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  #1  
Old Posted Apr 26, 2022, 5:20 PM
kzt79 kzt79 is offline
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Canada’s transition away from single-family detached homes will be messy

Interesting opinion piece in the G&M. IMO this isn't speculation, it's reality we have seen already for many years in Halifax: NIMBYs opposing every development proposal, endless complaints about things like height, a hostile and inefficient council, and ridiculously long, drawn out bureaucratic approval process.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opin...-homes-canada/

John Belec is professor emeritus of geography and the environment at University of the Fraser Valley.

Rapid densification has emerged as a favoured policy approach to fix Canada’s housing crisis. The thinking is that Canadian cities possess underutilized resource wealth in the form of single-detached housing lots. Rezoning these to permit construction of multiple units, so the argument goes, will release the potential for increased supply, which many (but not all) analysts and politicians agree is the root cause of the crisis.

An additional component to the densification argument is the belief that municipalities are at best indifferent, and at worst hostile, to the work necessary to densify. This is due in part to the alleged NIMBY (”not in my backyard”) attitude of residents in opposition who pack council meetings and influence decisions on rezoning applications.

There is also the view that municipal bureaucratic inefficiencies result in lengthy delays for building approvals and add administrative costs to new construction. Momentum is now growing to ease the building of new and different types of housing across the country. This will likely spur change, but the transition promises to be bumpy.

In its most recent budget announcement, Ottawa described the apparent inability of Canadian municipalities to deliver on densification as a systemic problem that needs to be addressed. Its solution, also announced in the budget, is the “Housing Accelerator Fund.” Although details are sketchy, the fund will reward efforts by cities that promote densification. This carrot approach contrasts with the stick brandished by provincial housing ministers such as B.C.’s David Eby, who has signalled that the province is prepared to override local authority on zoning and building approvals.

Building sector sees challenges in budget’s key program to expand the pace of home building in Canada

At its core, the densification movement represents a renunciation of the housing model that built post-war Canada: the single-detached suburban home. Promoters of this model included the Central (later Canada) Mortgage and Housing Corporation, which published pattern books of housing designs beginning in 1947. Canadians were advised to ensure that their new homes be protected by zoning ordinances and that they fit with the character of the neighbourhood. Readers were assured that this would insure a “good long-term investment,” which is precisely what has occurred.

The potential impact of densification policy initiatives on single-detached home ownership remains to be seen. If nothing else, these efforts may accelerate a generational pivot in housing tenure and style of the sort that writer and academic Richard Florida has said is occurring in the United States. As the rooted geography of the industrial era gives way to the flexible mobility of the post-industrial age, Mr. Florida argues the consequence is a “great housing reset.” Mr. Florida coined the term to describe a decline in the rate of homeownership in the United States this century and a concomitant rise in renting.

Although less pronounced than in the U.S., Canada also experienced a historic drop recently in the homeownership rate. The rate peaked at 69 per cent in 2011 and then fell for the first time since the early 1970s to 67.8 per cent, as reported in the 2016 Canadian census. That census also reported a continued decline in the proportion of the Canadian housing stock consisting of single-detached houses, at 53.6 per cent. For the long term, there are reasons to expect that the ownership/rental ratio in Canada will continue to shift toward rental, assuming availability of the supply of such units.

More impactful for Canada in comparison to the U.S. will be the arrival of immigrants in the near term. The ambitious target of more than 430,000 permanent residents per year for the next three years will increase demand for shelter, possibly dispersed more evenly across the country depending on federal- and provincial-settlement policies. Previous research by sociology professor Michael Haan has shown that rental is the dominant choice for new arrivals to Canada, at least in their first few years of settlement.

There are signs that Canada’s housing sector is experiencing a generational pivot away from the single-family detached home. The success of recent federal and provincial densification initiatives should accelerate this transition, but it promises to be messy and rancorous. Much depends on how quickly density is introduced and what role residents are permitted in deciding how it is to be implemented.

Pushback from those opposed to neighbourhood change, especially if it is imposed by provincial governments, is inevitable. However, other residents will be more than happy to pocket the inflated price of their re-zoned properties. Hanging in the balance are those desperate for the promised fruits of densification, especially the unhoused and under-housed. The job of managing these expectations may be just as demanding as implementing the land-use transition. In any case, it’s all about to descend on a city hall near you.
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  #2  
Old Posted Apr 26, 2022, 6:55 PM
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Halifax is interesting in that it has basically the best possible greenfield sites available on its periphery yet prices still spiked there and there are big delays in getting new supply going.

The public conversation mostly seems to be in the weeds to me. Frameworks like NIMBY-style debates around preserving nature (can't build it here, can't build it here...) get the attention but there is relatively little discussion of what good development should look like on a greenfield site (probably not towers with huge setbacks and scarce local amenities). Shifting development around based on which NIMBY fights hardest is a negative sum game while good planning is a positive sum game.
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  #3  
Old Posted Apr 26, 2022, 7:49 PM
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Originally Posted by someone123 View Post
Halifax is interesting in that it has basically the best possible greenfield sites available on its periphery yet prices still spiked there and there are big delays in getting new supply going.

The public conversation mostly seems to be in the weeds to me. Frameworks like NIMBY-style debates around preserving nature (can't build it here, can't build it here...) get the attention but there is relatively little discussion of what good development should look like on a greenfield site (probably not towers with huge setbacks and scarce local amenities). Shifting development around based on which NIMBY fights hardest is a negative sum game while good planning is a positive sum game.
I agree.

Unfortunately it seems Halifax (or at least the loudest voices) can't get past the first step.
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  #4  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2022, 3:57 PM
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Originally Posted by kzt79 View Post
I agree.

Unfortunately it seems Halifax (or at least the loudest voices) can't get past the first step.
Worse off, we have locked in our problems for 10 years until a review can be done on our attempt to bake in all the single detached neighborhoods into the Centre Plan.

Good thing we aren't trying to convince large amounts of people to stay here during our boom time.
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  #5  
Old Posted Apr 28, 2022, 11:00 AM
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Worse off, we have locked in our problems for 10 years until a review can be done on our attempt to bake in all the single detached neighborhoods into the Centre Plan.

Good thing we aren't trying to convince large amounts of people to stay here during our boom time.
That makes me think - the past couple years have been a rather unique time in terms of migration TO Nova Scotia for a change. I wouldn't put it past the government to extrapolate growth this indefinitely (in terms of spending planning) but in the end watch us squander this opportunity and be back to a stagnant no-growth economy in fairly short order. I hope not! But this outcome wouldn't surprise me.
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  #6  
Old Posted Apr 28, 2022, 11:53 AM
OldDartmouthMark OldDartmouthMark is online now
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Is this a problem in Halifax, though? Other than the Centre Plan, which seemed outdated from the time it introduced - there should definitely be more height allowed in more areas than allowed under the current plan.

However, Centre Plan aside, right now there are cranes everywhere and excavated lots ready for multi-unit buildings to be built on, and the general discussions in this forum seem to imply that the developers are running flat-out, and aside from that, there aren't enough trades available to do the work.

Meanwhile, I can probably count on one hand the number of new SFH developments taking place in the city.

IMHO, not everyone desires to live in an apartment building or condo, which is why you see large SFH developments happening in places like Lantz, when that level of development used to happen in the city.

So, is it a problem in Halifax?

That said, I agree that it's time to overhaul the zoning regulations to allow densification in areas where it wasn't previously allowed. At the same time I also understand the desire for those who still want to live in a stand-alone home, and that it's a tragedy that younger people are being priced out of the market by investors and speculators, thus being forced to live in an apartment with little hope of ever owning a home of their own, unless mommy and daddy are rich.

There are lots of questions that need to be asked, and they go beyond this topic - like why could previous generations get a job with a high school education where they could earn enough to buy a small or modest home, whereby things have shifted to the point where a young person (without rich parents) must go into debt to get a university education that doesn't guarantee landing a well-paying job, meanwhile those with the cash are buying up properties as investments and driving up prices. What caused the shift and where are we going with it? Is it a symptom of the 1% model, or something else? Regardless, it just seems that life is becoming harder and more complicated to live, and much less enjoyable for people coming up - and to what end?

There's also the topic of trades which has come up on this forum before - why aren't young people going into the trades as much as they used to? It seems like they have been looked down on before, but it really seems to be where the best opportunities are now.

There... 'older-guy' rant done. Feel free to skewer my words, but don't attack my character...

(just kidding)
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  #7  
Old Posted Apr 29, 2022, 7:39 AM
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The housing question will only be solved when both the province and municipality are dissolved and instead Fares, Metlege and the Ghosns form their own council ruling over NS and HRM. Any environmentalists, NIMBYs and social justice warriors must also move to New Brunswick. Remove rent controls too, we need rent increase minimums! Give all homeless a free bus ticket to Moncton. C’mon people, show some innovation!

Clearly all these ideas reflect what I believe.

In all seriousness, meh article from an irrelevant university. My reaction is a mix of “obviously” but also “not exactly”. So far housing starts have hit record levels, but populations within long established neighborhoods have declined due to a smaller number of wealthier people now living in them without new development.
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  #8  
Old Posted Apr 29, 2022, 3:15 PM
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I would guess that environmentalist aims have very high support and they are often reasonable. However the problem in Halifax is that you can find a stream on or a lake near any proposed site and argue that a huge buffer needs to be created for environmental purposes, such that high density or transit-friendly development is de facto banned in greenfield areas (don't even think about putting tall towers in!). I get the impression that the wealthier and more engaged neighbourhoods end up with the most "sensitive" natural areas near them that are the most likely to become parks (e.g. the buffer between Boulderwood/Williams Lake and Spryfield).

HRM does not do well with accessibility of these natural areas either. A lot of them are just informal trails you get to by car in some subdivision or they have no access at all and they're backyards for the residents nearby. Maybe the federal urban park program will change that somewhat.

