia.

If Vancouver had a twin sister, it would probably be Sydney.

Located around a huge natural harbour, Sydney is renowned for its mix of big-city amenities and stunning natural beauty.

It is the country’s gateway for new immigrants from Asia, with about 1,000 new people arriving every week, and is a favourite of foreigners looking for a second home.

And, like Vancouver, Sydney is hemmed in by geography.

With the Pacific Ocean to its east, a mountain range to its west, and large national parks on both its north and south, Sydney has a growing population but only a limited amount of land to build on.

All those factors, and a booming Australian economy, helped fuel a huge housing boom in Sydney in the late-1990s and early 2000s, with the average price of a detached house rising to close to $600,000 by late 2003.

Then prices started to fall.

Since the end of 2003, the average house price in Sydney has dropped about 15 per cent, according to figures compiled by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Michael Blythe, chief economist with the Commonwealth Bank, said the drop in house prices, which shows no immediate signs of recovery, took many by surprise.

“The typical experience in Australia is you always get these periods of rapid house price growth and then prices [flatten out] for a number of years,” he said. “This time around the fact that prices have actually fallen … is a little bit different.”

And, perhaps most troubling, Sydney‘s price drop came without either of the two big triggers many here say would be needed to deflate Vancouver‘s hot housing market: a big spike in interest rates or a weakening economy.

Australia‘s central bank did raise interest rates in late 2003, but only by a measly half a point — from 4.75 per cent to 5.25 per cent.

“It didn’t take much on the interest rate front to slow the housing market here,” Blythe said.

And Australia‘s economy remained strong right through the drop in house prices, with unemployment remaining at its lowest level in 30 years.

Sydney‘s housing bubble simply popped.

And some are now pointing to Sydney — and a wobbly housing market in Britain — as the first dominoes to fall in a global collapse in house prices.

In a cover story earlier this month, the influential magazine The Economist called the worldwide increase in house prices “the biggest bubble in history,” comparing it to the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s.

“It is impossible to predict when prices will turn,” the magazine predicted. “Yet turn they will … Over the next five years, several countries are likely to experience price falls of 20 per cent or more.”

The Economist isn’t the only influential voice predicting trouble in the housing market.

Yale economist Robert Shiller, whose book Irrational Exuberance successfully predicted the dot-com collapse, released a revised version of his book this spring that predicted a crash in house prices.

And in a recent television interview, Shiller argued “glamour cities” like Vancouver will likely be the hardest hit.

Vancouver is one of the [most] glamorous cities in the world,” he said. “Beautiful place, west coast, ocean view. It can kind of make investors a little bit flighty. They think this is such a wonderful place [that] everyone wants to live here. And they think there is no limit to price. But there is always a limit to price. There is only so much people can afford to pay.”

Shiller added that Vancouver is no stranger to booms and busts.

Vancouver is the most bubbly city in the world, I believe,” he said. “They’ve had very volatile prices in the past. The rest of Canada, I don’t get quite such extreme stories.”

Indeed, during a two-year period between 1979 and 1981, house prices in Vancouver jumped nearly 120 per cent — only to be followed by a spectacular crash that wiped out nearly all of those gains.

The city experienced less dramatic jumps — and drops — in house prices in the early- and mid-90s.

And yet many of those who follow Vancouver‘s housing market closely say they don’t think we’re heading for a crash.

For one thing, they say, the price increases in Vancouver aren’t large enough to truly be called a bubble.

Since early 2002, Vancouver has had fairly steady price increases of about 10 per cent a year.

And while those increases are significant — especially since they come on top of the highest house prices in the country — they are fairly modest compared to those in other cities around the world.

Sydney, for example, experienced three straight years of roughly 20-per-cent price growth before its market began to drop — with prices more than doubling over a five-year period.

And many of the hottest markets in the U.S. are currently experiencing annual price increases of 20 per cent or more.

Even within Canada, Vancouver‘s price increases aren’t as dramatic as many think.

Tsur Somerville, an expert on housing markets with the University of B.C.‘s Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate, keeps data on eight major housing markets in Canada.

Over the past three years, he said, prices have risen faster in Vancouver than the Canadian average, behind only Montreal and Toronto.

But Vancouver‘s housing boom only really got going in 2002 — lagging the rest of the country by a couple of years.

If you look at prices over the past five years, rather than the past three, prices have actually risen slower in Vancouver than the national average, trailing every major city except Calgary and Halifax.

And many observers say there are sound reasons for house prices to be going up in Vancouver.

“In Vancouver, the housing market is being supported by some pretty strong fundamentals,” said Cameron Muir, senior analyst with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.

