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  #21  
Old Posted Nov 22, 2022, 11:22 PM
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Wow, Jockvale Road! Rare you see any affordable or social housing outside the Greenbelt.
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  #22  
Old Posted May 4, 2023, 1:40 PM
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Push to use public land for public housing comes to Ottawa city hall, where ears are open to ideas to tackle housing crisis

Taylor Blewett, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 03, 2023 • Last updated 10 hours ago • 6 minute read


A professor of urban planning in Australia for nearly two decades, housing policy consultant Carolyn Whitzman recalled Monday how one state government came to her, wanting significantly more affordable housing — and without having to spend to make it happen.

“I said, ‘Aha! Let me introduce you to land policy’,” said Whitzman. “About six months after the report we did for them got passed, there was modular housing going up on a former road allowance from the state government, and it’s there now and it’s saving lives.”

Whitzman is making much the same pitch in a new report, prepared for the Alliance to End Homelessness Ottawa, and presented at Ottawa city hall this week.

Focused on “scaling up” non-profit housing in Ottawa, the report presents a formula it says city decision-makers can use to create homes that are affordable to people making moderate incomes, and potentially, some with low-incomes.

The key is giving free land to non-profit housing providers, along with other relief like fee waivers and tax exemptions. To demonstrate this, the report presents a number of hypothetical development scenarios – though they do rely on some additional assumptions, such as municipal dollars invested, a lending rate not presently available, in one case, and the need for additional operating dollars for projects involving supportive housing units.

For a city-owned site near the future Lincoln Fields LRT station, Whitzman and her co-authors model a 516-unit development across three imagined buildings.

Thirty per cent of its units would lease at 80 per cent of median market rent: from $800 for a studio to $1,279 for a unit with three or more bedrooms.

The rest of the rents would have to be between $2,210 for a one-bedroom and $3,500 for a three-plus bedroom “to support the mortgage financing necessary for financial viability” for the imagined $276-million project, which considers costs and funding sources.

It does rely on $27.9 million being granted by from the city (which has historically budgeted $15 million a year for such grants), as well as another $8.5 million in waived development charges.

The report states that non-profit housing affordability deepens over time, compared to market housing, as the years pass and landlords operating on a for-profit basis raise rents.

“However, in order to produce deeply affordable rents and adequate supports, the City of Ottawa needs to partner with provincial and federal governments.”

One of the report’s key recommendations is for city to revisit a 2019 report by a city hall staff task force. It identified 20 sites with the potential for affordable housing development in the short, medium, and long term, on public land near O-Train stations.

The Whitzman-Alliance to End Homelessness report, which was sponsored by Toronto-based anti-poverty group Maytree, recommends the city issue requests-for-proposals for all city-owned sites identified in the task force report, by the end of 2023.

One of those sites was at Bayview Yards – 6.6 hectares of city property just west of Bayview Station, and a site reportedly under consideration as a potential location for a new Ottawa Senators arena.

While this parcel was identified by the 2019 task force report as offering a short-term development opportunity, neighbouring federally owned land on the other side of Bayview Station Road, and city-owned property south of Scott and Albert streets (currently home to the Tom Brown arena), were also labelled as possible hosts, in the long-term, for affordable housing.

The Whitzman report proposes that “a large-scale, showcase affordable housing project” be prioritized for the area around Bayview. Between 17 hectares of public and privately-owned land, zoned for up to 30 storeys, the report says up to 12,000 homes could be created “in one mixed-income, mixed-use precinct, including associated social infrastructure and amenities that could serve the whole city.”

The report was presented at council’s planning and housing committee on Wednesday, where staff were asked about the status of the 20 government-owned sites identified in their 2019 report.

Peter Radke, director of the corporate real estate office (CREO), said he hadn’t seen this particular list, but the city does look annually at its own land inventory to see what it can dispose of. He’s been with the city for more than a decade, “and we’re reaching higher and higher up the tree, the low-hanging fruit is gone and now we’re getting ladders to get some of that land that we can surplus and put on the market, or to transfer to housing services.”

