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Category Archives: Laneway House

Support laneway houses in Vancouver!

We knew that the City of Vancouver was discussing laneway houses.

But now they are asking for our input.

Want to show some support?

 Council referred proposed amendments to the laneway housing regulations and guidelines, and expansion of the program to Public Hearing on June 11th, 2013

interested in what they have to say?  Here’s the proposed amendments. I have to admit I flagged about page 32, but then, my evenings are full of placing items in cardboard boxes prior to the big move.  I will read it, and I will be at that meeting if it is at all possible.

Gotta walk the walk, know what I mean?

Thanks to the guys at Lanefab for the heads-up.

Still packing and purging

DH was out of town doing good works in Ottawa from Wednesday to Saturday last week.  I had big plans to do a lot of packing, but surprised myself by actually doing less.  I had forgotten how much work a person who works at home does while he’s home — working.  There were piles of laundry that did not magically transform themselves into clean clothes; cat dishes that did not get filled; litter boxes that did not empty themselves; dishes that stubbornly remained dirty. And get this — the refrigerator does not spontaneously make food! It’s nice living the life of the ridiculously spoiled, and I didn’t even mind being reminded that I do.

But he returned to us late Saturday night and by Sunday afternoon we had a nice pile of boxes to take over to the rental. The big move is next Sunday, and we’ll be schlepping boxes over to the storage space next Saturday, so things are back on track. And I used the Victoria day holiday to pack like a fiend again.

We are currently living in what Stephanie at the blog Scoutie Girl calls “home limbo“.

that space between the moment we start dismantling our current home, and the moment we declare ourselves satisfactorily settled into our new one

And that’s where we’ll be until we’re in the laneway.

The rental looks better every time I see it.  There’s lots of light, and the neighbourhood is great.  The kitchen is teensy, and I was stowing some stuff away and remarked to DH that living there would be like camping, just using what we needed, with no spares or extraneous stuff.  He gave me a grave look, and explained that this is the way we will be living for the rest of our lives.  We will be getting rid of stuff from now till the move into the laneway, this is just the first step.

Stephanie suggests purging inclusively

decluttering through the lens of what you want to keep, vs. what you want to get rid of

Look at whatever-it-is and ask yourself, not “do I really want to throw this away?” but “do I really want to keep this?”  Find space for it in our new place?  Displace something else just to have this around?

Makes decisions a little easier to make.

Week 2

When Laurel sent us the list of stuff that had to be done, I was expecting things to stay pretty static during the last week.

But when we dropped by yesterday we could see real progress.

It’s still a hole in the ground.  But now it’s a level hole, with gravel!

Day8.1No more excavator sitting in our kitchen!  Just a lovely level lot with places for water to come in and flow out.

The rest of the yard is completely out of bounds

Day8.2with red danger tape up.  And the back fence is up with danger tape on that.

But it’s looking more like home to me.

DH took another shot to show the difference.

Week 0

LWHTime1Week 2

LWHTime3Only 28 more weeks to go.

 

 

 

 

A new career opportunity? you could clean up!

We are packing and packing and packing.  And then we look around — and nothing’s packed.

It’s amazing how much crap er stuff one collects in just 13 years.  In less than 1500 square feet.  I’m throwing out tons.  And giving tons away.  But there’s still so much stuff!

Wouldn’t it be lovely if someone would come in and take care of all this for me?

Like Christine Smart of Designing Moves.

According to this article, she is just the sort of person who will take care of all those tedious details, like she did for the Thorpes of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

 She dove right in, arranging an auction, handling online sales on craigslist and eBay, and donating to charities. Ms. Smart also oversaw move-related details, such as cataloging items, space planning, packing, shipping and unpacking.

People in their senior years (ahem!) are downsizing from large homes to small. There is such a need for people who help the downsizers adapt to their new life that there’s  a National Association of Senior Move Managers.

Give me a few days and I will be on the phone to get their help.

Come on in!

Have you ever been stuck somewhere, expecting guests, and no way to let them into your home?  No? Have you ever forgotten your keys? Or lost them?

Well, welcome to the 21st century — we have an app for that.

Thanks to Life Edited for turning us on to Kwikset — and Kevo.  Now that device you carry around that is your phone, your camera, your computer, your atlas, your mailbox, your stereo, and most of your life can also be your keys.

Kevo will open your lock and let you in — or it will open your lock and let your guest in, even though you might be anywhere on earth.

It’s like it’s a smart lock, in your purse or pocket.

DoorknobWhat if you lose your phone?  Can it be hacked? Don’t ask me, ask them.  But it seems like a very good idea.

Ain’t no place like a hole in the ground

I am crushed and downhearted by this recent provincial election.  Not because of the result.  I am disappointed by the result.  No, I am crushed and downhearted because over half the people in this province who were eligible to vote did not do so.

