The Province

Modular housing plan faces pushback

Some cite property values, safety concerns over three-storey project to house the homeless

- CHERYL CHAN FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG chchan@postmedia.com Twitter.com/cherylchan

The City of Richmond’s proposal to build its first modular housing project for homeless people is already facing opposition.

Hundreds of people packed an open house Wednesday to get more informatio­n about the project slated for 7300 Elmbridge Way.

“We’ve been getting a diverse range of viewpoints,” said Joyce Rautenberg, the city’s affordable housing coordinato­r.

If approved, the 40-unit three-storey project could make a serious dent in Richmond’s homeless figures, which grew 84 per cent to 70 people in 2017 from 38 in 2014, although homeless advocates believe the real number is close to 120.

The building will be erected on city-owned land used as an off-leash dog park in the Oval Village neighbourh­ood and would be in place for five years.

Adjacent to an ICBC Claim Centre and across the street from a hardware store, the lot is surrounded by about a dozen condo towers that lie within a two-block radius, with more market housing developmen­ts on the way.

Rautenberg said the project site was chosen because it’s close to transit, health agencies and other support services. Spaces will be given to Richmond residents first.

Operator Raincity Housing said there will be a minimum of two staff on-site round the clock every day.

“People don’t choose to be homeless or unwell,” said Catherine Hume of Raincity. “By providing support and services, we allow people to be integrated back into communitie­s.”

But some residents are not happy with the project’s location.

Yi Lu, a resident who lives in a building across the street, said the neighbourh­ood is one of the densest residentia­l areas in Richmond yet there is only one dog park that serves as green space for residents.

“It is not fair to build modular housing in this area,” she said, noting

the last Metro Vancouver homeless count only found 29 unsheltere­d homeless out of the 70. “If you build this here, it might attract homeless from other cities to come here.”

Rautenberg said the site design will incorporat­e a shared dog park on the north end of the property.

Outside the library where the open house was held, a woman was busy collecting signatures for a petition against the project. Some people expressed concern about safety, while others felt the project could hurt property values.

An online petition by a group called Oval Village Residents is urging mayor and council to reject the project over safety concerns and what it feels is a lack of transparen­cy from the city.

The proposed project would be within a 10-minute walk from six daycares and about a kilometre away from an elementary school, it said.

Across B.C., the prefabrica­ted dwellings are increasing­ly being used as an option to ease homelessne­ss. Last year, the NDP government announced a $291-million modular housing plan to put 2,000 such units across the province over two years.

It is providing about $5.9 million toward the Richmond project.

Ruth Goodchild welcomed the project, although she was careful to say she doesn’t live near the site.

“It sounds like it’s very much needed ... and that a lot of the people who are vulnerable aren’t necessaril­y people who would have hazardous kinds of behaviour,” she said.

Vancouver has completed two modular housing projects, with three other sites identified.

 ??  ?? Joyce Rautenberg, affordable housing coordinato­r for Richmond, says she has received ‘a diverse range of viewpoints’ on a plan to build modular housing at 7300 Elmbridge Way.
Joyce Rautenberg, affordable housing coordinato­r for Richmond, says she has received ‘a diverse range of viewpoints’ on a plan to build modular housing at 7300 Elmbridge Way.

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