Marpole’s new social housing project lays out welcome mat
Vancouver offers tour of 78-unit complex as homeless tenants prepare to move in
The units in the modular apartment building set to open in Marpole this month are small, just 250 sq. feet, but each will offer a homeless person their own small kitchen and bathroom with a shower stall.
Officials took journalists on a tour of the temporary apartment block, built of prefabricated units, that is nearing completion in the south Vancouver neighbourhood.
City council approved the 78 units of social housing at Heather Street and 59th Avenue in November.
Luke Harrison, CEO of the Vancouver Affordable Housing Agency, led the tour of one of the two buildings that Horizon North began building off-site in mid-October.
Each unit’s kitchen has a stovetop and microwave oven.
Fourteen wheelchair-accessible units are about 25 sq. ft. larger.
The buildings both feature a 770 sq. ft. common area, dining space and shared laundry. The land was provided by developer Onni Group for a term of five years.
Mayor Gregor Robertson said the primary goal of the temporary housing is to immediately address Metro Vancouver’s homelessness emergency — 3,605 people in the region at last count, including 2,138 in Vancouver — by bringing some of Marpole’s most vulnerable indoors.
Tenants will be 45 and older, people with disabilities and homeless living in the local neighbourhood.
“We are thrilled to see these buildings opening now,” Robertson said.
The buildings will have roundthe-clock support services provided by non-profit operator Community Builders Group.
Provincial housing minister Selina Robinson said the goal of the housing is to bring stability to the lives of its tenants.
“We all know that no one should be without a home, without a safe, supportive environment,” she said.
“Modular housing provides a meaningful and efficient response to people who are suffering, people who need help.”
Robertson acknowledged the furor that broke out in the community when the project was announced, much of it from locals who said they supported housing the homeless but not in their neighbourhood.
He chalked up a lot of the outrage to the spread of misinformation, despite the city’s efforts to reach residents through public information sessions and mail outs.
“We had a very aggressive timeline to get the housing open this winter,” Robertson said.
“The challenge is with communications and making sure that accurate information gets out to the community. We can always do more.”
The buildings are blocks away from Churchill’s Ideal Mini School, Sir Wilfrid Laurier elementary school and Sir Winston Churchill secondary.
Four students from the high school who are outspoken supporters of the housing attended Saturday’s tour. Pastors who put together “welcome kits” for the tenants came, too.
Robertson commended the students and said the city and B.C. Housing are committed to ensuring the building works well with the community. Liaisons will be tasked with addressing any local concerns. Some locals came for a tour earlier in the week.
B.C. Housing is now vetting tenants, who are expected to start moving in before the month is over.
Robertson said the city will continue working to build 1,000 units of social and supportive housing by the end of 2018 and a total of 12,000 units over the next decade, with temporary modular housing serving as a “stepping stone” to permanent housing.
Last fall, the B.C. government earmarked $66 million for 600 units of temporary modular housing on cityowned land in Vancouver. Sites being considered for the remaining 522 units include the 500-Block West 2nd Ave., 4410 Kaslo St., 501 Powell St. and the 1100-Block Franklin Street. The city opened a 40-unit building at 220 Terminal Ave. last year.