Those fundamentals include a booming economy, low unemployment, rising wages and more people moving here from other provinces.

And just as important, said Muir, is that all that good economic news came after a lengthy period of stagnant economic growth — and flat house prices — in the 1990s.

As a result, when the economy finally began to pick up, there was a lot of pent-up demand for housing that pushed up prices.

In its article predicting a housing market collapse, The Economist argued that the “most compelling evidence” that house prices are overvalued is the growing gap between house prices and rents.

The argument is that the true value of a home as an investment is its value as a rental property — either by its owners renting it out to someone else, or living in it themselves rent free.

In many countries around the world, this “price/rent ratio” has reached historic highs — and Vancouver is no exception.

While house prices in Vancouver have risen strongly in recent years, rents have actually fallen slightly.

As a result, the price/rent ratio in Vancouver is now at its highest point in a quarter-century — higher even than it was at the very top of the early-1980s housing bubble.

Those figures suggest that house prices in Vancouver are dangerously overvalued.

But it’s only one way of looking at things.

The other is affordability.

For most people, buying a house isn’t primarily an investment, but a place to live in.

And for them, the return on their investment isn’t nearly as important as what kind of house they can afford.

Over the past few years, wages in B.C. have risen slightly and, more importantly, interest rates have reached historic lows — meaning the average Vancouver resident can afford a much more expensive home today than he could a decade ago.

As a result, even though prices are higher now than they’ve ever been, the average home in Vancouver is actually more affordable now than it was in the mid-1990s, according to a report by RBC Financial Group.

In 1993, for example, an average homeowner in Vancouver had to spend more than 70 per cent of his or her income to carry a typical mortgage on a two-storey house.

Today, that figure is about 60 per cent.

“Even though affordability is bad in Vancouver, it’s not as bad as it has been,” said Allan Seychuk, the RBC economist who wrote the affordability report. “It’s nothing you’re not used to.”

That could all change, of course, if interest rates jumped several points, as they did in the 1980s.

But Seychuk said the Bank of Canada has a much better hold on inflation now than it did in the 1980s — making such a dramatic rate hike unlikely.

One of the other telltale signs of a housing bubble, experts say, is speculation — people buying houses just to flip them, rather than to live in.

“For a bubble there needs to be a lot of speculative activity going on,” said Helmut Pastrick, chief economist with the Credit Union Central of B.C.

Investors buying up houses in hopes of a quick buck are also those most likely to flee when the market turns down — increasing the chances of a crash.

There are strong signs that speculation has reached very high levels in many U.S. markets.

For example, fully a third of new mortgages in the U.S. now are interest-only or “negative amortization” (in which the size of the loan grows over time, rather than shrinks) — risky gambles that prices will keep going up.

Speculation is on the rise in Vancouver, too, but it is still relatively low.

Just four per cent of homes in Vancouver are resold within six months, according to data collected by Landcor Data Corp.

That compares to 10 per cent during Vancouver‘s last housing boom, which ended in 1990, and more than 20 per cent during the early-1980s bubble.

All these factors — a strong economy, low interest rates, and low speculation — lead most local experts to argue that Vancouver is not in a housing bubble.

But that doesn’t mean there isn’t cause for concern.

While the market appears stable overall, experts say that doesn’t mean there can’t be micro-bubbles in certain sectors of the housing market.

For example, anecdotal evidence suggests a fair deal of speculation is going on in the downtown condo market — speculation that often doesn’t show up in the official figures because condos are resold before they’re even built.

“Where people are just buying up condos for investment without really evaluating them well — when they’re treating all these things as a good investment independent of the fundamentals of that property in that area, then you get concerned,” Somerville said. “While overall we’re not worried … that doesn’t mean there isn’t behaviour that makes you concerned.”

And while few think Vancouver is in store for a spectacular market crash like we saw in the early 1980s, that doesn’t mean we aren’t due for a milder “correction” in prices.

Underlying economic conditions in Vancouver are strong, Somerville said.

But they aren’t strong enough to justify 10-per-cent-a-year price increases forever.

“We have house price inflation that’s above what it should be,” he said. “You’ve got [economic] fundamentals to support that — they just don’t support it on a continuing basis.”

House prices, like everything else, tend to operate in cycles — increasing for a while, then dropping off or remaining flat for a while.

The average housing boom lasts about four years and the longest sustained increase in prices in Vancouver‘s recent history lasted just under five.

We’re about three years into the current one.

“I would say some time over the next three years, we are extremely likely to see some kind of correction,” Somerville said. “These things typically don’t last more than five years. If I look at house prices, they’ve been rising for about three years. So I expect sometime in the next three years they have to stop.”

