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Urban Land Institute to Advise Vancouver, British Columbia, on Worker-Focused Housing
Renowned urban planning and real estate experts representing ULI will be making recommendations to the City of Vancouver, B.C.
June 28, 2021
For more information, contact [email protected]
WASHINGTON D.C. (June 28, 2021) – The single-family rental (SFR) market is seeing exponential interest and growth, with COVID-19 emphasizing the need for a broader diversity of rental housing, according to a new report co-authored by the Urban Land Institute (ULI) and RCLCO.
Low-Density Rental Housing in America builds off the analysis of last year’s ULI and RCLCO report, Family Renter Housing, which identified that the millennial generation are starting families and are in need of space. SFRs are a particularly intriguing option for these new family units, as they generally have added amenity offerings, such as a clubhouse, fitness center, or sports courts, and are managed much like apartment homes. COVID-19 has accelerated this trend as an ability to work remotely has meant that millennials preparing for a new family are looking at flexible options that allow them to live somewhere new while remaining untethered as homeowners.
Low-Density Rental Housing in America is the first report that codifies the SFR market’s language, product types and differentiating characteristics. In the rapidly expanding and evolving market, with companies employing various strategies and product types, positioning and locations.
The report looks at three general ownership models and structures, which defines the three product types of SFRs:
“Single-family rental homes have long played an essential role in meeting the housing needs of American workers,” said Christopher Ptomey, executive director of the ULI Terwilliger Center for Housing. “The trend toward purpose-built SFR housing has accelerated over the past decade providing new options for meeting growing consumer demand for larger units, often outside of more densely populated urban cores. Low-density rental development is already enabling cities to better meet the evolving housing demands of moderate-income households and holds the long-term potential to improve housing affordability and access to high-performing neighborhoods through the addition of lower cost units appropriately scaled and designed for such locations.”
Todd LaRue, managing director at RCLCO, commented: “During the course of this research effort, RCLCO was not surprised by the tremendous market depth for low- to mid-density rental housing, but the variety of products and concepts offered today appeal to wide array of household types, suggesting the market for the product is as broad as it is deep. And many of these households will be different than those traditionally expected to be in rental housing – and that is a big change in how we think about housing going forward.”
The Low-Density Rental Housing in America report also outlines key characteristics of each unique purpose-built SFR model, with project profiles demonstrating the success of each one:
Low-Density Rental Housing in America can be found on ULI’s Knowledge Finder.
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