Changing the game for Vancouver renters
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Changing the game for Vancouver renters

October 27, 2023

AT A GLANCE

  • High demand and limited supply have left Vancouverites with few options for affordable rental housing.
  • Non-profit developer Catalyst Community Developments is tackling the issue by creating housing for the ‘missing middle.’
  • Thanks to Catalyst’s Aspen project, long-time Vancouver resident Jennifer Cara was able to return to the city she loves and find an affordable 3-bedroom home for her family.
Transcript

(Music with a serious tone.)

(Visual: A wide cityscape of downtown Vancouver. Traffic flows between the city’s many high-rise condo and apartment buildings. Large murals are shown on the sides of buildings. The camera cuts to Vancouver City Hall among the buildings in the cityscape.

00:07

The need for affordable rental housing in Vancouver, no surprise, is significant.

(Visual: Ryan Bigelow, the man speaking, appears on camera. He is facing the camera and is being interviewed at the Vancouver City Hall.)

(Text on screen: Ryan Bigelow, Non-Market Housing Development & Operations – City of Vancouver)

00:12

Our planning department just completed a needs assessment, and that found that there’s over 77,000 households that are in housing that’s unaffordable or inadequate.

(Text on screen: 2019)

(Visual: A construction site for a new multi-unit residential building is shown. Construction workers move around the site working with concrete. The camera cuts to two people sitting on a park bench overlooking Vancouver’s False Creek. Apartment buildings are seen across the waterway. In a series of cityscape images, construction cranes are shown among the many high-rise buildings.)

00:23
The primary challenge for creating new affordable housing is economics. The rents that you need to charge to get a social housing project off the ground, to support a mortgage on a project like that, are unaffordable to those on local incomes.

(Music fades out)

(Another music track fades in. It has a more hopeful tone.)

(Visual: The camera racks focus between purple blossoms in a tree to a city bus in Vancouver’s Mount Pleasant neighbourhood. The Mount Pleasant Clock, a historical landmark, reads “Welcome to Mount Pleasant”.)

(Text on screen: 2022)

(Visual: The completed multi-unit residential building is shown. The camera racks focus between flowers and the new red brick apartment building. A sign on the side of the building reads: “Aspen – Apartments for Rent”.)

00:51

Aspen came about really at a time when the City of Vancouver was considering how to create more affordable housing and what assets and resources they had to do that.

(Visual: Luke Harrison, the man speaking, appears on camera. He is facing the camera and is being interviewed in a common area of Aspen Apartments.)

(Text on screen: Luke Harrison, President – Catalyst Community Development)

01:00

I’d say the, sort of, founding of Catalyst was based on partnerships, and so partnerships are very important to how we create all the affordable housing projects that we work on.

(Visual: A series of images highlights the partnerships involved in creating the Aspen: the Catalyst office, Vancouver City Hall, and the Vancity building.)

01:10

In this case it was a partnership that was started between Catalyst, the City of Vancouver, Vancity, and then ultimately CMHC.

(Visual: Luke Harrison, the man speaking, appears on camera.)

01:18

It really just worked very very well that that happened all very close to the start of the National Housing Strategy and the new Rental Construction Financing Initiative. So, the combination of below market financing as well as city land was really a winning combination to create affordable rents.

(Visual: Jennifer, a resident of the Aspen Apartments, looks towards downtown Vancouver from the terrace of the building. The terrace includes rows of flower and garden beds. Bees fly from flower to flower in the garden. Jennifer walks among the garden beds.)

01:37

You know, I spent all my adult live in Vancouver. I really like it here. I’ve been looking for ways to come back, but we realized when we left, we thought there was no way we could come back. Once you get out of the rental market in Vancouver, how do you get back in?

(Visual: Jennifer, the woman speaking, appears on camera. She is facing the camera and is being interviewed on the terrace of the Aspen.)


01:49

Catalyst enabled me to come back to where all my friends are. I had all my business contacts here. This is my hometown. I got to come back to my hometown.

(Visual: A series of images showcases the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood – people walk on the sidewalk, a woman walks her dog on a recreational path, buildings feature bright and colourful murals.)

