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Related: About this forumWASTED SPACE Ottawa wants affordable housing on 'every possible piece' of federal land. So how much is out there?
WASTED SPACE
Ottawa wants affordable housing on every possible piece of federal land. So how much is out there? A Globe analysis found enough to house 750,000 people
ERIN ANDERSSEN, CHEN WANG AND RACHELLE YOUNGLAI
THE GLOBE AND MAIL
PUBLISHED JUNE 1, 2024
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-could-canadas-underused-public-land-be-the-key-to-solving-the-housing/?
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Near Halifaxs downtown core, a shabby patch of land lounges in the middle of what urban planners call a super block. City staff looking for future housing have been coveting this parcel for a decade. Its close to bus routes, connected to services, and large enough, by their calculations, to contain a cluster of towering apartment buildings, with green space to spare for the 4,000 people who could live in them.
Instead, this 14 acres of prime housing real estate hosts a one-storey Canada Post mail sorting depot, and a parking lot of trucks. The city has grown up, busy with new construction, while the block with the post office property languishes like the slacker neighbour who gets in the way while youre trying to work.
This land, Halifax city senior planner Luc Ouellet said, could be vibrant and bustling. Its not performing to its potential.
The Halifax property is just one among hundreds of pieces of underperforming urban land owned by the federal government including large armouries with empty parking lots, aging post offices, and low-rise office buildings in high-storey streetscapes.
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msongs
(70,170 posts)applegrove
(123,111 posts)Basically if the government leases the land instead of selling it for housing it goes a long way to getting non-profits a leg up in creating more affordable units. It can save 23% of the costs of building an apartment. There is lots of lazy, underused government land.
It also talks about mixed market buildings and other ideas and issues.
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After a months-long analysis, The Globe found 613 pieces of of lazy land in cities and towns across the country a collection of federal real estate large enough to create about 288,000 housing units for nearly 750,000 Canadians. In addition, The Globes analysis also found 154 taller buildings close to housing that could be considered for residential conversions or development in their large parking lots.
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