Windsor Star

Condos fuel records in housing starts amid hot economy

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS AND GREG QUINN

OTTAWA Last year was a blockbuste­r for Canada’s real estate developers after work began on the most homes in a decade amid soaring demand nationwide.

Constructi­on started on 219,675 units, according to 2017 data Tuesday from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. That’s up from 197,916 in 2016 and the most since 2007. Starts on multiple-unit projects such as condos hit a record in figures dating to 1955.

The boom has surprised policy makers and analysts, most of whom began the year predicting the industry would be a drag on the economy. It reflects fundamenta­l drivers such as a buoyant economy and rising population.

Robert Kavcic, an economist at Bank of Montreal in Toronto, said the strong year for housing starts was “backed by underlying demographi­c support and strengthen­ing labour markets in the country’s largest provinces.”

The 2017 surge was broadbased, with starts in Ontario at the highest level since 2004 and reaching records in British Columbia.

They advanced in Alberta for the first time since the 2014 oil crash.

The increased activity mostly sidesteppe­d land-constraine­d Toronto and Vancouver, the country’s two most expensive markets, but was robust in the suburbs and less pricey surroundin­g cities. Starts in Toronto fell one per cent to 38,738 in 2017, while declining six per cent in Vancouver to 26,204 units. In Montreal, Canada’s second most populous city, starts jumped 39 per cent to 24,756.

Builders began work on 142,840 multiple units in 2017, up 15 per cent from 2016. That was driven by new constructi­on of 102,516 apartment-like homes, the highest since 1973, and 28,033 row-like homes, the highest for that category since 1976.

Demand has remained strong nationally even with prices in the Toronto region coming off from records.

The latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n show national home prices are up 9.3 per cent over the past year, bringing five year gains to 48 per cent. Even in Toronto, prices are up 8.4 per cent over the past 12 months.

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