01:58

I actually think it’s valuable for Vancouver to have buildings like this that have different income levels in them. I think it’s really great that people actually get to live with people that have different life experiences. I think that makes more of a community.

(Visual: Two young smiling women enter the front door of the Aspen building.)

02:11
For us, it’s all about building community. Making sure that people come into a Catalyst community and don’t want to leave.

(Visual: Luke Harrison, the man speaking, appears on camera.)

02:16

We want to create an ecosystem, an environment, where people can come in and be renters for life.

(Visual: Wide exterior shot image of the Aspen building.)

02:22

And be, frankly, in a better position being in a rental home than they would be if they were in something that they owned.

(Visual: An image from 2019 of the Aspen under construction. A sign on a fence reads: Construction Personnel Only. The construction is surrounded by a colourful mural on a neighbouring building. There are mountains in the distance.)

02:27

Before this development, this was a vacant site. Almost an entire city block with nothing happening. So, it wasn’t really contributing to the community at all.

(Visual: Ryan Bigelow, the man speaking, appears on camera.)

02:36

Now, it’s punching more than its weight in terms of adding to the community.

(Visual: A series of images showcases the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood: exterior image of the Aspen building, a city bus drives on a busy downtown street, and a person jogs on a recreational path. The camera cuts to Jennifer who is on the Aspen terrace. She is admiring the view of the Vancouver cityscape.)

02:40

It has provided 145 homes for folks that have access to transit, park space, community services, that otherwise couldn’t afford to live here.

(Music volume goes up)

(Visual: A landscape of the Vancouver skyline. The camera tilt upwards towards the sky and mountains in the distance.)

(Text on screen: #NationalHousingStrategy, placetocallhome.ca)

(Music fades out)

(Visual: Text, the Government of Canada logo, and CMHC logo fade in together. All text and logos fade to white.)


Vancouver’s affordable housing crisis is well documented. High demand for rental housing, limited supply and a steady influx of newcomers has resulted in rising rent costs and few affordable options. Many renters are choosing to either stay longer in their units or leave the city altogether in search of more affordable living.

It’s a challenge one non-profit developer is tackling head on.

 

THE MISSING MIDDLE

Luke Harrison, president, Catalyst Community Developments is seated in a rooftop lounge. Floor to ceiling windows cast views along Vancouver’s Main Street to the north, and the vibrant Mount Pleasant neighbourhood to the south.

You may be forgiven for assuming this is either a luxury hotel or a new condo building. It is neither.

Aspen is 145-unit mixed-use building providing Vancouver residents with affordable living in the heart of the city. Opened in 2021, there is a restaurant and health centre on the ground floor, access to parking, community gardens and a shared rooftop terrace. The units are pet-friendly and a portion are accessible. The building is within easy access to transit, parks, restaurants and other amenities. Downtown is a little more than a 30-minute walk away.

It is one of 9 affordable rental buildings across BC created by Catalyst, a non-profit developer targeting the ‘missing middle.’

President, Catalyst Community Developments Luke Harrison would like to create an ecosystem that would provide renters with a lifetime of affordable living.
President, Catalyst Community Developments Luke Harrison would like to create an ecosystem that would provide renters with a lifetime of affordable living.

“We define the missing middle as people with average household incomes in the communities that we build and operate in,” says Luke. “And so, we liken that to teachers, baristas, even people in the medical profession and others who are really locked out of being able to find adequate housing that can be afforded by those salaries.”

Unsurprisingly, Aspen is fully occupied and has a wait list of 120 people.

“Aspen came about at a time when the City of Vancouver was considering how to create more affordable housing and what assets and resources they had to do that,” says Luke.

The need for affordable rental housing, no surprise, is significant.
– Ryan Bigelow, development manager, City of Vancouver

“The city identified parcels of land that were suitable for development and invited Catalyst and other community housing developers to create affordable rental buildings. The ultimate goal was to drive down rents and increase affordability.”

“The need for affordable rental housing, no surprise, is significant,” says Ryan, development manager, City of Vancouver. “Our planning department just completed a needs assessment and that found that there’s over 77,000 households that are in housing that’s unaffordable or inadequate.”

The primary challenge, says Ryan, is economics.