So what does that mean for those thinking of buying a house?

“It is an issue for the person who says real estate is great and I’m selling all my stocks and buying real estate in the Lower Mainland,” said Somerville. “For that person, it’s a problem.”

But for those who are simply looking for a home to live in for a long time to come, it’s less of a concern.

For them, said Somerville, what house prices do over the next 10 or 20 years isn’t nearly as important as whether buying a house is right for them — and if they can afford to make the payments.

“If I’m making the payments and enjoying the house, house prices can fall without a big change in my standard of living,” he said.

And Somerville should know.

For family reasons, he’s decided to finally quit renting and start looking for a house.

“From an investment perspective, I think I’d be more inclined to rent for a while rather than buy,” he said. “[But] like lots of people, my housing decision is not based primarily on investment but is driven by what our family needs happen to be.”

And while Somerville is reluctant to make exact predictions about when Vancouver‘s hot housing market might begin to cool, he can’t help himself from making just one.

“You’ll know when the market has hit its peak on the day that I buy a house,” he said.

[email protected]

Pulse of the market

Three classic measures in housing economics as they apply to Vancouver:

House values in real terms

In the early 1980s and the mid-’90s, home ownership in Vancouver was nearly as expensive as it is now. But in both earlier examples, the cost in real terms then went on to decline.

Price-rent ratio

Economic theory says a bubble exists when residential rents and housing prices are out of balance. Shown below is Vancouver‘s price-rent ratio over time.*

*”The fundamental value of a house is the present value of the future housing service flows that it provides to the marginal buyer. In a well-functioning market, the value of the housing service flow should be approximated by the rental value of the house.”

— Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Share of income to pay for the roof overhead

The ownership bite is creeping up yet remains well below historic highs.

For a standard 2-storey home in Vancouver; percentage of household income taken up by ownership costs, annual average.

Source: University of British Columbia (top 2); Statistics Canada, Royal LePage, RBC Financial Group (bottom chart).

Vancouver Sun

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Filed Strata Corporation Documents can be in wrong place – doc.

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

Strata bylaws, plans, etc. can cause problems

Tony Gioventu
Province

Every month in B.C. something approximating 25,000 sets of strata minutes are produced.

Add to this more than 100,000 bylaw filings, 30,000 strata plans, thousands of transaction certificates and forms and financial statements, and we have a potentially large margin of error in documentation.

One New Westminster strata recently discovered that its bylaw amendments in the Land Title Registry had been filed incorrectly, under the wrong designation number.

Each strata has a designation number that identifies its filing information, location, strata plan and bylaws.

However, in the course of filing new swimming-pool bylaws, council members of this strata — let’s call it LMS1234 — inverted the numbers. For the sake of argument, let’s say they wrote LMS4321 instead.

The error was subsequently amended with the correct filing and co-operation of the Land Title Office. But there was an alarming moment when the other strata — the actual LMS 4321 — discovered they had bylaws referring to swimming- pool hours, when they had no pool. What other mixups could occur? Many.

Strata Law: Bylaws, strata plans, schedules of unit entitlement, voting rights, conveyance transactions, easements, right-of-ways and restrictive covenants are all items that are filed through the Land Title Services. Bylaws may be voted on but are not enforceable until they are filed. Once filed, they become effective. The Strata Property Act, the Land Title Act, the Real Estate Development Marketing Act and Real Estate Services Act all play an active role in filed documentation and requirements for strata corporations. Information that’s incorrectly filed can lead to unenforceable bylaws, incorrect information certificates for sales, improper fining and penalties, all of which can drag the strata into costly legal battles.

Tips: The Land Title Services do not check or validate whether the contents of your documents are correct. Registered strata plans and voting schedules frequently have addition errors, and bylaws and forms are frequently filed with incorrect information. Check and double-check your forms and records before you file.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association. Contact CHOA at 604-584-2462 or toll-free 1-877-353-2462 or e-mail [email protected].

© The Vancouver Province 2005

Convention of sea life – doc.

Saturday, July 16th, 2005

Below the new convention centre, marine life will meet and thrive, too

Frances Bula
Sun

Looking at the mountain of yellow sulphur on the north side of Burrard Inlet, the churn of ferries, fishboats and freighters, the industrial-zone shore, the buzzing float planes and the loading cranes, you’d be forgiven for assuming the inlet is a marine dead zone.

And that’s not to mention the tonnes of toilet water that get flushed into the inlet from outfall pipes and the former oil refineries perched on the water’s edge.

So it’s hard for the casual observer to imagine that anything more is alive in all that muck than a few tumour-laden finned things, some clumps of mutated seaweed, and perhaps a version of the Loch Ness monster snuggled down in a nest of petrochemical sludge on the seabed.

