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I think with the whole insurance crap going on, I'm not sure if finding a condo/apartment is the wisest option in the longer term. Assuming you want to have easy/quick access to Skytrain, just start looking along the skytrain lines. I might suggest a fixer-upper TH or duplex along the line (albeit further away). |
^ Oh yah sure, everyone with a $500k budget (hence why they are shopping for condos in the first place) will just up it to $900k+ no problem at all. Why didn't everyone think of that? |
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I said fixer-upper and further out of the town but along the Skytrain. When you factor in the extra paid in insurance, strata fee... etc. A 500k in Joyce (which is basically at the border of Vancouver) vs. an older TH in Burnaby with about 600k (certainly available a quick look on realtor.ca) and if non-strata even better, rare but certainly exist... I don't think the out of pocket monthly payment is much favorable for the 500k condo in Joyce. I honestly don't see a 500k condo in Joyce to be much nicer than a 600k old TH that's move in ready from a quick look on Realtor.ca. Not to mention the TH is usually bigger in size. |
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The area is definitely becoming a mix of families and student rentals. My biggest beef is the irresponsible people that throw away house hold garbage in the public garbage cans as they walk to campus instead of the garbage bins in their building's garbage rooms. Weekends are pretty quiet. Never heard any loud partying. We loved how Nesters was a quick walk away and they selection has improved a lot, though their produce suck. Driving downtown in the mornings wasn't bad except if you left a tad late as the traffic onto the second narrows bridge can get backed up. The second biggest beef with SFU/Burnaby Mountain is that everything is lease hold. That is the sole reason units there are more affordable. |
Where is this arcade bar at SFU? |
why are arcade bars still open at SFU? |
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I looked, there are a grand total of 2 "townhouses" in all of Burnaby under $600,000, 1 of them is mis-labelled and is actually a condo out by Highway 1 and the other one is 740 sq ft in size in a shit stain of a building. Yah I'd say the $500k in Joyce area is a lot nicer. Besides that, you're missing the part where someone can magically be approved for $100k more than they were before, you think $100k extra mortgage is nothing to people? Townhouses have massive strata fees and insurance issues too! Some are even higher than condo fees now. So what are you actually advising here? People overspend for no reason? Buy something even more expensive and in need of more repairs to avoid some "maybe" insurance premium rise? Good advice bro. |
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https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...8eaf456e_b.jpg You want to talk specific examples, all the power to you. What I was suggesting was simple. If by going out a bit, spend a tad extra (in purchase price) while not having to deal with the ongoing insurance problem/cost that MANY of condo buildings are facing, it makes more sense in the long run. If you have an argument against that very specific statement, I'm all ears. I've been dealing with RE for the last 20years with my family (albeit mostly commercial or development) so I'm quite well-versed in the topic, and would love to see something I got wrong after 20yrs. But you are trying to say that I was suggesting him to go from a shoebox to a mansion, which I wasn't. |
The bar is called "The Study". 4 Ping pong tables, a pool table, and some fun arcade games...very big space too. It's been closed since Covid so don't worry haha. |
So how bad is the insurance issue for people to suggest paying 100K+ more for a “fixer upper” TH than a condo? Genuinely curious cause I don’t know. Does this only affect condos or also strata townhouses? |
We looked at a lot of town homes (albeit ones costing more than $600k). The main downsides for me was the main living area of a TH is often no bigger than a condo, and that's where you spend most of your time. Only difference is TH bedrooms are upstairs, as opposed to a condo. In a building where strata fees are charged per sf, you're looking at $600 - $800 per month or more, on average, just for strata fees. So we stuck with a decent sized condo. Less square footage than a TH, but similar size main living area, and much lower strata fees. |
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But for many stratas, not having an insurance is not an option because many would lose the minimum requirement set by lenders. The issue arise mainly in the way condo is structured. When you are trying to fix a core problem, unlike townhouses where it's unit by unit (and you tend to have less units in the same space), you have to fix the whole building or else it might spill into other floors in another date. If you are looking into condos or really any strata units, you should DEFINITELY request their strata meeting minutes of the last few years as well as assessments, because in some of the buildings, it has gotten so bad that it simply got postponed but never fixed the problem because people simply can't afford to pay for it. |
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I can't qualify for a $600 - 800k duplex/townhouse in Burnaby, it'd be great if I could haha. But I don't think anyone is able to buy a property that expensive in their 20's without having help from family or a SO. I've also received recommendations that I stay on the lower range of the purchase price $400 - 450k since it's my first home. Who knows if I will move south or east for work later on. |
I'm not sure where you guys are getting the numbers for strata fees, condos are easily $400+ a month for anything bigger than 600sq, all the town houses I've looked at under the $700k price range has strata fees between $200 to $300. And I'm getting something twice the size, more bed rooms, private garage plus lower insurance costs. Once you get into 2+ bedroom apartments town houses are the way to go. |
Our property management company was successful in renewing insurance for our 80-something unit townhouse complex today. Our sewer backup coverage deductible went up to 50K from 25K, which I understand is pretty typical. Our total premium also doubled, but at least we have insurance coverage for another year. |
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-Mark |
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Small sample but single family homes are moving quickly in Victoria. Kind of surprising the market is still hot. Day 1 this was listed there were 7 showings and 2 offers over ask. Ask was $835k and offers were $890k zero conditions and $895 subject to inspection. They took the $890k zero subjects. https://www.realtor.ca/real-estate/2...-saanich-gorge |
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For stratas with only townhomes, you might find lower fees per square foot because the operating costs might be lower (i.e. no elevator maintenance, cleaning services for hallways, etc). Buddy of mine lived in a TH and a few years ago, when all the roofs and windows needed replacing/rainscreens, each unit was charged almost $100k special levy. Condos or townhomes, nothing is perfect. |
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If I recall correctly, the town home complex that charged $100k did all the roofs, windows, new siding, rainscreen, and somehow all of that ended up being close to $100k per unit. 96 units total, built in the late 70s. |
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