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Laneway Life

We swung by the laneway the other evening to have a look at the developments.  We found Angelito, our builder, patiently revamping the top of the stairs.  The inspector had asked that he change the staircase where it makes a 180 degree turn — from the landing just inside the garden-side door at the top of the first run to where it enters the kitchen part of the upper storey.  Apparently the way it was originally built it would not pass code.  I asked Angelito if these were the same stairs that the same inspector had been climbing every visit for the past six weeks.  He paused and said yes.

We then chatted about the next steps and how soon everything will be coming together.  Of course, to us, things are moving maddeningly slow.  We can’t always see the subtle but important steps that lead to the final product.  Angelito assured us that by the time of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation tour the place will be substantially finished.  That means exterior Hardie siding, insulation, drywall, painting, floors, cabinets, and lighting will all be done within the next couple of weeks.  We should see the home bloom before our eyes, as we did in the first weeks when the footings and foundation appeared to spring from the earth.  We are very excited, but I find I am a little anxious.  There is still so much to be done to get us ready for the move!

Every time we leave the laneway we walk down the lane, noticing yards where another laneway home could be built, adding to the lane community and to the ambience and livability of the lane.

We are very happy to be part of the laneway renaissance movement.  You don’t think that’s a real thing?  Thanks to This City Life, we know that cities around the world are taking back their alleyways, embracing them, repairing and renovating them.

Like in Seattle:

alleywayseattle

Montreal:

alleywaymontrealSydney:

alleywaysydney

Here in Vancouver Livable Laneways is an organization

dedicated to transforming the overlooked laneways and alleys of Vancouver into pedestrian-friendly civic spaces.

They recentlyheld an event in association with The Mount Pleasant Business Improvement Association.  There was music, vendors, food, and even a lovely art piece made out of a fire escape:

LeeBuildingArtpieceMore events are being planned for the future.  On the North Shore, an organization called More Fun Alleys had a contest to re-name an alley in North Vancouver.  The winner:  LoLo Lane.

Alleys can be wonderful places.  And they have great acoustics:

Acoustic of a saxophone player in Vancouver’s back alley from Alexandrine Boudreault-Fournier on Vimeo.

What should we name our lane?  I think Penny Lane is taken.

Densification. How is your city doing it?

Let’s face it, cities are running out of affordable housing.  To spread out into more and more far-flung suburbs is very expensive.  You need more amenities, schools, parks, hydro, sewers, transit lines and on and on.  It makes more sense that people fill in the existing neighbourhoods so more people can live there.  One of the answers is laneway homes but it would be too simplistic to suppose that it’s the only answer.  Other means of densification must be found.

the future of Vancouver?

the future of Vancouver?

Let’s look at the facts.  As we know, there are lies, damn lies, and statistics.  As this article in the Tyee shows, the current “trend” toward stabilization in the housing market in Vancouver is actually a continuing crisis.

In Vancouver, nearly half of us (46 per cent) are paying more for lodging than we can afford, at least according to the official definition. But some analysts warn that even these numbers could be understating the problem.

The statistics that lie to us are questionable because

the elimination of the mandatory long-form survey dealt an insurmountable blow to accurate data collection.

So when some people refer to Vancouver housing prices, they actually mean

everything from West Vancouver to Langley and all the way down to White Rock.

But here in the City of Vancouver we are running out of affordable housing.  Fast.  And densification seems the logical answer.

But while many people complain about Vancouver’s expensive housing, to just as many “density is a bad word,” notes Anne Mullin, president & CEO of the Urban Development Institute (UDI), which represents Canadian developers. “But it’s an important discussion to have.”

She’s alluding to neighbourhood uprisings that have blossomed across Vancouver against city hall’s efforts to boost density. Marpole residents, for instance, blocked a “thin streets” proposal to allow more houses per lot. Grandview-Woodland neighbours became incensed at the idea of high-rise towers being added to the bustling transit hub at Commercial and Broadway.

The answers are out there, let’s take a look at what’s happening in other cities.  Both are sea ports.  Both are first world communities.  And both are facing the same kind of problem as Vancouver is — a lack of affordable housing.

In Sydney, Australia, families are turning away from condos and

 $2,000 a quarter in strata fees, with remodelling, pet ownership and even visible decor frequently regulated.

In Australia properties are sold in auctions, and you can bet the prices get pushed up on attractive houses, even tiny ones.

