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> the cost of land + construction jumps significantly Per person? I don't see how. For a 16-floor building, you can easily fit 120 comfortable condos on a plot of land that would otherwise only fit 2-4 single family homes. Yes, the building cost would definitely be higher, but not per household. On top of that, it would be made of steel and concrete, and not plywood, which generally rots and needs to be torn down every 50 years or so. > High density urban housing is expensive, by definition. By definition? I'm not sure about that. There must be some middle ground between glitzy new condo projects and "the projects", which were also high-rise and affordable. Much of Eastern Europe, lots of Western Europe, former USSR, etc., all have relatively affordable housing. |
Here is a source for construction costs for major metropolitan areas in Canada: https://t.co/18FwgkSlWY
And here are some figures.
For Toronto:
House (medium quality): 120-240$/sf
Walk-up low-rise apartment (medium quality): 100-150$/sf
Residential condos (medium quality): 180-240$/sf
Point towers, 40-80 stories (medium quality): 230-310$/sf
For Vancouver
House (medium quality): 165-225$/sf
Walk-up low-rise apartment (medium quality): 155-180$/sf
Residential condos (medium quality): 205-250$/sf
Point towers, 40-80 stories (medium quality): 270-355$/sf
For Montréal
House (medium quality): 125-180$/sf
Walk-up low-rise apartment (medium quality): 100-155$/sf
Residential condos (medium quality): 150-180$/sf
Point towers, 40-80 stories (medium quality): 250-355$/sf
So if you can afford a 400 000$ housing unit, and you assume half of it goes to pay for the land, you could get a house with about 1 500 square feet of space, a similar sized condo in a low-rise, a 1 000 square foot condo in a concrete mid-rise or a 650 square foot condo in an high-rise.
Yes, high-density housing options lower the amount of land per unit, but at the same time, zoning for higher density tends to rise the cost of land. A lot zoned for an high-rise building will be worth many times what a lot zoned for single-family houses is worth even if the two lots are adjacent, since the land value is proportional to the potential revenue of development, so the bigger the development, the higher the potential revenue, the higher the land value.