Top Banner
Onni’s latest project in Port Coquitlam, The Shaughnessy on Lions Park, offers brand-new tower homes with never-before-seen views in a central Metro Vancouver location. ›› p.4 June 17, 2010 TRICIA LESLIE Housing starts in Metro Vancouver showed significant increases last month, to the tune of a year-over-year jump of 150 per cent, reports the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. In the Vancouver Census Metropolitan Area in May, 1,173 starts were recorded, and CMHC notes the single-family housing market, especially, is performing well and “overall new housing construction is in line with key economic indicators.” In the Abbotsford CMA, starts climbed 159 per cent compared to the same time last year. CMHC senior market analyst Robyn Adamache says construction of single-detached homes during the first five month of the year has improved and is currently above the 10- year historic average. While the multiple-unit sector is show- ing improvement, the current level of starts is below the 10-year average, Adamache notes. “Most housing market indicators suggest that the new home construction market is in balanced conditions this year,” she says. Nationally, housing starts decreased in both the single and the multiple sectors, CMHC reports. But in Metro Vancouver, local builders remain busy with new home construction. Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Asso- ciation president and CEO Peter Simpson notes that starts are up significantly locally, for both the month and the year. “A lot of builders are optimistic about the future. ey’re launching many new projects,” Simpson says. He conducted an e-mail survey last week that polled GVHBA builders to see what Healthy increase in Metro Vancouver starts MAGGIE CALLOWAY A bedroom is important to any child. It’s a refuge: a retreat from the sometimes- cruel world outside; a place that is safe, familiar and comforting. Designing a child’s room with a theme can be tricky in any instance, especially given the fact that interests can change from month to month. Finding a balance between the changing interests of the child, and the speed with which they change from child to tween to teenager, can be addressed. Redesigning the room every few years can be avoided by following a few simple rules that will save both sanity and the budget. Instead of including all things sports into the son’s room, or fairy princesses into the daughter’s space, introducing wall graphics is a great solution. Readily available at paint and wallpaper shops and at home improve- ment stores, these graphics are easy to apply and, most important, easy to remove without damage to the wall. Kids love colour. Colour can easily be introduced into a child’s room tastefully – without feeling like you have fallen into a pink cupcake. Pink walls, carpet, bedspread and furni- ture are more than a little limiting as the little girl becomes older. Pink and white wallpaper on a couple of walls with an easily replaced pink bedspread and pillows gives a nod to your child’s girly side, but allows you to move the room along with the years. Mae Saffron, co-owner of e Creative Personalizing children’s rooms can be simple and easy to re-do Create a room kids will love The Creative Design Works interior designer Doris Wutzke shows a Twilight- themed room at Morningstar Homes’ South Pointe in Delta. Rob Newell photo CONTINUED ON P.2 Peter Simpson CONTINUED ON P.2
16

Document

Mar 28, 2016

Download

Documents

Black Press

http://www.newlocalhome.com/editions/nlhr100617.pdf
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1:

Onni’s latest project in Port Coquitlam, The Shaughnessy on Lions Park, offers brand-new tower

homes with never-before-seen views in a central Metro Vancouver location. ›› p.4

June 17, 2010

TRICIA LESLIE

Housing starts in Metro Vancouver showed significant increases last month, to the tune of a year-over-year jump of 150 per cent, reports the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

In the Vancouver Census Metropolitan Area in May, 1,173 starts were recorded, and CMHC notes the single-family housing market, especially, is performing well and “overall new housing construction is in

line with key economic indicators.”

In the Abbotsford CMA, starts climbed 159 per cent compared to the same time last year.

CMHC senior market analyst Robyn Adamache says construction of single-detached homes

during the first five month of the year has improved and is currently above the 10-year historic average.

While the multiple-unit sector is show-ing improvement, the current level of starts is below the 10-year average, Adamache notes.

“Most housing market indicators suggest that the new home construction market is in balanced conditions this year,” she says.