Over 70 people turned out for the auction of a one-bedroom house on a 114 square metre block in Darlington, which fetched $951,000 — well over the suburb’s median house price of $757,000.

That’s about 1225 square feet in size.

The listing for a 139 square metre space in Balmain, which sold for $825,000, suggested that buyers could maximise the floor plan by building a second level.

A 300 square metre fibro cottage in Annandale, marketed as needing “a major overhaul”, sold for a cool $900,000.

Those are Vancouver prices!  And it doesn’t really add to affordability in neighbourhoods, rather is makes it worse by driving up the prices of the homes that are available.

In Seattle some developers are building “APodMents” — rooming houses with tiny apartments and shared amenities

One aPodment development, the Solana, has units that average 170 sq ft according to Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn, who has expressed his support of the developments (some units in other building are as small as 100 sq ft). The units come furnished (with no murphy beds so far as we know) and have their own bathroom and shower. Instead of a proper kitchen, they feature a fridge and microwave, with available communal kitchens. All utilities including wifi are included.

To say these buildings are experiencing push back is a gross understatement.  People owning houses worth millions are suddenly findings these developments sprouting up along their blocks.  And they are not happy.

Anyone who can scrape up enough money for month-to-month rent can live there…I don’t think most people want to live next to a boarding house with itinerant people living in it.

But in reality, tenants are not the usual SRO crowd

 The various articles we scanned reported of young Microsoft employees, recent college grads and divorcees on a fixed income occupying these apartments–not thugs looking for launchpads for heists.

Once again we see that if we are going to offer affordable housing for the people who pour our lattes, sell us our groceries and our clothes, teach our children and attend our universities, we are going to have to accept higher densification in all neighbourhoods.  Can we really say “Not In My Back Yard”?

Can you make your neighbourhood better?

DH and I were taking our customary walk down the alley from the rental to transit a couple of weeks ago, and he stopped and said “That’s what I’m afraid of at our place.”  It was graffiti, and not the nice stuff, either, just crude tags and initials.  But someone had used brown spray paint on nearly all the garage doors along one part of the crescent where we live.

graffiti

Like this but more obscene.

It was plain why they had chosen that particular set of homes.  The alley does not face other garages and homes, but rather a line of dense conifers hiding the lane from a very busy street.  Further along the crescent where garages face onto a lane flanked by a busy thoroughfare there was little or no graffiti.

Plus the yards along our alley all have high fences and two- or three-car garages, virtually a solid wall all the way along. You can’t see into your neighbour’s yard.  What we can glance through the occasional gate are more parked cars on concrete slabs and one rusting collapsed metal shed.  It’s like it was built just to accommodate graffiti.

And litter.  At one point there were five abandoned sofas mouldering on the boulevard, plus cardboard boxes and discarded stereo equipment.  That’s been removed, thank goodness.

These seemingly inconsequential transgressions can actually have a serious effect on the safety of the neighbourhood.  Studies have shown that in neighbourhoods with litter and graffiti, people become more disobedient.  Some people call it the “broken window” effect.  In areas where small “incivilities” are not repaired, like broken windows or graffiti, crime like theft and vandalism goes up.

This is something we all have to watch out for and fight against.

In our laneway neighbourhood the alley is a lot more friendly.  Fences are not as high and gates are usually see-through, giving you a glimpse into the yards.  There are some lovely gardens that are tenderly cared for.  You are likely to see a neighbour out on their deck or in their yard, and interact with them.  But I hope that another factor that will lead to a safer and tidier back lane will be….us.

The laneway will be nicely painted and we will have plants by the front door on the lane side.  Windows and our deck overlook the lane, which is well-lit.  We will put our garbage and compost cans around the garden side of the house so they won’t be visible from the lane.  And we hope that will make the alley way more livable.

From an article in Houzz comes proof that just doing some small improvements can have a much larger effect on your surroundings.

Good social behavior spreads, whether we realize it’s influencing us or not. The findings, published by Kees Keizer, a behavior scientist and professor at the University of Groningen, Netherlands, confirm the belief that setting a good example can positively affect others. But this study ventures even further to show that when we observe others caring about society, we end up caring, too.

We hope that there will be no tagging on our pristine new garage door.  I think, personally, that graffiti “artists” will be more reluctant to spray paint on someone’s house than they are to deface fences.

