|
|
|
Capital Apartments tried to have a building full of street-level CRUs just a block and a half south of here, and other than a few intermittent pop-ups, didn't have any success in filling them with tenants. Now, they're in the middle of being converted into residential units. So, to echo many of the above posters, maybe we don't really need more CRUs here.No retail on capital Blvd?
How many units?
Capital Apartments tried to have a building full of street-level CRUs just a block and a half south of here, and other than a few intermittent pop-ups, didn't have any success in filling them with tenants. Now, they're in the middle of being converted into residential units. So, to echo many of the above posters, maybe we don't really need more CRUs here.
Oh my God I love this, please just fill up all of the empty lots in downtown with cool 5-6 storey buildings with ground-level retail (ik this one doesn't have it but still)
Hard to say right now as Riley's sold to someone recently and the title appears to not have transferred yet, so I can't see who the new owner is.Whose the developer?
CRUs should be spread out and not concentrated. The empty ones are in places where they aren't needed.We have so many empty CRUs downtown already I am fine with this not having anything.
Objectively not true.very limited rental market,
I think so.
Objectively not true.
The highest year-over-year increase in residential lease rates out of all major Canadian cities was Edmonton (27% in Feb-24 over Feb-23), and expected to increase even further by the peak of leasing late in the summer.
What we have is very limited quality rental stock, and a lot of people are not being able to rent properties because we have a lot of apartments that lack stuff most consider essential, like dishwashers, in suite laundry, etc, but they're trying to price gauge and drive it closer to newer builds.