Nationally, housing starts decreased in both the single and the multiple sectors, CMHC reports.

But in Metro Vancouver, local builders remain busy with new home construction.

Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Asso-ciation president and CEO Peter Simpson notes that starts are up significantly locally, for both the month and the year.

“A lot of builders are optimistic about the future. They’re launching many new projects,” Simpson says.

He conducted an e-mail survey last week that polled GVHBA builders to see what

Healthy increase in Metro Vancouver starts

MAGGIE CALLOWAY

A bedroom is important to any child.It’s a refuge: a retreat from the sometimes-

cruel world outside; a place that is safe, familiar and comforting.

Designing a child’s room with a theme can be tricky in any instance, especially given the fact that interests can change from month to month. Finding a balance between the

changing interests of the child, and the speed with which they change from child to tween to teenager, can be addressed.

Redesigning the room every few years can be avoided by following a few simple rules that will save both sanity and the budget.

Instead of including all things sports into the son’s room, or fairy princesses into the daughter’s space, introducing wall graphics is a great solution. Readily available at paint and wallpaper shops and at home improve-ment stores, these graphics are easy to apply and, most important, easy to remove without damage to the wall.

Kids love colour. Colour can easily be introduced into a child’s room tastefully – without feeling like you have fallen into a pink cupcake.

Pink walls, carpet, bedspread and furni-ture are more than a little limiting as the little girl becomes older. Pink and white wallpaper on a couple of walls with an easily replaced pink bedspread and pillows gives a nod to your child’s girly side, but allows you to move the room along with the years.

Mae Saffron, co-owner of The Creative

Personalizing children’s rooms can be simple and easy to re-do

Create a room kids will love

The Creative Design Works

interior designer Doris Wutzke

shows a Twilight-themed room

at Morningstar Homes’ South

Pointe in Delta. Rob Newell photo

CONTINUED ON P.2

Peter Simpson

CONTINUED ON P.2

Page 2:

2 • New Local Home | June 17, 2010

Publisher: Fiona Harris • 604-575-5822 • [email protected]: Tricia Leslie • 604-575-5346 • [email protected]: Maggie Calloway • [email protected] Advertising Sales: Black Press National Sales • Adrian Saunders • 604-575-5812 • [email protected] Advertising: 604-575-5822Designer: Brad Smith • [email protected]

New Local Home is published once a week by Black Press Group Ltd. (Suite 309 - 5460 152 Street, Surrey, B.C. V3S 5J9) 350,000 copies are distributed free across Metro Vancouver. Reproduction in whole or part is prohibited.

local developers are experiencing.“Every single response was extremely

optimistic,” Simpson says, adding that local builders are reporting back success stories in a broad range of home types, whether it’s single-family homes, high-rises, townhomes or condos.

One builder notes he’s starting four new townhome developments, says Simpson.

“If you’re in the market for a new home, (right now) is a great opportunity to see what is available,” he says.

“You’re seeing the strength of the market at all ends of the market, from first-time homebuyers to the luxury, high-end side.”

The busy Metro Vancouver market is not only good for builders.

In 2010, the residential construc-tion industry – in Metro Vancouver alone – is expected to put $7.3 billion in construction value into the economy, says Simpson.

That will create about 64,800 full-time jobs and generate $3.3 billion in wages.

“That’s good news for everybody,” Simpson says.

“If we continue to have strong results, those numbers may be higher by the end of the year.”

CONTINUED FROM P.1

DesignWorks, with her associate Doris Wutzke, have loads of experience putting to-gether children’s rooms, as a large part of the company’s business is designing showhomes for new home developments throughout Metro Vancouver.

Before starting to design an interior for a new showhome, Saffron says she and Wutzke think about who will be living in the home.

“For (Morningstar’s South Pointe), Doris and I came up with a fictitious family who live in this home, then we came up with a colour theme,” Saffron says.

She and Wutzke look at the ages of the ficti-tious children, and think about what kids of that age would be into, and how they can de-sign their bedrooms to reflect their interests.

