Vancouver Sun

B.C. recreation­al real estate prices surge

Buyers looking further afield as COVID measures free workers from the office

- JOANNE LEE- YOUNG jlee-young@postmedia.com

Vancouver landscape architect Paul Sangha has long created gorgeous gardens and outdoor spaces for homes in the city, but this year, he is juggling a dramatic switch for his services in far-flung, recreation­al properties.

It's not just at Whistler, he said. “That, we would traditiona­lly get. But now it's jumped to Bowen Island and Pemberton, and then also into the Okanagan, as well as into Lake Country ( between Kelowna and Vernon). We never did work in Tofino before.”

“People are putting more money into their (out-of-city) properties because they're spending more time there,” he said.

Across Canada, prices are surging for such assets. The aggregate price of a single-family home in the recreation­al market rose 11.5 per cent to $453,046, and the aggregate price of a waterfront property jumped by 13.5 per cent to $498,111, according to a survey of recreation­al property prices from January to September 2020 by broker Royal LePage.

In B.C., Whistler (up 18.3 per cent) and Kimberley/Cranbrook (up 27.4 per cent) showed the biggest year-over-year gains for January to September for single-family homes in the recreation­al market during the first nine months of the year. Condo prices also gained 15.5 per cent.

It is a trend linked to what is happening in places such as Ontario's “cottage country,” where single-family recreation­al home prices went up 25 per cent in Rideau Lake, 44 per cent in Gravenhurs­t, 28 per cent in the Haliburton Highlands, and 17 per cent in North Muskoka. In Quebec, prices for this category in the Laurentide­s saw a 27 per cent gain, while Sutton saw a 36 per cent gain.

“You don't have to be at your house (for work) anymore,” said Rudy Nielsen of New Westminste­r-based Niho Land and Cattle Co., which has been selling recreation­al properties in B.C. for nearly 50 years.

He sees two kinds of buyers right now. “One says, `Hey, I can do my job from anywhere.' And the (other) is the worried buyer, which we have had for years. It's the `All hell is going break loose and this (pandemic) thing isn't going away. I'm going to buy 160 acres, build a cabin and plant potatoes and live happily ever after.'”

He said it has been one of the best years his various companies have had in a quarter-century of selling ranches and lakeside properties.

“The pandemic has made people re-evaluate their lifestyle,” said Vancouver realtor Faith Wilson, adding a long list of considerat­ions ranging from privacy and safety to shifting travel and family plans.

There has been a mix of buyers of lakefront and ski-hill properties near Fernie, both from Alberta, which is close, but also more from Vancouver, said Cranbrook-based Philip Jones, owner of the Royal LePage in East Kootenay.

“There are people buying strictly recreation­al properties, and also some of these buyers are buying what we consider convention­al homes here,” said Jones. “Some are buying raw land.”

Sangha said some clients just want help transformi­ng recreation­al land they own, even as they look ahead to making it more elaborate.

“Is there a tent that we could put out so we can enjoy the property in the short term? There are some beautiful, (high-end) ones that some local companies are making that are really like you're definitely glamping.”

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP/ FILES ?? Landscape architect Paul Sangha says he is being called upon to revamp more recreation­al properties throughout the province as owners are spending more time outside the city now that the pandemic has severed ties to offices.
ARLEN REDEKOP/ FILES Landscape architect Paul Sangha says he is being called upon to revamp more recreation­al properties throughout the province as owners are spending more time outside the city now that the pandemic has severed ties to offices.

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