But that casual observer would be so wrong.

True, the inlet has been called “the most polluted body of water in Canada.” The herring that used to be so numerous in the 19th century are long gone. There have been reports of fish with liver tumours.

But there is life — lots of it — beneath the surface.

The surf smelt still come in sufficient numbers to support a small but dedicated band of net fishermen. When federal Fisheries manager Jeff Johansen goes for his lunch-hour walk around Coal Harbour these days, he sees young salmon, likely from the Capilano River, cruising the shoreline in search of food.

And when divers went into the water into Coal Harbour near Canada Place, they found 11 forms of algae, three kinds of anemones, two brands of tube worms and two more of sea cucumbers, and a whole collection of sea stars, including the purple, the pink, the mottled, the leather, the blood, the vermillion and the sunflower. There are two types of barnacles, acorn and giant, the coonstriped shrimp, and six types of crabs: red rock, Dungeness, hermit, box, decorator, and longhorn decorator, an evocative name that calls up an image of a Finding Nemo-style crab character with a cowboy hat giving advice on Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.

Along with those, there are mollusks such as the mossy chiton and the frosted nudibranch, and fish — tube snouts, surfperch and sculpin.

“To be honest, the inlet is quite productive,” Johansen says.

And it’s now the job of the people building the $565-million convention centre expansion on the Coal Harbour shoreline to make sure they provide a pleasant home for all these critters in, around, and underneath its million-plus square feet of concrete — sort of like providing nice gravel and a castle for your aquarium-living goldfish, only on a grander scale.

And a more formal one, as well.

The hope is that the surprising abundance of life in the inlet can be increased through habitat improvement measures built in conjunction with the new centre.

It took Johansen, who was the manager of major-projects review until recently, and convention-centre planners, led by marine biologist Rick Hoos from EBA Engineering, two years to work out the exact details of this downtown sea life revitalization

It will also cost several million dollars to put in place everything that was agreed to.

It’s not what Fisheries originally wanted. The department tried to get the convention-centre people to buy a piece of land along the shore in another part of the inlet and rehabilitate that.

But, as Vancouverites know, waterfront land is pricey and sometimes impossible to get at any price.

So, eventually, negotiators agreed to accept the second-best solution, which was to rehabilitate the environment right on the spot.

The easiest part is the reconstruction of the shoreline.

That’s what grademan Bruce Kuhn has been working on for the last couple of weeks.

Kuhn is the guy out there in the white overalls who guides the gravel-shovellers into sculpting the perfectly graded shoreline, the grown-up version of sandcastle-building. Working from a complex set of diagrams and using what looks like an exceptionally long white yardstick (which is actually part of a system that includes laser beams emitted from a camera-like object sitting on a tripod nearby), Kuhn ensures that the slope of the shore all the way around the site is a perfect two-horizontal-to-one-vertical grade.

Once the slope has been smoothed to that geometric ideal, a filter cloth will be laid over it, then smaller stone, then large rocks, known in the trade as rip-rap.

A casual observer might think these are just any old big rocks. But, as with everything else, their size has been carefully calibrated and agreed to by vast teams of experts from fisheries and the convention centre.

“If you have smaller rock, you don’t have the large [crevices] that fish like,” says Johansen. “And the bigger rock also provides more surface for things to grow on.”

It’s the same kind of shoreline that was reconstructed along the seawall all the way west to the Bayshore Hotel.

But the convention-centre site will be adding more features besides that shore reconstruction.

Underneath the building, an intertidal zone will be constructed.

The ground from about the mid-point of the site to the shore under the building will be scraped down another two metres so high tides will wash into it. More special stone will be put down. And small water-draining channels will be dug out to ensure water doesn’t stay under the building and get stagnant.

So while conventioneers are watching their power-point demonstrations on more effective ways to think positively and network in the office, below them will be a moist little underworld where crab, shrimp, mussels, barnacles and anything that likes living in the 100-per-cent-no-sunlight universe will be scuttling (or lying rather inertly) around.

Another little world will be specially constructed off the tip of the point of land closest to Canada Place, the only piece of shore that will stick out past the boundaries of the convention-centre floor.

Originally, there hadn’t been anything beyond the big-rock treatment planned for that point.

But then the convention centre’s roof design changed in that northeast corner.

The city’s urban-design panel, in its first, largely negative review of the design, suggested the building be given more shape and drama on the waterfront by having the roof edge swoop up at the northeast corner.

That meant that it stuck out farther and cast more shadow.

