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  #61  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 6:58 PM
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"Condo living" also doesn't necessarily mean skyscrapers. The condo ownership model can also include townhouse developments and lowrise/midrise apartment buildings. And skyscraper apartment don't need to be condos either as it's possible to have rentals even if it hasn't been very common in Canada lately.

Personally, this just reinforces my desire to see a greater proportion of new multi-unit come in the form of lowrises and midrises but doesn't really affect my view of the condominium ownership model that much.
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  #62  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 7:08 PM
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Apartments are inferred when people talk about condo living.


Condo ownership can be anything. It can be the grounds (common elements) in a gated single family subdivision. It can be a house with a legal basement apartments. There's multiple condo corps. stratas in Toronto with 2 units
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  #63  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 7:24 PM
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Originally Posted by Bcasey25raptor View Post
This is an urbanist forum based around skyscrapers
How the hell are there so many here crapping all over condo living as inferior? Doesn't this run counter to the very goals and purpose of this very forum?
Reality bites, I guess.
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  #64  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 7:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bcasey25raptor View Post
This is an urbanist forum based around skyscrapers
How the hell are there so many here crapping all over condo living as inferior? Doesn't this run counter to the very goals and purpose of this very forum?
The best skyscrapers are almost universally office space. I see no contradiction.
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  #65  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 8:35 PM
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Originally Posted by jonny24 View Post
The best skyscrapers are almost universally office space. I see no contradiction.
Yep because the owners of those commercial buildings know what the costs will be in maintaining them and will fund that maintenance to protect their investment.
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  #66  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 9:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jonny24 View Post
The best skyscrapers are almost universally office space. I see no contradiction.
More like commercial usage traditionally has had a much higher incentive for density because worker proximity is correlated with economic productivity and so the office tower form factor in larger cities is generally superior to lower density offices and can be easily justified. There's a reason the factory replaced the cottage industry. Bigger means better. Meanwhile, higher density residences don't have any additional "living" productivity from being close together so the main justification for building condos is when the purchasing demand in a location can justify the construction costs. People in general are not incentivized to live closer together, it only happens due to external factors.

Hence, commercial buildings are generally going to produce more impressive skyscrapers because traditionally the economics have incentivized it. From an economic perspective, it's historically been true that office towers are superior to residential towers. That doesn't mean that residential towers are a worse form of living by any means, but it does mean that they only exist due to external pressures, not because developers inherently want them to exist.

Personally, one of my favourite skyscrapers built in the past few years is The Brooklyn Tower. Primarily residential.
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  #67  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 10:18 PM
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Originally Posted by chowhou View Post
More like commercial usage traditionally has had a much higher incentive for density because worker proximity is correlated with economic productivity and so the office tower form factor in larger cities is generally superior to lower density offices and can be easily justified. There's a reason the factory replaced the cottage industry. Bigger means better. Meanwhile, higher density residences don't have any additional "living" productivity from being close together so the main justification for building condos is when the purchasing demand in a location can justify the construction costs. People in general are not incentivized to live closer together, it only happens due to external factors.

Hence, commercial buildings are generally going to produce more impressive skyscrapers because traditionally the economics have incentivized it. From an economic perspective, it's historically been true that office towers are superior to residential towers. That doesn't mean that residential towers are a worse form of living by any means, but it does mean that they only exist due to external pressures, not because developers inherently want them to exist.

Personally, one of my favourite skyscrapers built in the past few years is The Brooklyn Tower. Primarily residential.
I'd say that's mostly true, but higher residential density often does have some productivity benefit. Dense residential tends to be located disproportionately in more desirable locations places where people can be more productive due to spending less time traveling to access work or for other reasons. If you reduce the time you spend in a car by an hour per weekday then that's 260 hrs per year that you can use for productive purposes. Or it can allow you to take transit more easily where you may be able to work en-route, depending on how crowded the vehicle is. And a better location can also put more jobs and/or better paying jobs within reach. But if it's dense residential in an inconvenient location then there's probably no productivity benefit.

But the biggest difference is probably that dense residential just isn't as dense as typical commercial in that each resident takes up more space in a residential building than each worker in an office tower.
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  #68  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 10:36 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
I'd say that's mostly true, but higher residential density often does have some productivity benefit. Dense residential tends to be located disproportionately in more desirable locations places where people can be more productive due to spending less time traveling to access work or for other reasons. If you reduce the time you spend in a car by an hour per weekday then that's 260 hrs per year that you can use for productive purposes. Or it can allow you to take transit more easily where you may be able to work en-route, depending on how crowded the vehicle is. And a better location can also put more jobs and/or better paying jobs within reach. But if it's dense residential in an inconvenient location then there's probably no productivity benefit.

But the biggest difference is probably that dense residential just isn't as dense as typical commercial in that each resident takes up more space in a residential building than each worker in an office tower.
I might have worded this poorly, higher residential density definitely has external productivity benefits like you mention (i.e. positive externalities), but internally to the owners I don't think there is an inherent perceivable benefit to higher density living. If a resident was given the choice between a lowrise apartment downtown vs a highrise apartment downtown, I don't think there is much of a perceivable benefit to living in the highrise. Meanwhile, a financial company might highly desire to be in the same building that other financial companies are in, rather than in a street level separate office.

