π’ 2,500 Empty Condos: Vancouver’s Missed Opportunity to End Homelessness
It’s shocking — while over 2,500 new condos sit empty across Metro Vancouver, thousands of people sleep in tents, vehicles, and shelters. Developers hold these units, unwilling to sell at a loss, while homelessness and unaffordable rents skyrocket. There’s a solution staring us in the face, and it’s not a radical experiment — it’s public ownership and responsible rental management.
π‘ The Idea: Government-Owned Rentals
What if the federal, provincial, and municipal governments worked together to:
- Purchase these 2,500 unsold condos from developers.
- Convert them into income-based rental units accessible to seniors, low-income workers, families, and people with disabilities.
- Manage them responsibly — mixed-income communities, not just “supportive housing” for addiction or mental health crises.
Each unit becomes a home. Each home becomes a step toward ending homelessness in Vancouver.
π° The Numbers Make Sense
- Average condo price: ~$800,000
- 2,500 units × $800,000 = $2 billion total
- Compare that to fossil fuel subsidies, airline bailouts, and emergency shelter spending — it’s completely feasible.
Even renting these units at a modest $1,000/month could generate $30 million per year — money that goes back into housing maintenance and community programs.
π Benefits for Everyone
- Thousands of people get stable, safe housing.
- Developers sell their unsold inventory without taking massive losses.
- The government invests in real, tangible assets instead of temporary programs.
- Communities grow stronger with mixed-income neighborhoods rather than isolating vulnerable people.
π§ How It Could Work
- Create a BC Community Housing Trust to manage the purchases.
- Negotiate bulk buys of unsold condos from developers.
- Turn units into income-based rentals, with rent capped at 30% of household income.
- Partner with nonprofits for tenant support and community programs.
- Track long-term benefits, reinvest rental income into more housing.
✊ Why We Need Political Will
Developers need liquidity. Governments need to solve homelessness. The public is ready to see real change. This alignment is rare — and the opportunity is right here in plain sight.
π¬ If we act, these empty condos can become homes, stability, and dignity for thousands. Vancouver cannot afford to wait any longer.
— Tina Winterlik
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