Working in consultation with Jeff Marliave from the Vancouver Aquarium, fisheries and the expansion planners agreed that, in compensation, the project would also include a cluster of boulders on the point and an artificial reef in the water.

Marliave said if we did this, it would create really neat habitat for rockfish, wolf eels and ling cod,” says Hoos. “There aren’t many places where these fish have suitable habitat.”

It will be even more fish-seducing once the expected forest of bull kelp grows up from the reef.

Finally, and this was the biggest negotiating point of all, the project builders agreed to build a first-of-its-kind series of concrete terraces along the bottom edge of the building.

To you, it might look like an odd series of steps cantilevered off the building, coming from nowhere and going nowhere along the waterline, serving no particular purpose.

But this “marine habitat skirt,” which was produced after several brainstorming sessions among engineers, planners, project managers, and fisheries people, serves several purposes, besides soaking up $3 million to $5 million in construction costs.

It made the city’s design team happy, because it acts as a kind of concrete venetian blind, hiding the pilings that the convention centre will sit on.

“The city really didn’t want this thing that was perched up on sticks — it would look ugly,” Johansen said.

It also helps with security. The post-9/11 era has produced a couple of changes in the building. One of them was a desire to ensure that access to the underside of the building would be restricted.

And finally, it makes baby salmon happy, along with crabs and seaweed.

Between March and August, Burrard Inlet is actually a daycare centre for young salmon from the rivers and streams that run into it. Because Coal Harbour is shallow, they like hanging around there, snacking on things they find close to the shore, while they’re in their teenage phase.

The ledges, which involved negotiating to make special pre-cast concrete with artfully designed irregularities, tide-pool-creating dips and rough spots, will provide a place for slimy things to grow, which encourages other forms of sea life that salmon like to eat.

So with the ledges, “we’re making sure they have continued groceries,” says Hoos.

So after spending all these millions of dollars on carefully constructed shorelines, reefs, marine skirts and the like, what will be the improvement besides the abstract satisfaction of knowing that we human beings aren’t systematically destroying the planet?

Well, as it turns out, no one can say definitively.

After Burrard Inlet was identified repeatedly in the 1970s and ’80s as a hotbed of pollution, the wheels started to grind slowly toward trying to clean it up.

A special collection of experts monitors what happens in Burrard Inlet and another reviews most building projects to assess their impact on marine habitat.

But no one can say exactly what has happened in the past couple of decades, beyond a general sense that things are getting better.

“I’d like to think that we’re progressing,” Johansen said.

But, like parents, those who are spending millions to get just the right kind of rock and irregular concrete and those who are monitoring Burrard Inlet, have to operate on a little bit of faith, hoping that a lot of care and attention will produce good results 20 years later.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Vancouver Then & Now – doc.

Saturday, July 16th, 2005

Pair of collector-photographers combine resources — and survive a Hollywood washout — for new look at Vancouver

John Mackie
Sun

 

CREDIT: Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun

Former Vancouver Sun and Province writer Lee Bacchus, who has returned to his first love — photography — since taking early retirement, holds his picture of the Vancouver Art Gallery from an angle that captures the building’s neo-classical architecture.


A Chinatown fish vendor.


CPR tracks taken from the Main Street overpass looking west.


Cambie and Water, looking south, in Gastown.


Lions Gate Bridge is captured from North Vancouver for Lee Bacchus’s postcard series.


Yaletown highrises blend to the point where the viewer can’t tell where one ends and another begins


Photos by FRANK HERZOG In 1957 (above, left) False Creek residents had a stunning view of the North Shore mountains; by 2004 a wall of concrete, steel and glass is mirrored in the waters of False Creek.

In a better world, Lee Bacchus would be a world-famous writer. But it was not to be, and so now the former Vancouver Sun and Province writer is working on option No. 2: becoming a postcard mogul.

Bacchus, 55, has teamed up with childhood buddy Brian Graham to produce a new series of Vancouver postcards that evoke classic early 20th-century postcards.

The dozen black-and-white photos in the series feature fresh views of familiar sights such as the Vancouver Art Gallery, Lions Gate Bridge, Chinatown, Granville Island, Siwash Rock, Gastown and Yaletown.

Bacchus turns out to be as talented a photographer as he was a writer. His shot of the art gallery is from an unexpected angle that captures the building’s neo-classical architecture against a backdrop of other buildings (the Hotel Vancouver and Cathedral Place).

His Yaletown photo features several highrises whose glass windows blend together so that you can’t tell where one ends and the other begins. His shot of Siwash rock is utterly timeless, and so beautiful someone had it blown up into a four-by-five-foot print for their office.

Bacchus has been a serious photographer since he was a teenager. When he took early retirement a couple of years ago, he turned to photography to fulfil his artistic bent.

