Urbanist Alain Bertaud -- who is author of Order without Design -- was recently in Vancouver for a talk about planning and housing matters.
One of the things that he argued, according to The Hub, was that Vancouver "cannot complain about high housing prices and, at the same time, drastically limit the amount of land available [for development]."
This should be an obvious thing. But then again, many people seem to believe that housing follows its own unique set of rules when it comes to supply and demand. So let's look at some basic math to illustrate what it means to, not even stop or limit development, but just slow it down a little.
Consider a development site that yields 300,000 sf of gross floor area. If I were to pick a number out of the air and apply a land price of $175 per buildable square foot, this is a site worth $52.5 million.
In today's environment, a land or acquisition loan for a site like this might come with a 50% LTV and an interest rate of 10%. What this means is that in a simple interest-only scenario, the annual debt service on this loan would be around $2.6 million ($52.5 million x 50% x 10%).