A major consideration when designing for a corporate client, Wutzke notes, is to ensure the homebuyers would be able to re-create what they liked about the children’s rooms in the showhome.

“We want to inspire people to do this on their own if they didn’t want to hire a designer. We want to make these kids rooms realistic, so families can imagine themselves living in the rooms,” says Wutzke.

For example, one bedroom in Morningstar Homes’ South Pointe development in Delta is designed for a tween/teen girl, about 13 years old, in a Twilight-inspired black, red and white theme. Keeping the furniture white and basic, an artist painted Twilight graphics on a stripe

on the wall, while a black Goth chandelier gives a nod to that side of the popular vampire saga. Red accents incorporate all the Twilight colours without the room being over-the-top, Saffron says.

“Not only do we try to match the child’s activities but their interests,” Saffron says. “We are always very conscious, when designing each room, that it can be easily changed – if this room, for instance is needed for another purpose, the Twilight graphic is gone with a coat of paint.”

Another room at South Pointe, designed for a boy, features a peg board that was bought at Home Depot, then painted and framed to make a nice-looking and efficient organizer. Adding clips – available everywhere – cre-ated vertical storage, which is great for sports equipment.

Saffron notes that one easy design element that anyone can do to personalize a room is to take family photos – from family events or soccer or hockey games, etc. – and photocopy them, blow them up and put them in frames.

“Kids love these in their rooms. It’s inex-pensive art work, and they are easily changed

as the child becomes older or (gets) into something new.”

At ParkLane Homes, the company’s in-house design team attempts to inspire home purchasers with ideas about how their new homes can be decorated; they also imagine a fictional family that could live in the home: how many kids in the family, their ages and their interests.

“This provides a clear picture for how each room should be decorated,” says ParkLane marketing manager Yosh Kasahara.

He notes that ParkLane tries to keep the children’s rooms looking clean, bright and uncluttered – a dream that most parents con-stantly fight to achieve.

“We get lots of positive comments on the children’s rooms in our showhomes ... but the best compliment that we can receive is when a young child sees a room for the first time and immediately says, ‘I want this one!’” Kasahara says.

As the children grow up and eventually, leave the home, it is easy to make these rooms into dens or studies, guest rooms or yoga stu-dios, a crafts room, a fitness area, or a library.

Doris Wutzke with an or-

ganizational peg board in a boy’s room at

a Morningstar showhome at South Pointe.

Rob Newell photo“We come up with afictitious family”

A Falcon Hill bedroom is tastefully dec-orated with easy-to-remove flowers.

Off the front: “We want to inspire people to do this on their own.” – Doris Wutzke, interior designer

CONTINUED FROM P.1A youngster’s room at ParkLane’s Bed-ford Landing is bright and colourful.

A Portrait Homes Silver Ridge kid’s bedroom features a custom stick-on.

It’s a great time to buy a home

Create a haven

Left, a child’s bedroom in a ParkLane showhome at Bedford Landing; above, a boy’s room at Morningstar’s Pepin Brook.

Page 3:

New Local Home | June 17, 2010 • 3

Page 4:

4 • New Local Home | June 17, 2010

A Playgroundfor Everyone

Bedford Landing – an award-winning ParkLanecommunity in the heart of Fort Langley.

FINAL OPPORTUNITY

Spacious 3 & 4 bedroom homes backing onto 30 acres of parkland

N0W seling from $826,900

www.bedfordlanding.com

Premier 3 & 4 bedroom homes right on the river

NOW selling from $830,900

2 bedroom & 2 + den apartments exclusively for adults 45+

2 BEDROOMS from $394,9003 & 4 bedroom homes in the heart of the community

NOW selling from $625,900

Only 1 left! Only 2 left!

Only 2 left!

Only 2 left!