It’s also nice to know that having a tidy house is not just its own reward, but benefits the neighbourhood, too.

We’re hooked up!

We have connections!  The water is hooked up to our laneway and the main house has a new and improved water connection which should solve their low-pressure problems.

On the way to getting it done the city made a big hole full of ugly in the lane:

20130912WaterBut at least we have water and can move forward.  The back yard will need to have the trench filled in and then be levelled before it can be planted with grass soon if we are to capture the rain that will be coming.

DH took another “time lapse” shot of the place:

LWHTime9Looks different than 18 weeks ago:

LWHTime2Just 12 weeks to go!

Would you like to OWN a laneway house?

Don’t you love going to home and garden design shows?  You walk into a large hall, someone hands you a reusable shopping bag, and you walk out with a lot of brochures and information on how to live beautifully.

Well, at this year’s IDSwest show, September 19 through 22 at Vancouver Convention Centre West, you could walk out with a lovely new laneway home.

It’s in support of Alzheimer’s research, and you, too, could own a snazzy, carefully designed laneway home.

And while you’re at the show, be sure to check out the living roof on the convention centre.

Would you like to live in a laneway house?

Seriously, would you like to try it?  One of the great things about laneway homes is that people can build them on their property to rent out.  To you????

Reading the Vancouver Sun online,  I saw this story on laneway homes available to rent in the city of Vancouver, including one in our very own neighbourhood.

RenfrewLanewayThese are all nice homes, well-built and well-designed, comfy and yet with enough storage for most people.  They range in price from $1100 (for less than 500 square feet) to over $2,000 (for 700 square feet or more) which may seem high for a lot of people, but the rental situation in Vancouver means that these homes are quite reasonably priced.  In the larger homes, two bedrooms mean that two room mates can split the rent.

A detached home in this town comes at a high rental price.

Is laneway living for you?  Would you like to give it a try?

 

Day 123 — a meeting with the builders

We always get so much accomplished when we meet face to face with our designer and builder from Novell. Last evening Angelito took us through the place and showed us where work had been accomplished over the past two weeks.

20130905TorchOnDeckOn the deck the lights have been installed and the torchon applied.  In fact, all the torchon has been applied to the flat roof areas, too.

20130905TorchOn

Here’s the area that will hold the living roof right off the deck.  That’s a kitchen window you see to the left.

We really noticed the difference inside between the roof with the torchon and without.  Previously there was a small lake in our downstairs bedroom from the heavy rains we’ve been getting.  Now everything inside is nice and dry.

The living roof is nearly ready for us — but we are not ready for it.  A few weeks of work have to be finished.

Inside all the wiring is done.  Plus the sprinkler system is installed.

20130905UpperStairwellWiringWe have electrical wiring for the lights, low voltage wiring for the AV (with speakers in the ceiling), and more low voltage wiring for the alarm system.  It’s going to be so good to have all this hidden behind the drywall.

20130905SpeakerHousingsDownstairs we see where the pocket door is going to go to close off the closet and bathroom from the hallway.  I’ll have my own private dressing area!

20130905PocketDoorThen we sat down with Laurel to talk about finishes.  It’s surprising how much there was to discuss when we have narrowed down the choices already.  The cabinet finish (walnut, with the grain on the horizontal), the floor (a grey-brown engineered floor), and the trim (very plain, baseboards only, no crown trim).  We chatted a bit about the paint colours.  And we chose the tiles for the bathroom. Two by two grey-brown for the floor, two by six white subway tiles for the shower and white hexagonal tiles for the shower floor and niche.  We did talk about putting in larger tiles on the floor, but we love the non-slip aspect of the smaller ones, especially since we will be aging in place and safety is a big consideration.

We also talked about the window covering.  This is going to be tricky because the windows go right to the ceiling, plus they open to the inside, so we may be going in a totally different direction than we had thought.

What’s next?  Well the sheathing inspector just wants to see a letter from the engineers about the torchon (we think he is being extra picky about the living roof, a reasonable consideration) and then he’ll sign off.  The water has to be connected before the drywall is put on, but I talked to the city last week (didn’t contact the Mayor’s office as had been suggested, just the Engineering office) and they were pretty sure the water and sewer would be connected early next week.

Then there will be insulation (a combination of spray foam and batting).  Then the drywall!  What a difference that will make.  Everything is on track for the millwork, and the lights are on order.

