Friday, October 31, 2014

Calgary and Edmonton Top Two Real Estate Markets in Canada

Calgary and Edmonton top two real estate markets in Canada

Urbanization the ‘new normal’

 
CALGARY - A new report released Tuesday by PwC and the Urban Land Institute says Calgary and Edmonton are the top two real estate markets in Canada.
Both Calgary and Edmonton scored well for investment, development and housing, said the Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2015 study.
For the second year in a row Calgary is the number one rated market by survey respondents connected with the real estate industry.
“Calgary marches to a different drum. It’s tied to energy, so it keeps building,” one interviewee was quoted as saying.
The report said the Calgary economy continues to post solid gains.
The report also noted that Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver, will see the most residential growth in 2015, a trend that has been helped by more jobs becoming available in the West than in Central Canada, while Calgary and the Greater Toronto Area will hold the most potential for retail growth.
The report said urbanization in Canada is now considered the ‘new normal’ rather than an emerging trend itself.
“Looking ahead into 2015, a common trend among all industry players will be the search for opportunities in and around the city cores. With more people moving into city centres for work and lifestyle purposes, companies and retailers are following them and driving new office and commercial developments,” said the report.
Don Campbell, senior analyst with the Real Estate Investment Network, said urbanization is a trend that is growing again given the fact that 27 per cent of our population is in the GenY/Millenial demographic.
“And their housing requirements are beginning to change the way housing demand trends are occurring,” he said. “As a comparison, 27 per cent of our population in Canada are Baby Boomers. The Baby Boomers changed the real estate market towards suburbs. Millenials are leaning towards greener choices. More village local feel, less reliability on automobile, more want of community feel are just some of the changes this next population cohort is demanding.
“And the important fact to consider is that this age group is just entering housing market - the rental and purchase markets - and will drive demand patterns for at least the next decade. Alberta will especially be affected by this trend as we are attracting a large cohort of this age group to the province with the mass inmigration we are experiencing. In fact, Alberta’s average age is actually getting younger while most other regions age.”
The report said urbanization is blurring industry lines as commercial and residential developers discover the opportunities that mixed-use properties bring. The convergence of commercial and residential development is driven by developers’ desire to control more aspects of a project and to add value to their property holdings.
“Urbanization is creating greater demand for offices in downtown cores – thanks to younger workers in particular. While the move to the core is more visible, selecting the proper location is critical for any suburban redevelopment, especially around transportation nodes,” said the report.
“The continuing urbanization trend and the high cost of single-family homes have fuelled the condo boom in Toronto and other cities like Calgary’s west end. However, the next phase involves young urban condo dwellers starting families and seeking affordable housing. Purpose-built multi-residential rental developments are starting to address this market need.”
It said urban retail will see strong growth with the influx of residents to city cores driving demand for amenities. Mixed-used properties will become increasingly common.
“Retail always follows the rooftops and with the surge in inner-city residential development retail is following the condo towers,” said Michael Kehoe, an Alberta-based retail specialist with Fairfield Commercial Real Estate Inc. in Calgary. “The retail rush downtown in Calgary is led by most of the major and niche grocery chains seeking a foothold close to the downtown core.
“Mixed-use towers that combine residential with retail and sometimes office space are the new development normal in most Canadian cities and quite evident in Calgary. The soon-to-be constructed Telus Sky project is a prime example of this trend. Residents and office tenants will enjoy shopping, dining and amenity retail choices right in their building.”
mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com
Twitter.com/MTone123
With a file from Canadian Press

Monday, October 27, 2014

Fourteen - Storey Luxury Condo Planned along Elbow River

Fourteen-storey luxury condo planned along Elbow River

12 suites in 14-storey Mission tower

 
 
Fourteen-storey luxury condo planned along Elbow River
 

Rendering of The XII residential condo development planned for the Mission district along the Elbow River.

