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To me those are the same people who buy a dog on a whim and then when they realize it's a lot work with sacrifices they just get rid of it. |
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Considering what's happening to all of the big lots by the highway, I'm sure the Township will probably look at Aldergrove next for multi-family residential. Therefore, the value for such parcels like your family's will only increase. The magic number is for you and your family to decide. What I would do is hang onto it, lease it to a company or family willing to use it as a farm to generate cash flow, then take a HELOC or the commercial equivalent on the property and use that to fund yours and your sisters home upgrade aspirations. |
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Well yeah the 1000 a week I want aren't for personal use. |
Westopher bathes in hollandaise, didn't you know? On the RE front, detached prices in the tri-cities pretty much went up 25% in the last 3 months, averaging about $1M now. Crazy. |
I have family living at the Met, and while I agree that the building and the units present well, I can't say I am too happy with the build quality, the quality of the residents, and the polices the conceige has adopted in attempt to mitigate the issues caused by the residents. On initial build quality, I'd say it's roughly par for course for a typical new building. There is the uneven floor; baseboards that have a huge gap where it meets the floor at certain places; wall paint / touch up issues; baseboard heaters that sit a full 1+cm away from the wall / baseboard; lights that didn't work, etc. Some of these issues were addressed. Others we were told is not fixable (ie. the uneven floor and baseboard gaps). Most annoying are the recurring problems. We have an intermittently leaky ceiling that sees a growing water stain, usually after some sort of sustained heavy rainfall. Developer repair has been slow, and from what I can see, the are only patching up our visual in-suite problem without addressing / looking into the real cause. The massive windows everywhere make the place quite hot in the summer, and too $$$ to heat up in the winter. We don't want to open the windows too much because there is construction on both sides of the building and it gets dusty too quickly. The quality of the residents are also lacking. We've seen people of different ethnic background, but by and large the majority of residents are probably Mainland Chinese, many being the younger (20's?) variety. Judging by the state of the garbage room and the various reminder memos posted by the building management company, a lot of the residents show very little respect for communal living -- or at least, a lot of them have a poor understanding of what constitute respectful communal living. :rukidding: In attempt to curb the disrespectful and abusive living practices, the conceige team has adopted an overzealous approach to police and discourage these bad practices. But that in turn makes it super inconvenient for regular residents to just continue with their everyday living. Case in point -- there isn't even space to wait for 2 minutes to pick someone up from the front of side entrance. Visitor parking is also a gong show. I was never a fan of that purchase, but unfortunately it wasn't my decision to buy there. And now the family member is complaining, some issues of which have previously been pointed out by yours truly. FailFish Quote:
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Stuff like that makes me not miss living in a high rise as ours was starting to show signs of General disrespect to the garbage/recycling procedures etc. Home builders association has standards in terms of floor unevenesss, I beleive acceptable is like 1/8th" over 5 feet? So if your problem is worse than what the association covers you have a right to have it fixed. Although how they measure is very subjective and they would probably have someone measure it that knows ways around it. Imo the first mistake was moving in or signing off on any problems like those before they were addressed. |
It's really tough to do strata right. There needs to be balance in rule enforcement and common sense, and also reasonable residents that are willing to support a good budget and policies. Overall, I'm happy with the strata. It's been basically the same core group of people. They've been fiscally responsible, and their budgeting made sense. We have a healthy contingency fund, and after 10+ years, all the buildings are in good health. Meanwhile, the condo next door, of similar design, is a comparable shit show. They have a lot of renters and it shows with the condition of the buildings, inside and out. |
It's definitely important to know what you're buying into when you purchase any strata property. After owning new and used strata properties, I would definitely favour used over new because you know the demographic makeup of the complex, how well the property is managed, and how the buildings have aged. I hate to say it, but you want to buy into complexes that have higher fees and that are predominantly owned by established locals. |
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Not much you can do to control the quality of residents, especially when I think many units in the Met are probably rental properties. My strata has a strict no rental rule, it hurts resale, but with us being the ones actually living here it makes a much cleaner and easier to deal with population. |
