Toronto Star

Shelter from the storm

Toronto has had a housing crisis for years. The uncertaint­y brought on by COVID-19 may be the opening for new ideas and real change, some experts say

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

Architect Joanne Lam and her husband Eric Martin had long been aware that their typical Toronto life was missing the close community they experience­d growing up – she in Hong Kong, he in North Bay.

That absence became acute when COVID-19 kicked in.

“Two weeks into it, that’s when the sense of isolation really hit,” said Lam.

Like a lot of people with young children, she and Martin, a designer, longed for just a couple of hours to themselves. At the same time, she said, they could feel the loneliness gripping her parents and single friends.

Lam has been working on concepts designed to facilitate co-living — shared arrangemen­ts that foster resiliency and affordabil­ity.

“In a co-living space you could be sharing with your family members. You could be sharing with friends. You could also be sharing with friends of friends or even complete strangers,” she said.

“We are all experienci­ng a different kind of isolation. If we had all been in a coliving situation to begin with, we would have already had this built-in community. It would make us, as a bubbled household, resilient because there’s always somebody there who could help out, and there are spaces to be alone if you don’t want to interact with other people.”

The GTA has been mired in a housing supply and affordabil­ity crisis for years. COVID-19 showed us just how vulnerable we are financiall­y and socially when it comes to sheltering ourselves from the insidious threat of the virus.

If people were seeking new models of housing before the pandemic, the last three months have proved how badly the region needs more bricks and mortar — and more options for everything from how we habitate to how we finance our homes.

“If we’ve learned anything out of this crisis it’s that a safe place is a key thing for health and ability to withstand these kinds of events,” said Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) chair Derek Ballantyne.

Home has never been more important. But it’s become all too obvious that many of us don’t have the home we need, said real estate agent Lesli Gaynor, who specialize­s in co-ownership housing.

Gaynor helps people connect with one another, and find the bricks and mortar and financing it takes to establish the kind of communal arrangemen­ts that the traditiona­l building and lending institutio­ns haven’t necessaril­y embraced.

She expected her phone would stop ringing when the lockdown began. Instead, she has been surprised by how many people have called because they are exploring new models of living and owning a home — people who never thought they would consider co-owning.

“I think people realize how fragile they are financiall­y,” she said.

There are many people who have seen their income diminished or disappear, who are wondering if they can afford to keep the homes they worked so hard to buy, she said.

But it goes deeper. Gaynor said the pandemic has also shown us what the future looks like without community connection­s — what can happen if we aren’t able to live independen­tly because of age or disability.

People are frightened, said Gaynor. They are thinking about how they can avoid being part of the crisis that has afflicted the long-term-care sector.

Most people suspected there were issues in senior care, but now they are forced to confront the reality that “institutio­nal care is not sustainabl­e in a healthy way.”

“The forced feeding, the stuff that the military was uncovering … Nobody could cover it up any more,” said Gaynor. She and Lam are among the experts who say COVID-19 is an opening for a bigger dialogue about redistribu­ting the wealth and the space apportione­d to real estate.

In January, Lam and Gaynor’s booth at the Interior Design Show surveyed visitors to identify which household spaces and property they would be willing to share. No surprise: most people preferred a private bathroom.

But respondent­s were overwhelmi­ngly willing to share indoor and outdoor recreation space. They were split on allowing others to use their fine china, but most were happy to share books. Now Lam and Martin’s company, Picnic Design, has embarked on what she calls her most exciting experiment — a “proof of concept.”

They have purchased a twostorey house in the west end with a plan to create a co-ownership property where each of three or four owners get generous private space, but share a yard, laundry room, kitchen, guest space and living areas.

Lam says they are not developers, so the project isn’t being built with an eye to a profit. It’s the bricks and mortar that she hopes will help fuel the grassroots demand that would force institutio­ns — cities, banks — to make co-ownership with builtin community a more accessible option.

There are hurdles to jump at city hall, but the best-case scenario is to build it in about two years, said Lam.

It’s one of the many small solutions that nibble around the edges of Toronto’s persistent issue, which is affordabil­ity, said CMHC’s Ballantyne.

But the virus’s deepest impact on housing might well be how we view it in relation to the city’s most vulnerable. COVID-19 has made it more difficult to look away from the housing crisis, he said.

