ChazYEG
Senior Member
I'll echo @Tropical about the West Oliver and Bridgeland comparison. I agree with your point regarding Downtown/East Village and Inglewood (albeit the latter's better direct comparison is with Old Strathcona, and then I believe they're pretty much level with each other), but I honestly see West Oliver much closer to Kensington than Bridgeland, especially with all of the new developments recently finished or in their final stages. Might not be quite there yet, but it is a much closer comparison.West Oliver has potential. So does McCauley, Alberta Ave, Ritchie, Downtown, and Garneau. But we're talking about where these cities are now, not in 5 or 10 years. This applies even more so to Blatchford, which may be an amazing development in time, but the story of that has yet to be written. I will say that Downtown/East Village, Inglewood, and Kensington are further ahead by a decent margin from West Oliver. West Oliver might be closer to a Bridgeland in vibrancy at the moment.
But that's what I mean by best bang-for-the-buck. Montreal is a whole order of magnitude above Vancouver in terms of urban experience, and Vancouver itself is above Edmonton and Calgary.Montreal's prices are getting there though. They're in the ballpark of Calgary's, last I looked (not too long ago).
I'd gladly pay Calgary prices to live in a Montreal-like city here I could do without speaking French. Hell, if I could live in a place like MTL without being fluent in French I'd be WAAAAY more inclined to pay Vancouver prices to live there, than in Vancouver.
This only goes towards my point, regarding how crazy expensive Vancouver is.