A great meeting and we continue to be thrilled and excited!

Look, up in the sky!

I was looking at a new weather app to check when the late-summer drizzle was going to stop and got a nasty shock.  A rain warning.  We live in Vancouver, a notoriously rainy city.  A warning that there will be heavy rain has to be taken seriously because we usually just pretend that it’s not happening. But as climate change happens (and happens to us, we can’t avoid it) we must expect more hard rains, more frequent, more severe.

it seems to me that we have chosen the perfect roof to handle this kind of weather.  The living roof will soak up the hard rains, holding the bulk of the spate so that it doesn’t overwhelm the water run-off system that can overtax the sewers.  The rolled steel roof will slide the water right onto the rain chains and along a pathway we’ll build for it so it gradually gets absorbed.

The rolled steel roof is being installed now — yes, in the pouring rain.

20130829_3Here’s the bit of roof right over our bedroom — that will provide us with lovely sound when we are sleeping beneath it in the rain.  You see the edging slipped over the under layer, and the steel panels lay over that.  Above that you see the window that will nestle between the kitchen counter and the upper cupboards.

Here’s what will be going on with the outside walls:

20130829_2That’s strapping holding down waterproof paper, with a solid plastic flashing at the bottom, and white flashing around the bedroom window.

Here’s what the finished roof looks like on the side gable — sharp!LWHTime8

More work has been done on the inside — the sprinkler system is in place.  We’ve decided on a security provider, so that’s one more thing off our list.

Looking forward to the next few weeks, there’s so much work that will be done in just a little while.

 

A peek inside the nursery

We are being delayed by an inspection that hasn’t been completed.  It’s complicated (as you may have guessed) but since inspectors are human and since they each have their own criteria as to what should be completed when, we have to get some more work done before the sheathing inspection is completed and signed off.

This is a disappointment, of course, we will be meeting with the nice folks from Novell on Friday to get everything straightened out.

But meanwhile, back at the ranch, er, farm:

realroofIt’s a baby living roof.  More to the point, it’s OUR living roof, growing up all big and strong out in Langley, waiting to be delivered to us and placed on our home in just a few weeks.

All together now, ‘Aaaaaahhhhhhhh’.

Just in passing, I was downtown the other day at a meeting and during a break looked out the office window to see this:

GeorgiaRoof

 

A live roof many storeys in the sky.

Ours will look nicer, of course, but it’s an idea of what we can expect.

 

Day 102 — the calm before the storm

We dashed back after our week amid the beaches and peaches of Penticton to see what changes had occurred in the laneway and were significantly underwhelmed.

From the outside, it looked as if nothing had happened.  But when we got inside we could see that the electrician had been very busy.  All the pot lights are installed in where the ceiling will be — that is going to be one bright home — and we could also see where the receptacles and switches will be.

We are still trying to figure out one key part of the plan — the bedside lamps.  We thought we had found the perfect lamp, but then heard from Laurel our designer that the electrician had said, yes, they could be installed, but they could not be hard wired in, and that meant a visible cord running down the wall.  Why bother? We want built-ins!  So we just slipped into the Penticton branch of a local lighting store and hope that we’ve found the perfect one.  We’ll go over to their local branch to see if they can help us out.

We got a little too clever for ourselves and looked in furniture and accessory stores for the bedside lamps before we went to a lighting store.  We have learned our lesson.

I also discovered a free computer assisted design program, Sweet Home 3D.  I’m still learning the program, but it allowed me to use our plans to draw a 3D rendition of our kitchen and sitting area:

upstairsMetro.jpgIt’s still crude (like I said, I’m still learning) but we are able to visualize so much better — I cannot look at two dimensional drawings and “see” in my mind where things will go.  For instance, we were hoping to use our current coffee table, actually a carved wooden chest with a slab of glass on it.  But when I tried to fit it into the 3D rendition, it was clear that it would block the flow to the deck door.  It looked possible in the floor plan, but in 3D it was unworkable.

What is ahead for us is:  electrical and outdoor sheathing inspection, building paper and rain screening, then the metal roofing and siding installation.  Then more inspections and then…..DRYWALL!  So we are going to see some major changes soon.

Also we are waiting for the city to connect the water to the main house and the laneway — that will mean the main house can fill in the trench that currently leads from their front yard to the laneway — ugly and dangerous with a toddler around.

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