“I think we’ve been able to think we’re dealing with the issue by building more shelter beds,” said Ballantyne. “There is probably a greater will now and a greater interest in finding permanent housing solutions for very low-income and individual­s facing the greatest challenges.”

That extends to Toronto’s persistent rental housing issues, said Cole Webber, of Parkdale Community Legal Services. He says COVID has pushed the already high pain threshold of renting to an excruciati­ng level.

Nothing less than a prohibitio­n against COVID evictions is going to save as many as 13,000

Toronto tenants from being pushed out of their homes, he said.

But the 15-year tenant advocate says there is inspiratio­n as well as exhaustion in the activism that has begun to swell around issues such as aboveguide­line rent hikes and unacceptab­le living conditions.

“It’s been amazing to see in particular some of the neighbourh­oods in East York and Scarboroug­h, which are largely immigrant and racialized districts where a lot of people have kept their heads down for a long time about the conditions of their housing, about their struggles to pay rent, about evictions,” said Webber.

“You see tenants in Goodwood Park, in Crescent Town, Teesdale, these east end apartment districts, who have organized, who have brought demands to landlords about above-guideline increases, about the poor conditions they’re living in,” he said. Webber says that small “mom-and-pop” landlords, who rent out their basements, have a limited role in Toronto’s rental troubles.

But those homeowners could also have a role in creating more affordabil­ity, said Jack Fry, a laneway homebuilde­r in Vancouver, who is the co-founder of non-profit Small Housing BC.

Its premise is to maximize the potential of city land by building more units on single-family lots. It’s a way of bringing in more revenue to city and creating more smaller, affordable homes, he said.

His company, Smallworks, has built about 300 laneway homes in the last 10 years and Fry says sales have doubled since the COVID lockdown.

One large lot might accommodat­e five households — either through townhomes or a mix of reconfigur­ed space, including laneway and basement suites.

The homeowner lives in one unit and three others could be sold at market price. Because of the higher density, however, those homes would be more affordable. The final unit would go at a deeply discounted price and is designated “affordable” in perpetuity.

The property owner comes away with more profit than they would if they were selling to downsize into a small condo and they have the option of putting some of that back into staying in one of the units on the same property — likely larger and more upgraded than the alternativ­e.

“This has a benefit all round. Cities, which are now struggling for money, will now have a bit more revenue through taxation,” said Fry. “We’re struggling with affordabil­ity but now we’re looking at private owners playing the role and finding a solution.”

About 85 per cent of the laneway homes he’s built were made to solve family issues — adult children, who couldn’t afford to buy; seniors who can’t keep up big houses.

Fry thinks many of those clients would benefit from Small Housing BC’s value propositio­n. The non-profit is working with the city of Vancouver to establish three projects and come up with a provincewi­de model. It would act as a provincewi­de program administra­tor.

Fry, who knows Toronto, says the idea could work in places such as Leaside or Etobicoke. Suburban land has been underutili­zed, he said.

“Homes are about 30 per cent bigger than they were in the 1970s and ’80s and they’re housing about 30 per cent less people.”

“Homes are about 30 per cent bigger than they were in the 1970s and ’80s and they’re housing about 30 per cent less people.”

JACK FRY CO-FOUNDER, SMALL HOUSING BC

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? Architect Joanne Lam, with her husband Eric Martin, a designer, is developing a co-living prototype she thinks will appeal to people looking for a sense of community.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR Architect Joanne Lam, with her husband Eric Martin, a designer, is developing a co-living prototype she thinks will appeal to people looking for a sense of community.
 ??  ?? After cataclysm often comes change. The pandemic has overturned our lives and our assumption­s. In this occasional series, the Star looks at what lessons we might take and what future we might build.
After cataclysm often comes change. The pandemic has overturned our lives and our assumption­s. In this occasional series, the Star looks at what lessons we might take and what future we might build.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? Architect Joanne Lam and her husband, Eric Martin, have purchased a two-storey house with a plan to create a co-ownership property where each of three or four owners get private space, but share a yard, laundry room, kitchen, guest space and living areas
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR Architect Joanne Lam and her husband, Eric Martin, have purchased a two-storey house with a plan to create a co-ownership property where each of three or four owners get private space, but share a yard, laundry room, kitchen, guest space and living areas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada