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104: Empowering Communities by Revolutionizing Middle Housing Development with mddl's Alkarim Devani

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EPISODE DESCRIPTION

Episode 104: Matt and Taylor are joined by Alkarim Devani. Alkarim is the CEO & Co-Founder of mddl from Calgary, Alberta, who's also the Co-Founder of the development company RNDSQR. Alkarim’s work has gained a multitude of media attention and frequently been the recipient of The Canadian Architecture Awards, MUDA Awards, American Architecture Prize, and the BILD Awards, as well as being a frequent guest lecturer at The University of California, Berkeley, and The University of Calgary. In addition, Alkarim regularly contributes his time to numerous volunteer organizations as well as a number of industry-led boards and communities including D.Talks and Calgary Housing Company.

 

mddl (pronounced “middle”) is an expert in middle housing, types that fall between single-family homes and apartment buildings, including townhouses, duplexes, and triplexes. As a CMHC Level Up Stage 5 Housing Supply Challenge Finalist, their mission, alongside strategic partners, is to build capacity from top to bottom, and to strategically partner with municipalities, industry experts, and citizens in reducing barriers and delivering middle housing to cities across Canada.

 

Alkarim is here to discuss:
→ His journey in real estate and founding RNDSQR, what led to the founding of mddl, and working with governments to support the development of affordable housing.
→ Why mddl started in Kelowna, what has been working so far in Calgary & Edmonton, and mddl's innovative resources & education programs to empower homeowners, including a GIS tool demo.
→ Dealing with community concerns of infill housing and increasing community engagement, why development needs homeowners to succeed, and what's needed to make a culture shift in boomers when it comes to housing.

 

mddl Website: www.mddl.co

mddl Instagram: @mddl.co

mddl LinkedIn: @mddlco

Alkarim Devani's LinkedIn: @AlkarimDevani

***

 

OUR SPONSOR

The Kelowna Real Estate Podcast is brought to you by Century 21 Assurance Realty, the gold standard in real estate. To learn more, visit: www.c21kelowna.ca

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CONNECT WITH THE SHOW

Kelowna Real Estate Podcast: @kelownarealestate

Kelowna Real Estate Podcast YouTube: @KelownaRealEstatePodcast

Kelowna Real Estate Podcast Instagram: @kelownarealestatepodcast

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CONNECT WITH MATT

Matt Glen's Website: www.mattglen.ca

Matt Glen's Email: matt.glen@century21.ca

Matt Glen's Instagram: @mattglenrealestate

***

 

CONNECT WITH TAYLOR

Taylor Atkinson's Website: www.venturemortgages.com

Taylor Atkinson's Email: taylor@venturemortgages.com

Taylor Atkinson's Instagram: @VentureMortgages

***

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All right.

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Welcome back to the Colonial Real

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Estate Podcast.

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Colonial Real Estate Podcast.

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I'm your mortgage broker host,
Taylor Atkinson.

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And I'm your real estate agent
host, I'm your real estate agent

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Matt Glenn.

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What's happening today, Taylor?

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Well, you know, Bank of Canada
announcement came out July 30th.

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Yes.

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Pretty boring, you know, as

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predicted.

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Yeah.

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You know, I think six months ago,
we spoke to Brandon Ogdensen.

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Things were much more optimistic
for rate cuts, but obviously...

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Tariffs have been a huge topic of
a conversation.

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When those tariffs come in, we see
inflation, core inflation that

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obviously has to put Bank of
Canada on pause.

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So that trade uncertainty and then
just like our economy in general,

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like we have some pretty weak
growth signals.

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So where we're at with that in
September, there's now a 13 %

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chance for a 25 basis point cut.

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And then in October, there's a 24

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% chance.

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of the same cut.

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And then moving on from that, like
by the end of the year, there's a

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50 % chance.

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It's not like it's adding up

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collectively.

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It's just 0 .25%.

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It's going to likely happen closer
to the end of the year.

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the So likely get a 0 .25 cut by
the end of the year.

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.25 cut by the end of the year.

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Yeah.

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And I mean, that obviously changes
weekly when, you know, information

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comes out about job growth and
inflation.

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Yeah, exactly.

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So it's been hard.

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to predict.

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It's been evolving.

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I think what I take away from that
is if you take tariffs out of the

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picture and you take the media out
of that, we as economy still need

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a little bit of a cut.

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It means we are at the lower part

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of our rate cycle, but it doesn't
mean we've hit it and we're going

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back up.

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I'm still optimistic on that.

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Right before we went on, Yeah, a
cut.

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we went on, you said something
super interesting about mortgages.

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Tell us about that.

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So what I've been doing a lot with

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clients right now over the last
six to 12 months, us about that.

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So what I've been doing a lot with
clients right now over the last

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six to 12 months, most people are
very stressed about the decision,

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whether they go variable or fixed
or a three -year fixed or a five

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-year fixed.

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Right now, everything's pretty

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balanced.

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Most of the rates are neck and

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neck.

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So in terms of being qualified,

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most people have the option to
choose whatever they want.

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But what most people get fixated
on is they have to choose one or

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the other.

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You don't have to, you can blend

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the two products together.

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That is so interesting.

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I did not know that.

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That's crazy.

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Specific to just a couple of
lenders.

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So if you want, you know, say you
have a $500 ,000 mortgage, you can

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put 200 ,000 on a variable, 200
,000 on a five -year fix and a

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hundred thousand on a three -year
fix.

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What?
You can do three like that?

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Crazy.

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Yeah.

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You can do up to five.

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You can really like.

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Pick and choose what you want.

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It allows people just to like, you

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know, hedge their bets a little
bit.

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If they think there are some rate
cuts, they can do that.

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If they think fixed rates are
going to drop, you know, they can

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put a little more on the variable
side and then they can lock that

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in in the future.

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There's lots of flexibility there.

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I guess what I preface to clients
usually is like, you know, hey,

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when people set this up, they have
good intentions to then go.

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I'm going to watch this like a
hawk.

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And as soon as rates drop, I'm
going to lock this in and switch

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that.

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Yeah.

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Let's be honest.

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Most people don't.

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It's usually like a set it and
forget it.

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But yeah, it's something that I
think is not well known about or

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people just don't talk about.

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Yeah, I didn't know that.

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So if you're out there and you're
kind of torn between fixed

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variable, five year fixed, three
year fixed, whatever.

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Yeah, reach out.

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We can.

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This is why we have you on the
pod.

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the pod.

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The one and only reason.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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No other reason than that.

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that.

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Yeah.

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We waited for three years to get

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this out of you.

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Yeah, exactly.

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That's great info, honestly,
Taylor.

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You're probably going to use that,
yeah.

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So anyways, we'll keep you updated
on this stuff, obviously.

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But at this point, pretty boring
stuff.

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Not a lot's changing.

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We'll just kind of watch inflation

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and see what happens with tariffs.

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But yeah.

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Nice.

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And then, yeah, today's show is

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awesome, man.

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We've been trying to connect with

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Al from Middle Housing for like
six months.

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I went to one of their events in
Kelowna.

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And yeah, they're doing some
really cool stuff.

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Primarily like... I see it as
mostly education based for people

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that want to learn.

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Yeah.

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Like he's obviously done a ton of
developments himself.

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And now he's kind of stepped away
from that.

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And it's just primarily focusing
on educating people.

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And like.

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Very affordable education courses,

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you know, like you can go to one
of their one day events for like

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150 bucks.

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And I think most of that is

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because they're getting subsidized
or, you know, being given grants

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federally or from municipalities
to come and help people because

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this is such an obvious solution.

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Like, yeah, he's helping people

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with infill housing, down there in
the house, building three units or

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carriage house or whatever,
building more houses.

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Yeah.

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And it seems like they're using

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Kelowna as a testing ground for a
lot of this stuff, which is super

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cool too.

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Yeah.

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Well, I mean, I think everyone
knows Kelowna has been very

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evolved in this space.

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They're really like leading in a

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municipality and it doesn't just
mean like they're focusing on

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investors, how to like tear down a
single family house and build a

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fourplex.

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Like it could be.

