Land-rich Kelowna draws Vancouver developers – Kelowna News

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Cressey Development Corp.’s Caban development in Kelowna

Vancouver’s Cressey Development Corp. is expecting a fast pre-sale sell-out of a luxury 127-unit mixed-use waterfront project in downtown Kelowna, and developers are bidding serviced land in the city to above-appraised prices, but the land action cools when rezoning and risk come into play, local agents say.

Hot as Kelowna real estate is this year, it remains haunted by past downturns.

Cressy’s project, known as Caban and consisting of upscale residential and retail on the lakeshore at Kelowna’s popular Gyro Beach, resurrects a plan for a similar project on the same two-acre site that was put on pause during the 2008 recession.

The environment is different today, according to Caban sales agent Taylor Musseau, who said a couple of invite-only previews in Vancouver and Kelowna were enough to register a potential 200 condo buyers for the Caban development.

Musseau expects most of the buyers will be owner-occupiers, but Cressey appears to be hedging its bets. The $850-per-square foot residential units, which include seven townhouses, will also be available for short-term rentals, Musseau confirmed.

Another greenfield site of a stalled development, a 1.41-acre parcel on Pacific Avenue and Pasnak Street in Kelowna that resulted from a six-lot land assembly, which was sold in June under court order. The site had reached third reading for a 110-unit condo development before the developer bailed out two years ago.

Appraised at $7.02 million, it sold for $8.31 million on June 16 after multiple bids.

A pending deal involves an unnamed Vancouver investor who offered $3.27 million for a 0.58-acre Kelowna site with potential for 45-units of residential listed by Macdonald Realty, Kelowna.

That pencils to $5.45 million an acre or $128 per square foot, which is getting close to values ​​in the Lower Mainland.

The City of Kelowna is offering two shovel-ready mixed-use commercial lots totaling 2.4 acres at the city’s western entrance along Harvey Avenue /Highway 97A. The asking price is $5.9 million; bids are being accepted until October 31.

“It is just mind blowing what has happened to Kelowna prices,” said Jeff Hudson, principal and co-founder of HM Commercial Group in Kelowna, whose recent report on land sales tallied more than $24 million in deals since May.

Hudson said out-of-town buyers include groups from Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta and BC, the latter primarily from the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island.

Seymour Pacific Developments, a large multi-family rental developer based in Campbell River, BC, is a “major player” in Kelowna, Hudson said, while Vancouver-based PC Urban has been buying industrial sites in the area.

Cressey is scouting for more land in BC’s second-largest city outside of the Lower Mainland, said Hani Lammam, executive vice-president at Cressey Development Group. Vancouver mega-residential builders Adera and Polygon already own land in the city.

“Kelowna has grown up,” Lammam said, “It has become a real contender.”

But the hyper-action stalls for land outside of Kelowna, said Okanagan rural land specialist Scott Marshall of Re/Max Kelowna, whose listings include a 142-acre rural acreage site on Huckleberry Road, Kelowna, which is asking less than $30,000 an acre.

His clients, he said, are locals, including patient developers who realize it may take months, perhaps years, of planning to get zoning and permits in place for higher density.

Marshall estimated that values ​​for rural Okanagan land have increased perhaps 15% over the past five years, far below the 50% increase seen in Kelowna during the same period.

“Despite all the hype, it seems like a normal year here,” Marshall said.