CALGARY - A unique luxury condo development planned for Calgary’s Mission neighbourhood is aiming at making an easy transition from the single-family lifestyle to highrise living.
The XII, a 12-suite, 14-storey landmark, to be built at 304 26th Avenue S.W., along the Elbow River, will feature one home per floor for 10 units and two units consisting of two floors each, the Herald has learned.
Stanley Yasin, managing partner of The XII, said construction of the project is expected to begin next spring with occupancy scheduled for the beginning of 2017.
He said units will range in size from 2,200 square feet to 3,300 square feet with prices ranging from $2.95 million to $5.8 million.
The development will also include a unique underground automated parking system.
“We spent a fair amount of time researching the marketplace and understanding what some of the other luxury buildings were offering and we came to the conclusion that this site best called for what I call a transition between single-family home living and condominium living,” said Yasin.
“By having single-level living we’re able to achieve the privacy and the comforts of a single-family home.”
Yasin said the automated parking system is a way to park cars that is safe, secure and easy. Homeowners will be able to drive their vehicles into the garage, exit the car and walk straight into the lobby, and the car will automatically drop below and essentially park itself. Prior to doing that, it will rotate so that when the car is retrieved it comes back up to the garage facing out.
Yasin said the company’s research indicated there is a strong demand in Calgary for luxury residential product.
“Once we decided that we were going to build a luxury way to live, it became obvious that we needed to create a building that called for that,” he said. “So the design was to achieve that luxury kind of living and the quality of the interiors will be very high. In fact, part of our mantra is to give our purchasers the opportunity to be able to finish the space to their liking, to their comfort.”
Architect Jeremy Sturgess said the features of the building come together to present a structure that is “light years” beyond anything currently available on the market and it will be iconic for many years to come.
“The XII is a jewel of urban elegance and will be a legacy. Residents will be living in some of the best space in Canada,” he said.
“The site is probably the last piece along the river in a set of buildings that had been building over time and creating in particular an important urban edge between the river and the single-family development to the south of the river and kind of downtown and the urban condition that really is sort of between the Elbow River and the Bow River moving northward.”
Sturgess said the site is one of the last key opportunities to do “something remarkable” there.
Other amenities include large storage spaces, high-tech and smart appliances, a full-time concierge in the lobby, digital video security surveillance, emergency backup of critical building systems in the event of power failure, large terraces, high-speed residential elevator with smart individual access control system, individually-restricted floor access, individually-controlled heating and air conditioning, and column-free living.
To customize their home, owners will have private consultations with Sturgess, interior designer Douglas Cridland and travel to Vancouver to meet with the bulthaup kitchens team.
mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com
Twitter.com/MTone123

Monday, October 20, 2014

In 10 Months, Calgary Sets Full-Year Record for Luxury Home Sales

In 10 months, Calgary sets full-year record for luxury home sales

$1-million-plus MLS sales already top 2013 


 
 

Luxury home sales in Calgary have already eclipsed the annual record set in 2013.

CALGARY - Calgary’s booming luxury home market has already set an annual record for MLS sales with more than two months left this year.
According to Mike Fotiou, associate broker with First Place Realty, as of Oct. 18, there were 732 properties in the city that sold for $1 million or more. That surpassed the annual record of 726 which was established in 2013. The previous record before last year was 544 in 2012.
Fotiou said that luxury sales year-to-date represent 3.3 per cent of homes sold through MLS in the city, up from 3.1 per cent last year and 2.4 per cent in 2012.
Monthly records have been set in the luxury home market for every month this year including the all-time high, for any month, of 104 in June.
Fotiou said that the booming luxury market records have been set this year “despite two direct measures” taken by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. at buyers of $1-million-plus properties.
The first was two years ago, he said, when the CMHC stopped insuring mortgages on homes worth $1 million plus if the buyer didn’t have at least a 20 per cent downpayment. The second was enacted at the end of July when the CMHC stopped offering mortgage insurance for homes that cost $1-million plus altogether, even if the buyer made a deposit of 20 per cent or more.
mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com
twitter.com/MTone123

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Cochrane Reaches All-Time MLS Sales HIgh

Cochrane reaches all-time MLS sales high

Annual peak established after only three quarters

 


Cochrane reaches all-time MLS sales high
 

Cochrane’s resale housing market has set a record this year for activity.

Photograph by: Christina Ryan , Calgary Herald

CALGARY - Cochrane has joined Airdrie and Chestermere for reaching an annual sales record in the resale housing market after just three quarters of the year.
According to Mike Fotiou, associate broker with First Place Realty, MLS sales in Cochrane year-to-date until the end of September hit the 610 mark, up 38.32 per cent from the same period last year.
The annual peak for sales was established in 2013 with 554 transactions.
The average MLS sale price in Cochrane so far this year is $433,537, up 4.34 per cent from last year, while the median price has risen by 4.99 per cent to $426,250.
mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com
Twitter.com/MTone123

Thursday, October 2, 2014

September Another Record Month for Calgary Luxury Home Sales...

September another record month for Calgary luxury home sales

All 9 months this year establish new peak levels

                         
 
September another record month for Calgary luxury home sales
 

Calgary’s luxury home market is experiencing a record year in 2014.

Photograph by: Courtesy Sotheby's , Calgary Herald

CALGARY - Each month this year has established a record for luxury home sales in Calgary’s resale market.
September is the latest.
According to Mike Fotiou, associate broker with First Place Realty, as of Thursday, a total of 61 MLS properties in the city have sold for $1 million or more, eclipsing the previous record of 59 for the month set last year.
The most expensive sale so far this month was for a home in Briar Hill at $4.6 million, he said.
Fotiou also said the neighborhoods of Altadore/River Park and Elbow Park/Glencoe lead the way in sales in September with six and five transactions respectively as of Thursday.
mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com
Twitter.com/MTone123