🎲 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
- What would you do if you won $17 million tomorrow?
- How could we encourage wealthy individuals to invest in social good?
- Why do some people see lottery winnings as “fun” instead of “impact”?
- How could this model scale across BC or Canada?
- What other crises could be solved by “thinking outside the box”?
- Could a celebrity make a social statement this way?
- How do mixed-income models stabilize communities?
- What are the risks of a private individual owning affordable rentals?
- Could lottery winnings be pooled for collective social investment?
- 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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