A lot of city lands have contamination issues, meaning remediation would be needed before construction, said Radke. Some sites are also being used as staging grounds for the LRT project, added David Wise, the acting director of economic development and long-range planning.

Wise said staff would like to do a more comprehensive review of the 2019 list of properties, and other sites with CREO, “to see which ones might be a little bit more ready to go than some of the others.”

Interim community and social services general manager Clara Freire also noted that from an affordable housing development perspective, “land is not the greatest barrier for us.” It’s capital funding, she said, as well as operating funding in the case of supportive housing.

But it’s not just large, LRT-adjacent sites that Whitzman’s report recommends the city take a look at. It identifies “several hundred parcels of land owned by municipal, federal and provincial governments in all suburbs of Ottawa that are suitable for affordable and supportive housing development.” The report includes a map of such sites, courtesy of another project Whitzman worked on last year, which also scored each parcel for its access to amenities.

“There should not be a new library, a new health centre, a new firehall — a new stadium — without lots of housing on top,” Whitzman said in an address Monday to a group that included city councillors and senior leaders in the local non-profit housing sector.

Co-presenter Kaite Burkholder Harris, executive director of the Alliance to End Homelessness Ottawa, identified councillors Cathy Curry and Marty Carr as two champions of their work on the report.

Both councillors also sit on a working group with the mayor, which is leading a series of reviews of city spending on programs and services. In opening remarks at Monday’s presentation, Curry said the review is not about finding savings for the sake of it — it’s about identifying dollars that could be applied to term-of-council priorities, which will soon be formally established.

“One of them is housing. It has to be. I think we’re all in agreement,” said Curry, who represents Kanata North.

Referring to her fellow council members, Curry told Whitzman and Burkholder Harris that they have “25 people listening very carefully who want to do the right thing. And that right thing may look different for different people, but it’s not because they don’t understand the importance of this.”

Curry was to bring forward a motion at council’s planning and housing committee on Wednesday, where the Whitzman report was on the agenda. She wanted staff to review all of it, and if there was anything they didn’t agree with, to report back and explain why.

With the support of her colleagues at committee Wednesday, Curry directed city staff to consider the report’s recommendations, as they prepare to apply for funding next month under a federal program aimed at accelerating housing construction, and refresh Ottawa’s own 10-year housing and homelessness plan next year.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...e-open-to-ideas-to-tackle-housing-crisis
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  #23  
Old Posted May 4, 2023, 3:08 PM
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
[B][SIZE="4"]“There should not be a new library, a new health centre, a new firehall — a new stadium — without lots of housing on top,” Whitzman said in an address Monday to a group that included city councillors and senior leaders in the local non-profit housing sector.
This quote is interesting, and may actually be a recipe for action. If new neighbourhood amenties are tied to affordable housing (or even just multi-family housing) by by-law, it seems more likely that we would see supply being built.
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  #24  
Old Posted May 13, 2023, 12:57 AM
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Circling back to a 2019 report on possible sites for new affordable housing; other than Gladstone Village (one tower proposed, but no movement otherwise) and the nearby redevelopment of OCH properties, we've seen little movement.

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/...using-Near-Transit-LIST.html#document/p1

The priority should be the parcel between the new Library and Dream LeBreton. It's imperative that this block be fully complete to ensure a coherent and accessible urban district. Patrons of the library should be able to go from Pimisi to the Library without walking through, or around, a construction site. I'd like to see one tower of 40-50 floors on a 6-12 (step-up) podium.

Next, the baseball stadium parking lot. I see an opportunity to build a mini Lansdowne, without the expense of new sports facilities. A one or two level parking garage, topped by pedestrian streets surrounded by mixed-use. Heights could vary from 40 floors along the Queensway, stepping down towards Coventry (6 to 8 floors).

We then have the site on Richmond that was expropriated for the Byron tunnel. Building up the street wall along an area that's already partially urban with great potential for further growth north of Byron Tramway Park. I see here twin towers of 30 floors on an 8 floor podium.

