Quote:
Originally Posted by Changing City
Municipal zoning and red tape aren't holding back supply. It might be in a few locations, but it isn't in the majority of Greater Vancouver. There are tens of thousands of approved units that aren't (yet) being developed, for a variety of reasons, but municipal approval isn't overall the reason why they aren't being built faster.
There's some question whether the development industry could build much more than they are. In the 1990s, annual housing starts were 16,015, and in the 2000s it was 15,360 units. It was slightly higher in the 2010s at 21,655 a year. In both 2021 and 2022 there were 26,000 housing starts in Metro Vancouver. So we're already seeing developers building more than they have over the past three decades.
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I simply don't buy this. For example, how many SFD in Metro Vancouver have been torn down only to build another SFD that is three times the size. If zoning allowed it, they all could (and most of them would) have been rebuilt as triplexes instead of monster homes with 9 bathrooms for 2 people, and it wouldn't have taken any extra construction work.
And I've read the stories of people trying to build laneway homes or duplexes and so on, and how they've faced endless delays and costs from municipal departments that take months to respond to queries and so on.
And I've seen first hand how as soon as a neighbourhood gets upzoned, all of a sudden fencing is going up all over and every lot is getting rebuilt into more houses.
Just because there is a backlog of approved 50 story towers that the developers are slow-walking to ensure they all make money, doesn't mean there isn't more development that could take place, especially on the smaller scale, if there was less red tape and greater zoning approval.