SARAH HARROWITZ - Vancouver's latest stab at innovative and affordable housing (after laneway homesand shipping container homes) comes in a more unexpected form: a jail. The former Remand Centre (250 Powell St.) in downtown Vancouver is being turned into a seven-floor unit of affordable housing for marginalized and vulnerable community members. The project is a collaborative effort between BC Housing, the government, BladeRunners, The Bloom Group, CPA Development Consultants, and Henriquez Partners Architects. The finished product will feature 96 self-contained housing units. The jail, which was built in 1981 to hold those waiting to appear in court, was closed in 2002. Funnily enough, the original was designed by Henriquez Partners Architects founding partner Richard Henriquez. The redesign, led by the same firm, is in the hands of his son, Gregory. "We have worked hard to get it off the ground and know it will make an enormously valuable impact on the DTES community, providing stability and dignity to at risk aboriginal youth, women at risk of homelessness and others struggling to build better lives," Gregory Henriquez told The Huffington Post B.C. in an email. "That my father designed the original detention centre further personalizes this project for me – I’m proud to be breathing new life into his original design." Nearly 40 of the building's units are being designated for at-risk Aboriginal youth who participate in BladeRunners, a training employment program focusing on the trades. “Ninety-five per cent of the kids we work with are homeless when they first start the program,” BladeRunners’ Garry Jobin told Global News. “Our need for affordable, stable housing is unbelievable.” The rest of the units will be available to women at risk of homelessness and those in low income households. Priority will go to those who already live or work in the Downtown Eastside. There will also be a community garden and a multi-purpose space. The multi-million dollar project (which is receiving funding from three levels of government) will be managed by The Bloom Group. "We were really interested in having [the project] be something that we could support and make an asset in our community," The Bloom Group's director of resource development and communications Lesley Anderson told The Huffington Post B.C. While the project was first announced back in 2011, people were reminded of it last week when BC Housing tweeted some photos of the building and its progress. Read more : Fullstory at Huffington Post Rent increase for low-income Chinatown seniors could set "terrifying precedent", says Pivot lawyer2/11/2014
YOLANDE COLE (GEORGIA STRAIGHT) - EIGHTY-FIVE-YEAR-OLD ZHEN KUN Feng has lived in the Chau Luen Tower on Keefer Street for 14 years. Like most of the tenants in the 81-unit Chinatown building, his apartment is a small bachelor suite of about 300 square feet. For the past few months, Feng, along with three other tenants, has fought to keep the units affordable for the low-income residents who live there. The Chau Luen Kon Sol Society of Vancouver, which manages the building, is seeking to raise Feng’s rent from the $434 a month he currently pays to $570. Other tenants in the building are also facing rent increases of 30 to 40 percent, he said. The dispute is currently before the Residential Tenancy Branch, which is expected to rule on the matter soon. “This housing is...specifically supposed to be for low-income seniors,” Feng told the Georgia Straight in an interview in one of the units in the Chau Luen Tower. The majority of tenants in the building are in their 80s, according to Feng. He noted many of the seniors are already paying more than 30 percent of their income to cover their rent, and have to pay a significant amount in medical expenses, in addition to covering other bills like heat. The typical monthly income of Chau Luen residents ranges from about $800 to $1,100, he added. “The seniors have a lot of stress, and some people are crying because of that stress, saying [they] don’t have enough money,” Feng stated through an interpreter. “Are they trying to kick us out, become homeless? Some are already crying.” According to Feng, the society has indicated they need to increase the rent in order to cover the cost of repairs, and because the rent is low compared to other buildings in the area. A message left with the building caretaker requesting an interview with the Chau Luen Society was not returned by the Straight’s deadline. DJ Larkin, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society who is representing the group of about 80 seniors, said she is concerned that if the Residential Tenancy Branch permits the landlord to raise the rent to match other rates in the area, it could set a “terrifying precedent” for other low-income buildings. “We have a concern that the legislation does allow for people to benefit from neighbourhood change and gentrification in a way that really pushes low-income people out of housing at an accelerated