Bayview/Tom Brown should wait until we know what's happening with the Sens. If they secure LeBreton and shovels are in the ground, then it will be safe to plan. If LeBreton fails, this is the next best site. Tom Brown should definitely be replaced with a Sensplex, either on site, or closer to the arena.

All of these projects can and should be a mix of market housing, affordable for mid-income and deeply affordable/social housing. Something along the lines if 50/30/20. For the arena, it may need to be 80/10/10 to help fund the facility. Partner with private or not-for profit companies.

I'd like to see all of these (including Gladstone Village) redeveloped by 2030. Once these sites are developed, the next ones can go up for proposals.
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  #25  
Old Posted May 13, 2023, 2:52 AM
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I'm really gunning for the 250 Lanark/Graham Spry Building site in Westboro. I would love to see some significant height and density on that side of the O-Train trench to counterbalance all the 'luxury' going up in a line on the other side. With a 32 story building next door and 40 story twin towers across the trench there should be no objection to creating a very dense and tall affordable housing project directly attached to mass transit here. This site could easily accommodate 5000+ units and everything the new occupants would need is within a few minutes walk.
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  #26  
Old Posted May 13, 2023, 2:03 PM
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I'm really gunning for the 250 Lanark/Graham Spry Building site in Westboro. I would love to see some significant height and density on that side of the O-Train trench to counterbalance all the 'luxury' going up in a line on the other side. With a 32 story building next door and 40 story twin towers across the trench there should be no objection to creating a very dense and tall affordable housing project directly attached to mass transit here. This site could easily accommodate 5000+ units and everything the new occupants would need is within a few minutes walk.
Should be near the top of the list as well. Such a project would provide a good oppopportunity to deck over the transit trench and provide more functional greenspace for the quickly growing population.
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  #27  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 1:46 AM
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Project Mikinak affordable housing project gets $24.1 million infusion from province
The money is in addition to $48 million in funding for Ottawa through Ontario's Homelessness Prevention Program.

Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 24, 2023 • Last updated 3 hours ago • 2 minute read


The Ontario government is providing more than $24 million to help fund Project Mikinak, an east-end development by Ottawa Community Housing that will provide homes for seniors, families, Indigenous people and those with developmental disabilities.

The money, announced in Ottawa on Wednesday by Minister of Housing Steve Clark, will fund up to 138 affordable and supportive units of the 271 homes at Mikinak in the Wateridge Village on the site of the former Rockcliffe air base.

“These 138 new homes will be offered to Ottawa residents with a clear need, including those currently living in emergency shelters,” Clark said. “Instead of ad hoc or temporary housing arrangements, these Ontarians will have access to new, safe supportive housing that will provide them with the stability and the opportunity they need to succeed.”

The money is in addition to $48 million in funding for Ottawa through the province’s Homelessness Prevention Program. It also helps offset what the city felt was its minuscule share of a $202-million pot to address homelessness province-wide. Ottawa received just 0.4 per cent of that $202 million, a portion the provincial government said was based on a new formula using up-to-date stats.

Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, who quipped Clark’s announcement “was the most exciting gathering in the mayor’s office since Ryan Reynolds came to visit,” said the new money helped make up for that disappointment.

“This money today allows us to fulfil a requirement that we felt was not being fulfilled with the previous funding,” Sutcliffe said to reporters after the announcement. “In the end, the total amount of money we’re getting to address homelessness and affordable housing in Ottawa has just gone up by $24.1 million and that’s great for the City of Ottawa.”

The development at 715 Mikinak Rd. will include a mix of unit sizes with varying levels of affordability, including average-market-rent units and below-market-rent units. Last fall, the project received $78 million in federal funding.

The government’s capital investments will help keep rents at Mikinak low, OCH chief executive officer Stéphane Giguère said.