Both Bacchus and Graham collect old postcards and like to take photos of the city. So when Graham suggested they do a postcard series, Bacchus agreed.

“This is the era of e-mail, so postcards have taken a dive,” he says.

“But we both collect postcards, and we like it as a kind of people’s medium. It’s an art form that belongs to everyone, and we like that. And we thought there’s room in it to do stuff that isn’t schlocky.

“The idea was to do it as if you had a relationship to the city, instead of just doing it as a tourist might see it. We hope that people who live here might like these as well.”

A good example of their approach would be a picture of the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks, taken from the Main Street overpass looking west. The photo is a mini-history of Vancouver: it’s got the railway tracks, Gastown and a forest of modern steel and glass skyscrapers, all in one shot.

Finding views like this turned out to be a lot more work than Bacchus expected. He figures they took 3,000 digital shots of local landmarks. Once they settled on the right spot, they hauled out a Wehman field camera (a folding view camera) to take the actual photos.

The Wehman is a modern version of the kind of camera that early photographers would have used. It takes large eight-by-10 negatives which give you incredible detail, but it’s heavy, time-consuming and costly: $2,000 for the camera and $20 a picture ($12 for film, $8 for processing).

“This was insane, really, getting up at 4 a.m. with this camera and hiking around,” says Bacchus.

“One day we were on the Granville Bridge trying to shoot the Yaletown development. We’ve got this camera, which is huge — it blocks the whole sidewalk — and all of a sudden this fleet of water trucks comes by, spraying water.

“We’ve got this $2,000 camera with the film in it, and we’re thinking ‘They’re going to turn the water off, right?’ And they keep coming and the water’s not going off. It was a Harrison Ford movie. He comes flying after the trucks in this car, which is being pulled by the camera car. And it’s supposed to be raining, so they’re spraying all this water and we get soaked.”

Once they had the right images, they took them to Printworks, a printer in Japantown. They got 12,000 postcards, greeting cards and bookmarks for $1,800, and then set about flogging them to stores such as Chapters, which has agreed to take some.

The postcards are published under the nom de plume Lucien Frank (the first names of their sons), because “photo by Lee Bacchus and Brian Graham” is too unwieldy.

It also references the great Vancouver photographer Leonard Frank, whose beautiful early postcards provided inspiration for the series.

Bacchus is also selling prints of the series for about $100 (e-mail [email protected] for information).

And in case you were wondering, no, he doesn’t miss writing.

“I don’t ever get the impulse, other than to write a letter to the editor,” he says.

“But I miss venting, when you get that chance to pop off.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

L’Hermitage – Greater Vancouver Real Estate Article

Friday, July 15th, 2005

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Jaison Craik & Cameron McNeill – riding high in condo-marketing race

Friday, July 15th, 2005

REAL ESTATE I Jason Craik and Cameron McNeill giving condo king Bob Rennie a run for his money

MICHAEL KANE
Sun

RICHARD LAM/VANCOUVER SUN MAC Marketing Solutions partners Cameron McNeill (left) and Jason Craik are about to start pre-selling The Flatiron (at right), a new luxury condo tower downtown. Craik says the pair has sold about $250 million worth of condos so far this year.

Jason Craik wants to be Vancouver’s newest condo king as he pushes to close the gap with perennial top seller Bob Rennie.

Craik, 34, has broken all sales records in the first six months of this year, according to the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver. He has moved about $250 million worth of condos, including three of five towers to be built in Whalley.

“We have sold about 1,500 [units] so far this year, and we still have another $300 million in projects coming on to the market, so it is going to be a big year,” Craik said Thursday.

“I don’t want to put down Bob [Rennie] because he is the Wayne Gretzky of real estate and we have a tremendous amount of respect for him, but Bob sold 1,250 units last year.”

Individual realtor sales are not disclosed by the real estate board until the end of the calendar year when Multiple Listing Service totals are tallied to determine the industry’s Medallion Club winners. And there are still six months’ worth of sales figures to come before 2005’s top sellers can be declared.

Rennie, last year’s clear winner with $405 million in sales compared to Craik’s $172 million, declined Thursday to disclose his year-to-date sales.

Both realtors are project marketers heading up sales teams that move new, multi-family developments.

Craik describes himself as the sales guru at MAC Marketing Solutions, while his business partner, Cameron McNeill, 35, is the marketing brains behind the scenes. Both previously worked for large developers before hanging out their own shingle. “All the listings are through my name, putting me in the limelight, but the reality is that we are a tag team,” Craik said.

