Ex-Montreal Girl
Active Member
If I sell my house in 40 years (if I make it, I'll be 83 then) and someone wants to knock it down and build something new I still get great value for the land. If you buy a condo built in the 1970s or so and a developer wants just the land, does he buy everyone's units? What if a few hold out? How is the value of the land distributed?
That was done somewhere, I believe in Vancouver. But I can't quite recall. There was a big owners' meeting and there was a vote on whether to sell. But it's hazy. The trouble there though is that people in older condos have different stages of renovation, and different quality. Our place -- custom kitchen, custom bathrooms, marble, granite, yada yada -- is worth significantly more than most of our neighbours. Height and views are other factors. It's not one price fits all.
As to the business of maintenance fees, I have sliced and diced these for five years, before we bought and after. I think in dollar value we come out more or less the same, and that includes gym costs. Our building has great facilities. The bonus is never having to find people to shovel your walk or rake your lawn or fix your furnace or any of that. When I think of all the hassles of home-owning, from replacing a garage door bashed in by vandals to coming back from a vacation down south to discover burst pipes to having to call PCO to get rid of the wasp nest under the eaves to having to get the eaves cleaned twice a year, I am grateful to be here. And all the other downsizers who have moved in say the same thing.
It's not about maintenance fees. It's about the freedom. The trick is to find a solid building in a good location with great amenities.