rate," Larkin said in a phone interview with the Straight. "Because rather than only raising the rent every 12 months in accordance with the legislation normally, when a neighbourhood starts to change really rapidly, a landlord can turn around and say I would like to apply to raise the rent by $200 immediately because the rest of the neighbourhood has become more expensive." She noted the tower has “really significant” ongoing maintenance issues, but is being compared to other buildings in the area that have been completely remodeled. “In this building, one of my fears is that the branch may feel comfortable allowing a rent increase based on the landlord’s assertion that these people can all get the provincial SAFER [Shelter Aid For Elderly Renters] grant, because they are seniors,” she said. “However, what fundamentally it means is that a landlord has been successful in taking a building that has not been well maintained, and getting the rent raised based on that rapid neighbourhood change, which really does open the door for a lot of other buildings, especially in the Downtown Eastside.” Feng noted the Chau Luen Tower is 43 years old. “A lot of the amenities here are really old—this fridge, freezer, stove,” he said. “In 43 years, they’ve never replaced the elevators, so it often breaks down. Sometimes it breaks down for two or three weeks.” He added that services in the building have been reduced. While there used to be a building caretaker on site day and night, now it is staffed between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. “There’s a lot of stuff that could happen to seniors and no one would take care of them…and they’re still trying to raise rents, so that’s not reasonable,” he stated. Feng, along with fellow tenants including Zhong Liu Zheng and Wen Kam Cheng, has been advocating on behalf of the building's residents, and has collected 81 signatures on a letter opposing the rent increase. “We’re not doing this for ourselves, but for the entire building,” he stressed. “I see the seniors like this and I can’t bear [it].” Larkin noted that the residents do appreciate that the building is operated by a non-profit benevolent society. "But they’ve really been pushed into a corner where they feel like they’re not getting services, they’re not getting maintenance,” she said. “How is there any fairness in putting them in a situation where their rent could go up quite a large amount, and it’s just causing so much stress for a vulnerable group of people.” CARMINE MARINELLI (24 HOURS) – Following its three-storey prototype (pictured), Atira Women’s Resource Society is set to file an application to build a new seven-storey affordable housing project in Strathcona — again using repurposed shipping containers. It was really important for people to see that not only are they beautiful little suites … but to leave the container exposed so people would unmistakably know that these were 12 shipping containers.” — Janice Abbott, Atira CEO Atira Women’s Resource Society is applying to construct a seven-storey housing complex made from recycled shipping containers on a Strathcona property, an initiative more than twice the height of a similar project it opened last year. The non-profit’s proposal follows an existing three-storey pilot project launched in September on Alexander Street. Unlike those bachelor suites, however, the new plan would house families in one- and two-bedroom apartments at Hawks Avenue and East Hastings Street, currently zoned light-industrial. “It’s still got to be designed yet,” said Atira development manager James Weldon. “This pilot project was in part to determine, ‘Is it even technically possible to do this?’ “Now we have the experience it’s going to be different structurally, maybe we’d fabricate them slightly differently.” Atira CEO Janice Abbott said the new facility, if approved, wouldn’t mimic its predecessor because the property is more square, not a thin rectangle like the Alexander Street lot. But rezoning is the first step. “For this one, we didn’t have to go through a rezoning process – we just had to convince them to let us do containers. That’s a bit of a challenge. Abbott said the project would be women-only housing with one- and two-bed units to “have some family housing.” Atira’s mission statement states it “supports all women, and their children, who are experiencing the impact of violence.” It owns a number of properties in Strathcona and the Downtown Eastside. “I have admit, when the containers first came to the site, I was like, ‘Oh my God – they were dark, hulking rusty boxes,’” Weldon said. “But when this was finished, it turned into cool, contemporary housing. It really levels the housing playing field.” Weldon said Atira hopes to reduce costs on future container housing. The prototype had “premium features” to showcase the idea and defray concerns over housing women in shipping crates. |
Market UpdateUpdates on Real Estate news happening in your city. Archives
January 2024
Categories
All
|