Really, people? Ever hear of the responsibilities of citizenship?  Universal sufferage?  One person, one vote?

I don’t want to hear your feeble excuses.  Woody Allen said that 80 percent of success is just showing up.  So next time, when we need you, show up already.

’nuff said.

Our home is currently a hole in the ground.  And as Bugs Bunny once sang, there ain’t no place like a hole in the ground.

with a big fat goon a’ floating around.

Now our land is well dug up, we were expecting to be moving along quite briskly.  But as Yosemite Sam might say, “Hold on, there, pardner”.  Life is a little more complicated than just building a hole in the ground and having someone pour concrete around it (see cartoon, above).

First:

  • our builders (Novell) will be preparing the site for WCB safety – tarps over dirt, barrier from falls, safe path of travel for surveyors and workers, etc.
  • there will be an inspection by Geo-Technical Engineer – for soil stability
  • there will be an inspection by WCB – for safety
  • then once they have the above items squared away, Novell will schedule the land surveyor to come and lay down markers that denote the corners for foundation.
These inspections will take at least a few days – by next week we hope to be into forming the foundation walls.
We’ll meet Novell for our first semi-weekly meeting next week.
Till then, as far as the build goes,  that’s all folks!

Day 1, Week 1, Part 2

DH has decided to create a little time-lapse record of the build, and has found the perfect place to shoot a picture to capture the most action.

Here’s a shot he took a few weeks ago:

LWHTime1Note the parking pad and fence across the yard.

Here’s yesterday’s shot:

LWHTime2I had hardly noticed the retaining wall in the neighbour’s yard before, with all the bushes about, but now you can see it quite clearly.

We’ll be putting more of these time lapse shots as the build progresses.

 

 

Day 1, Week 1

We were very excited when Laurel our designer told us that the excavator could start work on Monday, May 13.

So we were delirious when she said that they could actually start on Saturday, May 11!

The first thing I did was to take down the wall calendar and with my so-handy-for-labelling-moving-boxes Sharpie, marked a big “30” on the box for Saturday, May 11, and counted down each Saturday until November 30 — a 30-week build!

We were pretty busy yesterday with moving chores, but DD was on the spot to commemorate the moment when the excavator arrived.

Day1.7

It didn’t take long until the concrete slab at the back of the lot was demolished.

Day1.2

Day1.3

Day1.4

Day1.5

Day1.6

We dropped by after the fact to get a good look at a big pile of dirt.  No surprises in the way of oil tanks, boulders, or abandoned graveyards.

We are definitely on our way.

Be listening to the Home Discovery Show this Sunday!

As you do every week!

Sunday morning bright and early (well, early anyway) I’ll be speaking with Ian and Steve of The Home Discovery Show about our laneway adventure — and I may have some news to share!

So stay tuned!

Laneway homes in the news

Two stories in the Vancouver Sun today about laneway homes:

West Vancouver is considering allowing laneway homes.  Or, as they say in the carriage trade, “coach houses”.

As a community planner put it all into perspective,

“We have a community that is aging, that needs different housing options. We have younger families who are having difficulty establishing themselves or remaining in West Vancouver because of the cost of housing,” Mikicich said. “At the same time, it’s a community that highly values the established character of its neighbourhoods.”

It’s a way to increase density in this charming suburb of Vancouver without incurring the “monster house” syndrome. As Jake Fry of Smallworks remarked,

“You may have more roofs per acre, but they’re going to be smaller roofs. They’ll probably even have less square footage per city lot, but there’s going to be more families and you’ll see the … communities become much more dynamic”

In this story, homeowners who have build laneway homes and applied for HST (now GST) rebates were instead charged bills by the CRA.  The Canada Revenue Agency rules are not just confusing, they can be contradictory.

It LOOKS straightforward, you build a house and apply for a tax rebate.

But where the rules may get sticky — especially in high-priced Vancouver — is when it comes to determining the value of a laneway home built as a rental.

“The GST/HST new residential rental property rebate is limited to rental units that are less than $450,000 at the time of substantial completion of construction,” CRA said.”

Most laneways can be built for less than $450K, but if you take the value of the property into account the value would be much greater.

To me, this is ridiculous.  You cannot find a property in Vancouver that is worth less than $450K.  As the writer, Don Cayo, says, determining the added cost of the property is difficult and moot:

But simple division may, in fact, overestimate the land value — it hasn’t been subdivided and it can’t ever be, so there’s no market reference to determine its value. Land assessments are usually based on “highest and best use,” but there’s no other use — or only unlikely or very limited use — for pieces of property that small. So their “worth” is highly hypothetical.

I’m taking more than a casual interest in how this plays out, so stay tuned for updates.

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