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When I was looking to purchase a unit several of the units I went to were literally ruin/destroy by the tenants which also happen to Chinese students. I guess coz when they were in China Mom and Dad cleans after them and do all the house work. Now they are alone they don't really do them. One unit the washroom smell so bad even with the doors close, it have moles growing in the washrooms and shit/blood stains on the toilet seats. The kitchen is full of bags of garbage with juice coming out. The stove and the kitchen wall is cover with thick really burn grease. Literally some of the hardwood floor have dog pee/poo stains on them. Even agent said most likely everything needs to be replace to be livable again. Yet there are 2 Chinese international students living there with their dog. Another one I went to is around Joyce area. When you enter the lobby I saw a guy (most like mid 20s) with a bag or chinese take out sauce dripping all over the lobby and into the elevator. He didn't even try to clean it up, just contiune to play on his phone. One of our old tenants gf/bf studying at BCIT. They ever bother to vacum at all. When they left we had to throw away the bed/mattress we let them use. It was cover this mud/blood stains. Smell like shit I guess coz there are blood stains all over. I never know people can actually live like this. I mean I am a pretty messy person and lazy person but god I would never fall to that level. I think one common feeling Chinese have is that since it is not their they just don't care. They didn't pay for it so why take such good care. If it is broken/ruin they aren't going to fix it. Also they aren't taught the basics common sense after they left home so they don't really know what to expect. |
^ Fuck people are disgusting. If I ever rent my place out to international students I'm asking for 3 months security deposit and a hold on their Daddy's Amex card. |
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http://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/hou...lines/gl29.pdf Quote:
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^Yeah but stupid lazy fobs can't even dispose of garbage and flush their shit properly, what's the chance they're all caught up with the RTA? :D |
The elephant in the room that no one wants to address... Quote:
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Its a big elephant. When it falls, its going to be loud. Whoever does it isnt going to be very popular either. Ive always been on the fairly negative side of this speculative market, but I've even thought of betting big into a house lately. |
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I e-mailed a realtor friend a few days ago because I have a family member who is looking to buy a 1 bedroom condo and here's what he said... Quote:
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I'm for extreme measures. No one should be able to own more than 3 homes. No corporations should be allowed to own any homes unless rentals. I don't care. Tank the value of my home. I live here, so I sure as shit don't care. Housing shouldn't be a commodity. |
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Let's just say the offer I put down for 1 bed and den that was starting at like $370k was over $400k easily AND it might be rejected Btw Everyone putting down offers was Chinese and everyone that was looking at the floor plans and samples was Chinese as well Forgot to mention there was no 1 bed 1 bath available for VIP purchase |
https://mobile.twitter.com/FIVRE604 I follow this guys twitter casually. Lots of tweets about developers selling vancouver buildings offshore while offering discounts and "guaranteeing" cap rates. On politics, its the same as corporate bs. Come in, shit all over the walls, ride the gravy train as long as possible, and then jump off before shit hits the fan, leaving the next person to come in to clean it all up. |
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Sadly, too many younger people in the market can't afford to pop the bubble. They have their entire life-saving (plus everything they'd get for years to come) tied in their home. They would live a miserable life for believing in this hype. |
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Take one good at Winnipeg. Sure housing is super cheap there you literally buy a mansion with 400k but you don't see people flocking their way there. It sucks there. There aren't much employment. Heck their whole DT is like 2 streets and that's it. Housing only becomes a commodity when people can't even afford to rent. Which is not happening. Accept the fact Vancouver is changing. I hear people always complain Vancouver is a boring city with nothing to do. Well is becoming more and more fun with more restaurants, more to do, more attractions all these comes with a price, which put Vancouver on the map for investment. Unless of coz you want Vancouver to blast back to lates 80s and the 90s where literally after 9pm you have nowhere to go. All the fancy restaurants you like or try are gone. You think Vancouver housing is bad? Check out other cities around the world and you will realize our real estate is still cheap here. Just because you are born here doesn't give you more rights than others. Don't like the fact you can't own? Make changes to your life. Buy farther away from the city, share a rental unit with friends to cut cost down, get a 2nd part time job, spend less. There is always a choice but I guess that's too much to ask. |
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