This weekend he starts taking offers on Vancouver’s second “flatiron,” a wedge-shaped tower destined to become a landmark at the corner of West Pender and Jervis in the downtown business district, a site currently occupied by The Crime Lab restaurant and nightclub. Construction is expected to take two years.

The city’s only other “flatiron” is the near-century-old Europe Hotel in Gastown.

The new 28-storey tower will include three townhomes and 49 suites — only two per floor — ranging in price from $800,000 to $3 million. Every unit has glass walls on three sides and views of Coal Harbour and the North Shore mountains.

Craik can’t say how fast “The Flatiron” will sell, but he expects 100 appointments on Saturday.

By late August, he expects to be turning his attention to his next big luxury project, about 140 garden apartment homes at the $80-million Barona Beach Lakefront Resort in Kelowna.

In addition to projects in Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond and Surrey, MAC Marketing Solutions also operates in Calgary and Toronto. Its upcoming project portfolio exceeds $2 billion, on a par with Rennie Marketing Systems.

Although he puts in his share of 12-hour days, Craik spends as much time as possible with wife Christine and three young children. He also enjoys fly fishing at his lakefront recreational property in the Okanagan.

Remax Crest Realtor Joel Carcone blogs his way to real estate

Friday, July 15th, 2005

SALES I

Review of medical studies says one third of original results are faulty

Wednesday, July 13th, 2005

And ‘there’s no proof subsequent studies … were necessarily correct’ — author’s caveat

Lindsey Tanner
Sun

CHICAGO — Here’s some medical news you can trust: A new study confirms that what doctors once said was good for you often turns out to be bad — or at least not as great as initially thought.

The report is a review of major studies published in three influential medical journals between 1990 and 2003, including 45 highly publicized studies that initially claimed a drug or other treatment worked.

Subsequent research contradicted results of seven studies — 16 per cent — and reported weaker results for seven others, an additional 16 per cent. That means nearly one-third of the original results did not hold up, according to the study in today’s Journal of the American Medical Association.

“Contradicted and potentially exaggerated findings are not uncommon in the most visible and most influential original clinical research,” said study author Dr. John Ioannidis, a researcher at the University of Ioannina in Greece.

Experts say the study is a reminder to doctors and patients that they should not put too much stock in a single study and understand that treatments often become obsolete with medical advances.

“A single study is not the final word, and that is an important message,” editors at the New England Journal of Medicine said in a statement about the study.

The refuted studies dealt with a wide range of drugs and treatments. Hormone pills were once thought to protect menopausal women from heart disease but later were shown to do the opposite. Contrary to initial results, vitamin E pills have not been shown to prevent heart attacks.

Contradictions also included a study that found nitric oxide does not improve survival in patients with respiratory failure, despite earlier claims. And a study suggested that an antibody treatment did not improve survival in certain sepsis patients; a smaller previous study found the opposite.

Ioannidis acknowledged an important but not very reassuring caveat: “There’s no proof that the subsequent studies … were necessarily correct.” But he noted that in all 14 cases in which results were contradicted or softened, the subsequent studies were either larger or better designed. Also, none of the contradicted treatments is currently recommended by medical guidelines.

Ioannidis’s study examined research in the New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet and JAMA — prominent journals whose weekly studies help feed a growing public appetite for medical news.

Not by accident, this week’s JAMA also includes a study contradicting previous thinking that stomach-lying helped improve breathing in children hospitalized with acute lung injuries. The new study found they did no better than patients lying on their backs.

Dr. Catherine DeAngelis, JAMA’s editor, said she included the study with Ioannidis’ report to highlight the nature of medical research. “The crazy part about science and yet the exciting part about science is you almost never have something that’s black and white,” she said.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Construction in BC now pushed by non-residential sector

Tuesday, July 12th, 2005

Ashley Ford
Province

Housing starts may have taken a slight pause across the Lower Mainland, but the the overall construction industry in B.C. is going gangbusters.

Statistics Canada says intense housing activity in the province is now being matched by the non-residential sector.

Spurred on by B.C. and neighbouring Alberta, the Canadian non-residential sector hit a record high of $7.6 billion between April and June, StatsCan said yesterday.

“B.C. posted the largest increase in total investment, with a 19.1-per-cent jump to a record $932 million,” the agency said.

Meanwhile, on the housing front, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation reports there were 24 per cent fewer housing starts in Vancouver in June from a year ago, while the Fraser Valley starts increased by 3.5 per cent from a year ago.

However, on a year-to-year basis starts are down 12 per cent across the region at 8,574 from 9,762 a year ago. Housing officials, however, are not surprised or concerned by the slight dip and say it was expected as the region was coming off a record year in 2004.