Single Family Sales Centre 23015 Billy Brown Rd, Fort LangleyOpen daily 12 ~ 5pm | 604.888.2176

Apartments Discovery Centre 9275 Glover Rd, Fort LangleyOpen daily 12 ~ 5pm | 604.888.2793(except Wednesday & Thursday)

All prices subject to GST & applicable taxes

20095 Gold Awards

2009 Best New Home and Townhome Builder

Live with a view

Live above it all in Port Coquitlam. And enjoy views that no one else has seen.

“The residents of the first highrise ever built in Port Coquitlam, The Shaughnessy on Lions Park, will see views of the city never seen be-fore from this height,” says Onni development manager Mike Mackay.

The new homes are currently underway and, when complete, will be ready for residents in a 26-storey highrise designed by award winning architects, lDA/IBI.

Mackay says The Shaughnessy on Lions Park is the first residential tower in Port Coquit-lam built with comprehensive sustainability principles including water-conserving fixtures, a green podium roof for natural filtration, and energy-efficient lighting systems throughout.

“I’m very excited about the phenomenal views people will be seeing for the very first time,” Mackay says, noting it’s different than the usual.

“Unlike most pre-sale situations, where people are familiar with the setting, in this situ-ation people are going to enter this building for the very first time and be blown away.”

The Onni Group of Companies project was created with careful attention to architectural details. It was important to Onni to ensure the building will be in harmony with the look and feel of both its location – Shaughnessy Street – and the city’s heritage and history.

“It was with this in mind brick facades and architectural steel were installed at street level,”

Onni’s The Shaughnessy on Lions Park is a 26-storey Port Coquitlam highrise that will offer unprecedented views. Rob Newell photo

New homes, PoCo address

CONTINUED ON P.5

Page 5:

New Local Home | June 17, 2010 • 5

Unparalleled PoCo location

Mackay says. The location of The Shaugh-nessy is superb. Overlooking Lions Park, a fantastic riverside retreat with a picnic area and large playground, the area is popular with outdoor events in the summer, such as concerts and Cinema Under the Stars.

Countless other events are just five min-utes away. Port Coquitlam is also a hub for highway, bus transit networks, and the West Coast Express; with the proposed Evergreen SkyTrain line nearing the development stage, every corner of Metro Vancouver is easily accessible.

Outdoor enthusiasts will love the location next to the access point for the Traboulay Poco Trail system, a 25-kilometre route through forests, creeks, meadows, marsh-land and riverfront. The trail also leads to playing fields, tennis courts, baseball diamonds and playgrounds – a richness of lifestyle second to none.

Consisting of one- and two-bedroom units, from 580 square feet to 940 sq. ft. with balconies; three-bedroom penthouses from 1,695 sq. ft. to 1, 780 sq. ft; rooftop patios and four townhomes with rooftop patio from 2,100 sq. ft. to 2, 270 sq. ft., The Shaughnessy has a home perfect for every homebuyer.

Each home is finished to the homeown-er’s choice of two designer colour schemes, while durable laminate flooring looks chic.

Onni’s The Shaughnessy on Lions Park overlooks the green space it is named for. Transportation and nature trails are nearby. Rob Newell photos

CONTINUED FROM P.4

CONTINUED ON P.6

A lifestyle for all to enjoy

Page 6:

6 • New Local Home | June 17, 2010

Life can be great at The Shaughnessy

HST PROMO ON NOW!

DISCOVERY CENTRE 5655 - 210A Street, Langley | Open Daily 12 - 5pm except Fridays

cornerstoneliving.ca 604-534-6000

NOW SELLING FROM ONLY $184,900.Superior quality one – two bedroom + den condos

SMART CONDOS

THAT HAVE IT ALL

Contemporary ceramic tile in the entry, kitchen, bathrooms and laundry closet and berber-style carpet throughout the bedroom lay the foundation for a beautiful home.

The gourmet kitchen is a chef ’s dream, featuring sleek polished composite counter-tops with an extended breakfast bar and an undermount double stainless steel sink with in-sink garbage disposal.