Approximately 33,000 people are tenants of Ottawa Community Housing, and there is a waiting list of 12,000 names for affordable housing. That translates to an average wait of 5 1/2 years, said Coun. Theresa Kavanagh, the chair of OCH.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...gets-24-1-million-infusion-from-province
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  #28  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 1:54 AM
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Is this a new project, or does it relate to the building(s) that's already going up?
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  #29  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 2:23 AM
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Is this a new project, or does it relate to the building(s) that's already going up?
It's this one, currently under construction.
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  #30  
Old Posted Jun 13, 2023, 7:04 PM
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Some good news for existing affordable housing, majority of ccoc properties are now municipal tax exempt. With the result being a $45 Million payout to CCOC and no future municipal tax bills for there properties. In conjunction with other policies put in place by the city more properties will likely be added to this list as the city helps them continue to buy properties......

https://twitter.com/gowlingwlg_ca/status/1668331688957444105?t=_GEdazgK3zoPYvzO-_FjWQ&s=19
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  #31  
Old Posted Jun 19, 2023, 3:22 AM
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OCH project updates.


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  #32  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2023, 7:27 PM
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Ottawa not the only city having issues getting more rentals/affordable housing built..

https://globalnews.ca/news/9910537/montr...instead-of-building-affordable-housing/#

Last edited by DarthVader_1961; Aug 23, 2023 at 7:32 PM. Reason: Text improvements
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  #33  
Old Posted Sep 7, 2023, 1:43 AM
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$110M affordable housing plan gets go-ahead, but won't meet demand
Money welcome but doesn't come close to what's needed, committee hears

Giacomo Panico · CBC News
Posted: Sep 06, 2023 5:40 PM EDT | Last Updated: 4 hours ago


Ottawa's planning and housing committee has approved a plan to spend $110 million over the next three years on affordable housing, but not without hearing concerns that the city needs more than three times that amount.

The money earmarked Wednesday is capital funding the city gives to not-for-profit agencies it partners with to build affordable housing units, often with supportive services attached.

It includes housing money from both the federal and provincial governments.

While he was pleased his fellow committee members approved the spending plan, Coun. Jeff Leiper noted demand far exceeds the $110 million being provided.

"Our affordable housing provider partners have projects that they would like to build," said Leiper, the committee's chair.

"But at this point the funding is uncertain to actually move ahead and build the units."

In order to meet the demand, the city would need to invest an additional $375 million, said director of housing services Paul Lavigne.

"If we had that extra money, it would go a long way to advancing our goals, based on the number of projects that we have ready," said Lavigne.

A major challenge highlighted during the meeting was the staggering increase in construction costs, which staff said have risen 51 percent since 2020.

The impact, they said, is that the $110 million will be used in part to build 133 new units and also as contingency funding for 408 units already under construction.

The committee should explore ways to work with the federal government to convert vacant government office space into affordable housing, said Mary Huang, president of the Centretown Community Association.

"There's a lot of people who are struggling," said Huang, the only public delegation to speak at Wednesday's meeting, in an interview with CBC.

"There's people sleeping rough in encampments, behind community gardens, in exits of condo buildings."

The list of affordable housing projects that will benefit from this funding include:
  • Ottawa Community Housing Corporation's project for 715 Mikinak Rd., on the former Canadian Forces Base Rockcliffe lands.
  • Ottawa Salus Corporation's construction of 54 supportive housing units at 56 Capilano Dr. in the Fisher Heights neighbourhood.
  • Nepean Housing Corporation's completion of a project at 1 Dunbar Court near Hunt Club Road and Greenbank Road.
  • The Multifaith Housing Initiative on LeBreton Flats, which would add 133 affordable rental units there.

Full city council must still approve the affordable housing strategy, which is expected to happen on Sept. 13.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/11...go-ahead-but-won-t-meet-demand-1.6958300
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  #34  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2023, 4:03 PM
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Since several of you might be involved, in various capacities, regarding the developing of properties, I thought that I might try to tap into your knowledge.

I see that the city is capping some areas at 4 stories, and some at 6. I thought that I had heard that about 5 stories is the limit of wood-framed construction, and after that, there was a shift to concrete. I think that I have also heard that the step up in construction cost means that you need about 15 stories to make a concrete building economical.

So, can you help me with my confusion?

If 6 stories is above the limit for wood-framing, and concrete buildings need to be 15+ stories to be economical, what is the point of a 6-story limit?

