Quote:
Originally Posted by Migrant_Coconut
IMO there isn't much of a difference between (let's say) 400+ affordable units right on top of the Quay and 600+ affordable units out by Grand Boulevard. As with the Coal Harbour social housing where the exact same argument came up, governments want their infrastructure to be easily accessible to all demographics, not just people with enough money to live near it.
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I'm not sure selling the site would pay for 200 extra social housing units. in 2020 the Coal Harbour unit construction costs were $36.5m for 60 units, or $608,000 per unit. The nominal value with the land is over $1m per unit. (The City already owned the site, so the $25m land value ascribed to the homes was for valuation purposes, rather than an actual expenditure for the housing to be built.)
If there was any land available to buy in North Vancouver as an alternative to the ICBC site, it would no doubt also cost c$400,000 per unit. BC Assessment say the land is worth about $100m. Assuming a developer was willing to pay that, the province would potentially realize a profit of $47m. That might pay for a site for over 100 homes, but probably not 200. And that assumes that there isn't a significant cost for abatement and demolition of the 1980 building, which would lower the value of the site.