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Old Posted Mar 30, 2017, 7:36 PM
C. C. is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2014
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Quote:
Originally Posted by whatnext View Post
Except we are now at Peak Millenial, and the funny thing is once people start settling down and raising kids doing it in a condo starts to look really unappealing. Toronto is getting the spillover from BC foreign buyers tax, but with new capital controls brought in by the Chinese government are going to slow even that down.
You lost me at Peak Millenial...

Not everyone's goal in life is to have kids. Even with them, bringing them up in cookie-cutter suburbia isn't universally accepted as the thing to do as it was in the 70s and 80s, especially if the family can afford something better.

What's the population growth of greater Toronto? Even if only 20 percent of the growth choose to occupy non-single family homes for lifestyle preference or financial reasons, that's still going to be thousands of new units every year to meet demand. The typical apartment/condo development has what -- 200 or 300 units? There is literally demand for hundreds of new ones every year.

I'm amazed that building of tens of thousands of single family homes in the 80s was seen as acceptable, but now a small percentage increase in multi-family living and everyone is screaming bubble.
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