“Home builders are still extremely busy working on the record number of projects already under construction. During the first half an average 18,565 housing units were under construction across greater Vancouver, the highest number ever recorded during the first two quarters of the year,” said Cameron Muir, CMHC senior market analyst. Peter Simpson, CEO of the Greater Vancouver Home Builders Association has welcomed the “small breather and we are not concerned.”

He said the industry is working at virtual capacity, but with careful scheduling of trades, it is managing to cope with the situation.

“While there is some continuing concern about future skilled-labor supply we can maintain these levels of activity and our builders are managing it well.”

Simpson said he suspects by the end of the year the housing start numbers will be fairly close to last year’s performance.

Everyone agrees that continuing low interest rates and consumer demand will keep the industry operating at high capacity for the foreseeable future.

The resurgence of the non-housing industry is just further icing on the cake for the B.C. and Alberta economies.

StatsCan says the biggest contributor was record spending in the two western-most provinces.

The story, however, is different in Central Canada, CMHC said.

“The biggest declines occurred in Quebec, where investment fell 2.9 per cent to $1.3 billion and Ontario was down 1.1 per cent to $3.3 billion.

© The Vancouver Province 2005

Land, skill shortage drive up home costs

Tuesday, July 12th, 2005

Builders have hit a ‘ceiling’ in starting new housing projects

Bruce Constantineau
Sun

The pace of home construction has fallen dramatically in Greater Vancouver because of a shortage of skilled workers and suitable properties, doubling the cost of residential building over the past five years.

According to a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. report, the number of housing starts during the first six months of 2005 fell 12 per cent to 8,574 units while the number of Fraser Valley starts declined 17 per cent to 3,488 units.

CMHC analyst Cameron Muir said home builders have hit a “ceiling” as they try to start new projects while coping with a record number of housing developments already under construction throughout Greater Vancouver. He said a record 18,565 housing units were being built during the first half of this year.

“Builder and developer resources are already stretched to the limit,” Muir said in an interview.

“They’re finding it tough to ensure there are enough tradespeople around to build the units already underway.”

Cressey Development Corp. vice-president Hani Lammam said the Vancouver-based home builder has built up a significant land bank of future development sites, but a shortage of skilled trades and price uncertainties associated with those trades, have reduced the amount of new house construction activity.

He said builders can no longer sell their housing units first and then lock in contracts with tradespeople to build those units at a later date.

“That’s too big a risk now because construction costs are escalating so fast that we might lose our margin,” Lammam said in an interview.

He said rising labour and materials prices have pushed up residential construction costs in Vancouver to at least $200 a square foot for quality multi-family projects, up from $120 a square foot five years ago.

Muir said a strong rebound in the non-residential construction sector in B.C. — fuelled by transportation and Olympics-related projects — means Vancouver home builders must compete with non-residential builders for materials and tradespeople, which drives costs higher.

Lammam said another reason for the new house construction slowdown can be found at the municipal level, as some municipalities become too busy to process new housing project applications expeditiously.

Muir said the slowdown should prevent any kind of oversupply situation from developing, which could cause the housing market to “burst” at some future point.

“Since there’s a ceiling of new homes being built and inventories are low, builders are constrained from overbuilding,” he said.

While some Greater Vancouver developers still have significant land holdings for future housing projects, others are not so fortunate and land-supply constraints have become a big issue in the market. Muir said the biggest and best sites have already been taken, so many developers now are keen on “brownfield” sites — properties that were formerly industrial sites.

Park Lane Homes, for example, currently plans to develop a major housing project on a former lumber operation site along the Fraser River in Fort Langley.

“Ten years ago, builders wouldn’t touch those sites with a 10-foot pole, but today they represent some of the largest sites that are close to urban areas,” Muir said.

Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association chief executive officer Peter Simpson said he’s not worried by the drop in new housing starts so far this year.

“Being down 12 per cent from the best year in a decade isn’t really something we’re overly concerned about at this point,” he said. “It’s still a good year.”

Simpson said builders are more concerned now about the supply of building materials than about rising costs.

“So far, nobody has had to wait long for things like drywall and steel and lumber, but we monitor that all the time to make sure there is enough supply out there to feed the demand,” he said. “We’re competing against other parts of Canada for these materials.”

Simpson said that despite rising prices, the demand for new Greater Vancouver housing remains strong because mortgage rates are still very attractive, with five-year mortgages available for just over four per cent. He noted that 47 per cent of household income was required to service debt in Canada in 1990, but lower interest rates have pushed that figure down to the 30-per-cent level.

“It would take a mortgage rate of more than 13 per cent to push us back to 1990 [debt-service ratio] levels,” Simpson said.