Is there the possibility of taller (and economical) wood-framing? Can 6 story concrete buildings be economical? Is there something in the middle (steel framing?) that works for middle heights?

Obviously, if the units were all designated (and priced) as luxury units, a shorter concrete building could be built, but is that the only way to make 6 stories work? (That doesn’t help in creating ‘affordable’ housing, though.)
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  #35  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2023, 3:04 PM
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Historically, the limit in Ontario for wood building construction was because of the Ontario Building Code limiting how tall you were allowed to build out of wood. Although that has been updated to 6 stories now, there is still some resistance from developers and builders to go that tall.

Additionally, once you get to around 6 stories in wood, you change from "stick-built" (aka 2" by 6"s and 2" by 4"s) to "mass timber", which changes the design, engineering, and construction methods. There has not been many mass-timber buildings in Ontario but it is slowly starting. Out west they are miles ahead - https://www.archdaily.com/879625/inside-...orlds-tallest-timber-structured-building

So that's a roundabout way of answering your questions. Wood is definitely feasible for 6-stories.
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  #36  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2023, 5:05 PM
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Wow. Very interesting, Dzingle Bells. Thanks for that information.

I had heard just yesterday (from the ‘about here’ video provided by J.OT.13, in the Building Better Suburbs thread) that Vancouver allowed up to 12 stories with wood, but the Brock Commons Tallwood House appears to have 18 floors (17 in wood, sitting on a concrete base). Progress indeed.

Ontario should follow Vancouver’s lead, and allow 12-story wood-framed buildings. (Although there might be more severe snow-load issues in Ontario.) I think that this is a great opportunity to construct the ‘up-to-12-story Missing Middle’ buildings economically while sealing in carbon, instead of spewing carbon into the atmosphere through the creation of concrete. Engineered timbers are also a great way to use up smaller trees, resulting in faster turn-over in managed forests.

This is how affordable housing can be delivered more quickly and economically. A factory manufactured ‘kit’ that can be easily assembled on site, with minimum disruption to neighbours.
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  #37  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2023, 9:51 PM
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Seems like an easy win to get more housing built for cheaper. Isn't that the Governments priority? I guess no developers asked for that change.
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  #38  
Old Posted Jan 9, 2024, 10:29 PM
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Ottawa Community Housing acquires 311 townhomes in Nepean
The deal is scheduled to close Feb. 15.

Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jan 09, 2024 • Last updated 1 hour ago • 2 minute read




More than 300 aging, but affordable townhomes have been added to the Ottawa Community Housing stock thanks to a multi-million dollar deal between OCH and Minto.

In the deal announced Tuesday, OCH has acquired 122 three-bedroom townhomes in Tanglewood plus 154 three-bedroom and 35 four-bedroom townhomes in Chesterton from Minto Apartments REIT. Both neighbourhoods are in Nepean near Merivale Road and Viewmount Drive.

The units, most of which are already occupied, have a range of rents, but are all significantly below current market rates, said Cliff Youdale, chief development officer for OCH. The deal is the first of its kind for OCH buying private-market housing that is already renting at affordable rates.

“This is definitely new. It’s a byproduct of the economic conditions,” Youdale said in an interview Tuesday. “It’s been really hard for us to acquire units in the past because it was such a competitive marketplace. But, with some of the adjustments in the market, it’s a cost-effective way of adding units to our portfolio that are currently affordable.”

Existing tenants will be allowed to stay, and OCH will be able to keep their rents low. When units do turn over, having OCH as the owner will prevent rents from climbing out of reach.

Multi-bedroom units suitable for large families like the ones in the Minto deal are particularly hard to find, Youdale said. Some tenants have lived there for 20 years or more.

OCH purchased the properties at about $270,000 per unit, he said.

The Tanglewood complex was built in 1975 and the Chesterton homes date back to 1969, but all have been well maintained by Minto and are the same age as many of OCH’s existing 15,000 units, he said.