Last edited by someone123; Apr 29, 2022 at 3:36 PM.
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Old Posted Apr 29, 2022, 8:35 PM
OldDartmouthMark OldDartmouthMark is online now
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However the problem in Halifax is that you can find a stream on or a lake near any proposed site and argue that a huge buffer needs to be created for environmental purposes, such that high density or transit-friendly development is de facto banned in greenfield areas (don't even think about putting tall towers in!). I get the impression that the wealthier and more engaged neighbourhoods end up with the most "sensitive" natural areas near them that are the most likely to become parks (e.g. the buffer between Boulderwood/Williams Lake and Spryfield).
While I understand your point, I can't help but see that view as being a touch cynical. IMHO, while I'm sure there is a degree of NIMBYism going on in some of the protests/obstructions, I have to believe in most cases that people have legitimate concerns in that they don't want natural areas that are considered important to be spoiled or damaged, and whatever animals that are left living there (or use the area while in transit) to be negatively affected. It would also be natural for somebody who lives in the area and is very familiar with the area to have the strongest concern... i.e. you wouldn't expect somebody from Spryfield to be concerned about a small wetland in Eastern Passage, as they probably wouldn't even know it existed.

I think there is a divide between the group that sees a natural landscape as an opportunity for development and the one that sees the natural landscape as a thing of beauty that should be preserved. I used to be firmly in the camp of the former, but am finding myself swaying more to the latter these past number of years. I am finding myself less agreeable with the end point of unbridled urbanism - i.e. every square inch of land taken up by highrises, bike lanes, and transit routes, with the idea of natural landscape to be a quaint little preserved park area in the middle of all the steel and concrete, or controlled areas kept natural so that we can still have places to hike and bike, but not too far away from our favourite coffee shop...
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Old Posted Apr 29, 2022, 8:44 PM
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While I understand your point, I can't help but see that view as being a touch cynical.
Example: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-...erns-1.6314151

Almost all of the periphery of the metro area has some wetlands of the type described in there. There have been similar fights around Mainland South with a lot of that land being taken off the table (really there is a ring around Halifax). Will there be opposition to developing the sensitive wetlands surrounding the new Burnside Expressway? I saw similar comments about the Sandy Lake area near Bedford/Sackville.

I don't deny that these are nice natural areas but a lot of NS is similar and there needs to be some way to square growth with development. Saving some wetlands near the city is not necessarily even a net win for the environment if it just pushes the sprawl farther out. I wonder if HRM has any clear plan about where the development can go (not just ad hoc "wait for a developer to want to develop their land then have people come out of the woodwork to oppose it") and why something like Southdale seems to be in the process of being hashed out. There does not appear to be anything like HRM by Design or the Centre Plan around the suburban fringe that makes those trade-offs in a coordinated way at the planning stage. I wonder if this contributed to the urgency that caused the province to step in.
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Old Posted Apr 29, 2022, 9:11 PM
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"It would also be natural for somebody who lives in the area and is very familiar with the area to have the strongest concern"

Yes it's all perfectly natural. Until one starts to wonder why the concerns didn't exist when these people came to live there. I guess they just happened to get the last non-sensitive lots which are all surrounded by sensitive habitat. So their moving in was perfectly fine but anyone else would be a disaster.
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  #12  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2022, 4:37 AM
OldDartmouthMark OldDartmouthMark is online now
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Example: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-...erns-1.6314151

Almost all of the periphery of the metro area has some wetlands of the type described in there. There have been similar fights around Mainland South with a lot of that land being taken off the table (really there is a ring around Halifax). Will there be opposition to developing the sensitive wetlands surrounding the new Burnside Expressway? I saw similar comments about the Sandy Lake area near Bedford/Sackville.
Sure, but that isn't to say that there aren't valid concerns, as in the article you linked to:
Quote:
According to a retired biology professor who has visited the site a number of times, it is not just a wetland, but a watercourse.

David Patriquin said he does not believe widening the buffer zone will protect the area.

"There's fairly steeply sloping land on either side of it, and that's the land they are developing, so I don't think it's got a chance ... it's just not going to survive as it is," said Patriquin, a member of the Nova Scotia Wild Flora Society.
I think it's reasonable to expect HRM to have a plan in place to deal with such things (don't they already?), but I also think it's not necessarily a good idea to assume the city is always right.

Perhaps I shouldn't have commented, but every time I hear/read the narrative being repeated over and over, I always have to think that not everybody who speaks out is a NIMBY just looking after their own interests. I really don't think that the population has sunk to such a low level (yet?).
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  #13  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2022, 4:47 AM
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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
"It would also be natural for somebody who lives in the area and is very familiar with the area to have the strongest concern"

Yes it's all perfectly natural. Until one starts to wonder why the concerns didn't exist when these people came to live there. I guess they just happened to get the last non-sensitive lots which are all surrounded by sensitive habitat. So their moving in was perfectly fine but anyone else would be a disaster.
So you're suggesting that nobody should live in a house (or condo) that was previously built near sensitive lands, because some previous builder, maybe even 50 or more years ago, built in an area when the effects of building on that environment weren't fully understood (or cared about)?

I think it's good to learn from mistakes in the past and insist on it being done better moving forward. I think that's the point that is trying to be made by most of the people raising concerns. Does that not sound reasonable?
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