“Five, 10 years ago you could get a social housing project off the ground with a low-cost loan say from CMHC and a nominal lease from the City of Vancouver and you’re off to the races. Now due to rising construction costs, the rents that you need to charge to support the costs on a project like that are unaffordable to those on local incomes. Significant capital contributions are needed from senior government to get these kinds of projects off the ground.”

The combination of below-market financing as well as city land was really a winning combination to create affordable rents.
– Luke Harrison, president, Catalyst Community Developments

Enter, a new partnership model.

“The founding of Catalyst was based on partnerships and so partnerships are very important to how we create all our projects,” says Luke. “In this case it was really a partnership that was started between Catalyst, the City of Vancouver, Vancity and then ultimately, CMHC.

It just worked really, really well that that happened close to the start of the National Housing Strategy and the new Rental Construction Financing Initiative. The combination of below-market financing as well as city land was really a winning combination to create affordable rents.”

 

WORKING PERSON PENALTY

When long-time Vancouver resident Jennifer Cara had children, she found herself squarely in the missing middle.

“Vancouver has a working person penalty,” she says. “Everyone that lives downtown wants the services. They want the retail, the Starbucks…but no one that works in Starbucks can afford to live in downtown Vancouver. I had a relatively good job but I couldn’t afford to live downtown anymore. Plus, as I found out, no one wants to rent to someone with 2 babies.”

Once you get out of the rental market in Vancouver, how do you get back in?
– Jennifer Cara, resident, Aspen

Together with her partner, Jennifer and their 2 children moved to Victoria to be closer to her partner’s family.

Thanks to Catalyst’s Aspen development, Jennifer Cara found an affordable home for her family in the heart of Vancouver.
Thanks to Catalyst’s Aspen development, Jennifer Cara found an affordable home for her family in the heart of Vancouver.

“We needed help because 2 babies, that’s a lot of babies. And it was great, but I had spent all my adult life in Vancouver and was looking for ways to come back.

But once you get out of the rental market in Vancouver, how do you get back in?”

Then she discovered Catalyst.

Catalyst buildings use Housing Income Limits — the maximum gross household income for eligibility in many affordable housing programs. The limits vary by region and are set by BC Housing, based on figures established by CMHC.

Jennifer fit into the Housing Income Limits for Victoria and qualified for Catalyst’s Madrona building.

Until she progressed up the career ladder.

We want to create an ecosystem where people can come in and be renters for life and be in a better position, frankly, than they would be in something that they owned.
– Luke Harrison, president, Catalyst Community Developments

“Suddenly I was slightly over the limit for Victoria. My kids’ dad said Hey, there’s a place in Vancouver by Catalyst and it has the same kind of deal where’s there’s tiers. But, I fit into this one because it’s Vancouver and it’s more expensive.”

Development manager, City of Vancouver, Ryan Bigelow says Aspen has transformed a vacant city block and created 145 affordable homes for Vancouver residents who otherwise could not afford to live in the area.
Development manager, City of Vancouver, Ryan Bigelow says Aspen has transformed a vacant city block and created 145 affordable homes for Vancouver residents who otherwise could not afford to live in the area.

Jennifer’s new home at Aspen is close to the skytrain, her children’s school, Science World — their ‘happy place’ — and has lots of space for her family and dog.

“It enabled me to come back where all my friends are. I had all my business contacts here and this is kinda my hometown.”

Her new Vancouver rental experience is also far different to her previous one.

“I’ve met neighbours on my floor. Last time I lived in Vancouver, I was in the same building for 13 years and knew one person. It’s valuable for Vancouver to have buildings like this that have people with different income levels and life experiences. I think that makes more of a community.”

 

TRANSFORMING A CITY BLOCK, CREATING AN ECOSYSTEM

“Before this development this was a vacant site,” says Ryan. “Almost an entire city block with nothing happening. It wasn’t really contributing to the community at all. Now it’s punching more than its weight. It’s providing 145 homes for folks who have access to transit, parks, community-based services that otherwise couldn’t afford to live here.”

“There’s a social norm within Canada that you rent for a period of time in your life and then you move on to home ownership,” says Luke. “We want to create an ecosystem and environment where people can come in and be renters for life and be in a better position, frankly, than they would be in something that they owned.”

 

KEY FACTS

SEE ALSO