Negotiations began in the fall, and Youdale said he hoped OCH could acquire other properties like these in the future to help ease Ottawa’s affordable housing crunch. The wait list for affordable housing is currently about 12,000 names long.

“We really think it’s important that we protect that private market affordable,” Youdale said. “And I think private-market players would also agree. It’s an opportunity for them to move some stock that may not be part of their future visions.”

Minto described the deal as beneficial for both the city and the company.

“This transaction is truly a win-win,” Jonathan Li, president and CEO of Minto Apartment REIT, said in a statement.

“It helps maintain affordability in the assets, and, at the same time, the proceeds generated from the transaction strengthen the REIT’s position to further increase housing supply across the country as we invest in our existing portfolio and new purpose-built rental developments.”

The deal is scheduled to close Feb. 15.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/ottawa-community-housing-acquires-311-townhomes-in-nepean
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  #39  
Old Posted Jan 9, 2024, 10:50 PM
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
Ottawa Community Housing acquires 311 townhomes in Nepean
The deal is scheduled to close Feb. 15.

Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jan 09, 2024 • Last updated 1 hour ago • 2 minute read




More than 300 aging, but affordable townhomes have been added to the Ottawa Community Housing stock thanks to a multi-million dollar deal between OCH and Minto.

In the deal announced Tuesday, OCH has acquired 122 three-bedroom townhomes in Tanglewood plus 154 three-bedroom and 35 four-bedroom townhomes in Chesterton from Minto Apartments REIT. Both neighbourhoods are in Nepean near Merivale Road and Viewmount Drive.

The units, most of which are already occupied, have a range of rents, but are all significantly below current market rates, said Cliff Youdale, chief development officer for OCH. The deal is the first of its kind for OCH buying private-market housing that is already renting at affordable rates.

“This is definitely new. It’s a byproduct of the economic conditions,” Youdale said in an interview Tuesday. “It’s been really hard for us to acquire units in the past because it was such a competitive marketplace. But, with some of the adjustments in the market, it’s a cost-effective way of adding units to our portfolio that are currently affordable.”

Existing tenants will be allowed to stay, and OCH will be able to keep their rents low. When units do turn over, having OCH as the owner will prevent rents from climbing out of reach.

Multi-bedroom units suitable for large families like the ones in the Minto deal are particularly hard to find, Youdale said. Some tenants have lived there for 20 years or more.

OCH purchased the properties at about $270,000 per unit, he said.

The Tanglewood complex was built in 1975 and the Chesterton homes date back to 1969, but all have been well maintained by Minto and are the same age as many of OCH’s existing 15,000 units, he said.

Negotiations began in the fall, and Youdale said he hoped OCH could acquire other properties like these in the future to help ease Ottawa’s affordable housing crunch. The wait list for affordable housing is currently about 12,000 names long.

“We really think it’s important that we protect that private market affordable,” Youdale said. “And I think private-market players would also agree. It’s an opportunity for them to move some stock that may not be part of their future visions.”

Minto described the deal as beneficial for both the city and the company.

“This transaction is truly a win-win,” Jonathan Li, president and CEO of Minto Apartment REIT, said in a statement.

“It helps maintain affordability in the assets, and, at the same time, the proceeds generated from the transaction strengthen the REIT’s position to further increase housing supply across the country as we invest in our existing portfolio and new purpose-built rental developments.”

The deal is scheduled to close Feb. 15.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/ottawa-community-housing-acquires-311-townhomes-in-nepean
I'll take this any second of the day over these units going into Land-trusts (as preferred by Laine Johnson) or the hands of CCOC. At least with them being OCH there is a chance they may eventually have a density increase as OCH has done in other areas of the city with there property.
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  #40  
Old Posted Jan 10, 2024, 6:35 PM
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I'll take this any second of the day over these units going into Land-trusts (as preferred by Laine Johnson) or the hands of CCOC. At least with them being OCH there is a chance they may eventually have a density increase as OCH has done in other areas of the city with there property.
Maybe but I'd be very curious how this evaluation took place. Certainly the market price is nowhere near that amount. You're right though hopefully OCH builds up block by block over the next 30 years.
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