Monday, November 17, 2025

And Now for Something Completely Different

 ðŸŽ² And Now for Something Completely Different

Every week, somewhere in the world, someone wins a life-changing lottery jackpot — sometimes $17 million or more. Most people dream about what they’d buy: yachts, luxury cars, exotic vacations… but what if someone thought differently?

What if a lottery winner used their fortune to solve a real problem — like housing?


Turning Windfall Into Homes

Take the example of Belvedere in Surrey.

  • 40 unsold units remain in a completed 30-storey tower.
  • Market softened, buyers backed out, and the developer is under creditor protection.
  • These units could sit empty for months, maybe years — while seniors, students, and youth aging out of foster care struggle to find safe housing.

Now imagine this:

A single lottery winner — someone who just won $17 million — buys all 40 units. Done.

  • Seniors get affordable 1-bed units.
  • Students finally have a safe place to study and sleep.
  • Youth leaving foster care step into stability instead of uncertainty.

How It Could Work

  • Affordable rents: $750–$1,250 per month for those who need it most.
  • Mixed-income units: some rented at market rate to sustain costs.
  • Self-sustaining building: rent covers maintenance, property management, and even modest profits to reinvest.
  • Immediate impact: no waiting for construction — people move in today.

Why It’s Brilliant

  • Outside-the-box thinking: solving housing with private action, not bureaucracy.
  • Legacy-building: a lottery win becomes a permanent social impact.
  • Win-win: tenants get homes, investor creates a sustainable asset.
  • Scalable: more jackpot winners, more empty condos — more lives changed.

Reflective Questions

  1. What would you do if you won $17 million tomorrow?
  2. How could we encourage wealthy individuals to invest in social good?
  3. Why do some people see lottery winnings as “fun” instead of “impact”?
  4. How could this model scale across BC or Canada?
  5. What other crises could be solved by “thinking outside the box”?
  6. Could a celebrity make a social statement this way?
  7. How do mixed-income models stabilize communities?
  8. What are the risks of a private individual owning affordable rentals?
  9. Could lottery winnings be pooled for collective social investment?
  10. What is the human cost of leaving buildings empty in a housing crisis?

Sometimes the simplest solutions come from thinking completely differently. What if the next $17 million windfall didn’t just change one life, but changed dozens — for years to come?

💡 That’s the magic of thinking outside the box.

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