Calgary Herald

Potential 2026 Olympic bid sparks hope for more affordable housing

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Affordable housing advocates are hopeful a potential Calgary 2026 Olympic bid could help put a dent in the city’s shortfall.

A draft hosting plan unveiled last month by the bid corporatio­n, Calgary 2026, envisions converting some 2,800 units of temporary Olympic accommodat­ions for athletes, officials and media into longterm housing. Only 20 per cent of that would go for market rates, with the rest set aside for people in need.

Of the plan’s $5.2-billion price tag, $583 million would be for housing.

The co-chair of the Community Housing Affordabil­ity Collective, an umbrella organizati­on of private and not-for-profit players in the sector, said the city has a 15,000-unit affordable housing gap.

“If I do a projection 10 years from now, that number may well be 20,000, depending on the economic situation and the number of Calgarians in need,” said Martina Jileckova, who is also CEO of the non-profit Horizon Housing Society.

So while the Olympic infusion wouldn’t solve the problem, a few thousand more units would help, she said. But that’s only as long as it’s on top of, not instead of, other sources of funding, like the National Housing Strategy.

“We want to make sure that we continue to invest into affordable housing through other streams.”

She adds that she hopes the notfor-profit sector can contribute ideas to this aspect of the plan, since it has in-depth knowledge of what people will need.

The bid corporatio­n’s plan mentions converting Olympic housing into a 200-unit seniors complex, urban Indigenous housing and student housing.

The executive director of Vibrant Communitie­s Calgary, a poverty-reduction group, says the national average of housing that’s affordable is six per cent, whereas in Calgary it’s only 3.6 per cent.

So anything to help close the gap, including the Olympics, would be welcome, said Franco Savoia.

“It’s one more step. Is it the solution? No. But it’s part of the solution,” Savoia said. “We’d be very, very supportive of more affordable housing coming on stream, whatever the mechanism.”

The CEO of a Calgary building industry group said increasing the supply of market housing would also help those in need.

“The best thing that can happen is that there is not only choice, but affordabil­ity for market housing, which reduces pressure on affordable housing, or in-need housing,” said Guy Huntingfor­d of Building Industry Land Developmen­t.

Housing affordabil­ity is also a major issue in Canmore, the idyllic Rocky Mountain town an hour west of Calgary that would host some events.

“If you’ve been in Canmore for a long time and got in the market 20 years ago, you’re probably doing all right,” said town chief administra­tive officer Lisa de Soto. “But the average cost of a single family home is nearing $1 million, so it’s clearly out of reach of most people.”

The bid corporatio­n’s plan calls for 240 affordable housing units in Canmore to be managed by the city’s housing corporatio­n.

“That’s very meaningful for us, even though it’s potentiall­y seven or eight years away.”

But professor Stacy Lorenz says no one should bank on the Olympics, citing the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Village as a cautionary tale.

“They ended up losing a lot of money on it while not even coming close to delivering on the promises they had made, or on the projection­s they had suggested for the number of units for social housing that would be built,” said Lorenz, whose research at the University of Alberta focuses on the sociologic­al and historical aspects of sports.

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG ?? Horizon Housing’s Glamorgan affordable-housing project, was under constructi­on in March. Calgary has an affordable housing gap.
GAVIN YOUNG Horizon Housing’s Glamorgan affordable-housing project, was under constructi­on in March. Calgary has an affordable housing gap.

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