It's also worth noting that in general, residential owners are looking for enough space to fit one single family, multiplied several times (but dividable). Commercial owners are looking for enough space to potentially fit an entire multinational corporation. The scale is just completely different.
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  #69  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 1:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bcasey25raptor View Post
This is an urbanist forum based around skyscrapers
How the hell are there so many here crapping all over condo living as inferior? Doesn't this run counter to the very goals and purpose of this very forum?

A preference for single-family housing isn't necessarily incompatible with urbanism. There are some great neighbourhoods that are predominantly single-family while still being dense & urban, eg:


https://www.solorealty.com/blog/the-...elphia-alleys/


https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail...hrase=building


https://media.istockphoto.com/id/136..._Apff7JCKnQ0w=


That said, IMO the mark of a great city and a healthy society is one that offers a variety of housing forms and built typologies, as naturally, people's preferences and lifestyles vary; as do one's needs through the different stages of their life. And this is where we're failing - increasingly it seems, Canadian cities offer a binary housing choice: big, expensive SFH for the 1%; or small, 1-bedroom condo in a high-rise for everybody else.

In other words, high-rise condos are great. High-rise condos being the only form of housing available (for the non-mega-rich) is not.
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  #70  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 2:02 AM
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^ Yeah there's a huge difference between attached single family housing in the form of town/row houses (or detached houses close enough together and to the street they function as such) compared to fully detached housing with a much lower FAR. The first picture above doesn't show how big the backyards are, but in the other two you can tell the average FAR is probably 2.0 or more given the height of the buildings. But really, an average FAR of 1.0 is probably a perfectly fine compromise between efficiency and fulfilling people's detached housing tastes - as long as there's a few 4 or 6 story apartment buildings in the area to supplement density and add variety and choice. A FAR of 1 is basically a 2 story house that occupies half its lot leaving the rest for front/back yard, driveway etc.

The problem isn't that detached houses exist; it's that people in them don't want anything else to exist near them.
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  #71  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 2:00 PM
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FAR 1 is what the CoV is going with for its multi plex zoning, which covers the entire city of Vancouver. In full build out of 4 plexes and 6 plexes (depending on lot size), you would have a population density in the 30 000 per sq mile range. That kind of density supports great walk-able streets, and mass transit. A very efficient city. The problem with that is, it takes a very long time to build up density this way. There's not a big enough incentive with 1 FSR.

This is the advantage of towers - they get built fast, and you can boost density fast, and realize the benefits much quicker. The West End was built in about 20 years, between the 1950's and the 1970's. Now the West End is one of the most car free neighbourhoods in the country. Same deal with Downtown South and Coal Harbour. It only took about 20 years to build a 50 000 person neighbourhood. Oakridge will probly be the next neighbourhood that will get built up that quickly. Jericho after that, with its beaches and already existing high streets . Jericho will be a kick ass neighbourhood, comparable to the West End, except it will have the huge advantage of having a subway station serving it.
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  #72  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 2:23 PM
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The Montreal of the 1920s-40s already provides us with a blueprint
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  #73  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 2:38 PM
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Montreal is great and all, but those neighbourhoods were built on raw land (right?), so it built up relatively quickly. That's just not realistic when we are talking about developing over top of existing neighbourhoods.

Yaletown is a tower neighbourhood that checks a lot of boxes. Jane Jacobs eyes on the street, etc.

https://maps.app.goo.gl/Mzw1QVYTVNBKzonw6
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  #74  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 4:57 PM
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Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
Jericho after that, with its beaches and already existing high streets . Jericho will be a kick ass neighbourhood, comparable to the West End, except it will have the huge advantage of having a subway station serving it.
Yeah I'm most excited about Jericho. No reason it won't be an incredible spot. I just need to be able to move there before I need an old folks home.
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  #75  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2024, 10:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bcasey25raptor View Post
This is an urbanist forum based around skyscrapers
How the hell are there so many here crapping all over condo living as inferior? Doesn't this run counter to the very goals and purpose of this very forum?
You were saying?

Tribunal decision reveals strata's struggle to find strange noise
Condo owner slapped with thousands of dollars in fines for noise that strata couldn’t locate
Yasmine Ghania · CBC News · Posted: Jun 28, 2024

A recent decision from B.C.'s Civil Resolution Tribunal tells a bizarre tale about a mysterious noise in a concrete building that has led to hundreds of complaints, tens of thousands of dollars in fines, the consultation of acoustic engineers and the draining of a heating and cooling system.

It started when a man, only identified as RK in Wednesday's decision, heard a "tapping noise" coming from his bedroom ceiling in his North Vancouver condo in the summer of 2020.

He heard it again in November 2021, and by January 2022, "the noise frequency increased to once or twice per week," the decision said. RK asked his upstairs neighbour Alan Zenuk if he could help him find the source of the noise, but Zenuk refused, according to the decision.

RK complained to his strata about the "unreasonable noise" in April 2022, claiming the frequency of the noise "increased significantly over time." He heard "percussive strikes, tapping, scraping, dragging and clunking noises" during the day and night, according to the decision.

The noise debacle escalated, with RK making 443 noise complaints to the strata from April 2022 to November 2023, the decision said. The strata fined Zenuk at least $42,600...

...Zenuk argued to the tribunal that since the strata can't precisely say what's causing the noise, he can't be blamed for it. He sought $5,000 in damages from the strata and a reversal of the fines against him, which he has not paid...


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...ines-1.7250029

Keep in mind there are thousands of cases like this that never make it into the media.
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  #76  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2024, 11:39 AM
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