Five premium stainless steel Kitchen Aid appliances are included; the elegance is carried through to the bathrooms with a comfortable minimalist tub and/or glass-enclosed shower with single lever, pressure balanced shower control. The theme is carried through with a choice of light oak or grey teak cabinetry and a clean, simple undermount sink with a modern single-lever faucet.

While the people buying homes in The Shaughnessy range in age and lifestyle, The Key Marketing president Cam Good notes it is also attracting the empty-nest crowd.

“We are having a surprising number of people downsizing and selling their single-family homes,” says Good, who is charged with the sales of The Shaughnessy.

“They are telling us they want a secure place to live with a beautiful view they can lock-and-leave and perhaps, vacation a lot more in the future.”

Homes are priced from $244,900. Visit www.liveattheshaughnessy.com for more information.

CONTINUED FROM P.5

Enjoy outdoor living year-round

The balconies at Onni’s The Shaughnessy on Lions Park allow residents never-before-seen views of Port Coquitlam and beyond. Rob Newell photo

Page 7:

New Local Home | June 17, 2010 • 7

MOTIF | Ad Concept V2.2 | Blackpress / New Local HomeA P P I A G R O U P O F C O M P A N I E S

BANGARANG COMMUNICATIONS LTDt 604.924.1729 f 604.924.0512

artist [email protected]

proof issued June 14, 2010

size Full Page | 10.3125” x 14” colour CMYKrun date TBD

version FOR APPROVAL

THE COUNTDOWN IS ON.Hurry! There are only 19 spacious suites left at Motif. All are built and ready for immediate occupancy. Imagine how great it will be to live in the heart of Burnaby’s vibrant Brentwood community, an elevator ride away from shops, restaurants and a private fi tness spa. Just 15 minutes from downtown by Skytrain.

PRICES STARTING AT $432,700.

All are built and ready for live in the heart of Burnaby’s rom shops, restaurants and by Skytrain.

3 REASONSTO VISITMOTIF3 NEW SHOW SUITES OPEN FOR VIEWING

1 REASONTO BUYNOWLIFESTYLE! START LIVING IT TODAY!

2 REASONS TO BUYAT MOTIFSTUNNING VIEWS & LARGER THAN AVERAGE SUITES

SALES CENTRE4400 Buchanan StreetBurnaby BC V5C 6R4

Open Daily Noon to 5PM (Except Friday)

www.motifatciti.com604.298.8800

Page 8:

8 • New Local Home | June 17, 2010

By the time they ask “Are we there yet?” … you will be.

Copyright 2010 © | Higherground Project Marketing Inc. Brokerage and Sales by Multiple Reality Ltd. Prices are subject to change without prior notice.

A mere 90-minute drive from downtown Vancouver brings you to The Cottages. It feels like a world apart. Steps from peaceful and pristine Cultus Lake, surrounded by breathtaking mountains and lush green forests, with the great outdoors right at your doorstep. But this isn’t your grandfather’s rustic idea of a cottage – these luxurious family cottages are styled your way, with all the features and finishes you could hope for and large private porches and decks providing plenty of space for family and friends to gather and enjoy BC living at its best. And as if that wasn’t enough, the 10,000 sq. ft. clubhouse with pools offering all the amenities of a first-class resort.

1.877.888.4950CultusLakeCottages.com

Discovery Centre & Display CottagesOpen daily from 12 noon to 5pm except Wednesday1777 Columbia Valley Rd. Lindell Beach, BC

Single Family Cottages $399,900from

Phase 1 and 2 SOLD OUT!Priority register now for Phase 3.

Page 9:

New Local Home | May 6, 2010 • 9

Page 10:

10 • New Local Home | May 6, 2010

Page 11:

New Local Home | May 6, 2010 • 11

Page 12:

12 • New Local Home | May 6, 2010

Page 13:

New Local Home | May 6, 2010 • 13

Page 14:

14 • New Local Home | May 6, 2010

Page 15:

New Local Home | May 6, 2010 • 15

Page 16:

16 • New Local Home | May 6, 2010