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a generational house where you
want to bring in a family member

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and have some rental revenue yeah
like they focus nationally so i

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think on the investment front it's
probably a little more lucrative

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in like alberta where the cost of
land is a little bit cheaper just

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pencils a bit better yeah but
really cool technology too like

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when we were going over like
realist

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ca and how they're meshing that
together And you can just look up

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active listings and what you can
put on those sites, like a

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fourplex.

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And then you can pick a design

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from the Fast Track program.

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Yeah.

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And then you can pick Crazy.

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Like super, super cool stuff.

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Yeah.

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Like five years ago, this would

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have never been something we spoke
about.

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But yeah, they've got some awesome
stuff.

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So sign up for their newsletter,
come to some of their events.

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I think Al said, you know, likely
they'll do another event in the

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fall, but we'll keep it.

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There's one day course, middle

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school.

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This is a very interesting

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episode.

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He has a lot of good things to

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say.

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Yeah, wicked guy.

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All right, guys, this episode,
like every other episode, is

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sponsored by Century 21 Insurance
Realty, Best Brokerage in Kelowna,

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and North Okanagan, South
Okanagan.

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all around the interior of BC.

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If you're an agent looking for a

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switch, or if you're a buyer or
seller looking for an agent, give

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us a call.

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We'd love to talk to you.

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Enjoy the episode, guys.

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All right, Al.

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So great to have you on the show,
man.

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I met you about eight months ago
at one of your presentations and

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thought you were doing some great
work.

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So we've been trying to get you on
the show for ages now.

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So I appreciate you making time
for us.

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Yeah, no, I really appreciate you
guys asking me to come through.

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This is great.

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So maybe we can just start like

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quick high level elevator pitch of
yourself and Middle, the company

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you guys are expanding quite
rapidly throughout Canada.

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So I guess we met at our first
annual middle school here in the

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city of Kelowna.

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I guess we met at our first annual

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middle school here in the city of
Kelowna.

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We've now done middle school.

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in seven different cities, I think

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we're up to over 1000 attendees
across the country.

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And historically, like I was a
real estate agent, I graduated

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from the University of Calgary,
but I decided to get my real

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estate license like when I was 18.

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So right out of high school.

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And so I went and got my real
estate license.

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I decided I still want to go to
university because no one in my

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family had a university degree.

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And I was like, I'm going to be

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the first.

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I went and kind of, yeah, it was a

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business school.

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And it was tough because like my

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family is all entrepreneurs.

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My brothers were doing stuff.

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My brother is the reason why I got
my real estate license.

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I basically like sat open houses
the entire time that I was in

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university and basically got paid
like cash because no realtors

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wanted to sit open houses, but
they wanted their clients to know

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they had open houses.

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And so I basically like have

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signs.

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00:06:58,210 --> 00:06:59,830
back of my car that were like the

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stock brokerage signs and would
settle open houses in like every

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00:07:01,610 --> 00:07:01,910
community.

237
00:07:01,910 --> 00:07:03,650
And I would get to study because,

238
00:07:03,830 --> 00:07:06,690
you know, back then, like no one
was buying from an open house and

239
00:07:06,690 --> 00:07:08,070
we'd get like five people out.

240
00:07:08,070 --> 00:07:09,230
But the cool thing for me is I

241
00:07:09,230 --> 00:07:11,650
just like learned a bunch about
communities, fabrics.

242
00:07:11,650 --> 00:07:15,550
I would go literally anywhere in
the entire city of Calgary if I

243
00:07:15,550 --> 00:07:17,650
was going to get paid to sit the
open house.

244
00:07:17,650 --> 00:07:20,350
I never sold a single house in
university, but I sat a lot of

245
00:07:20,350 --> 00:07:20,890
open houses.

246
00:07:20,890 --> 00:07:23,640
And so it was like a crazy thing,

247
00:07:23,640 --> 00:07:26,900
but I learned a ton and you
learned a lot about communities,

248
00:07:26,900 --> 00:07:27,720
what was happening.

249
00:07:27,720 --> 00:07:28,920
happening, transformation, new

250
00:07:28,920 --> 00:07:29,760
builds, like new growth
communities.

251
00:07:29,760 --> 00:07:31,820
And I just really got an
understanding of like what was

252
00:07:31,820 --> 00:07:32,680
happening in the city.

253
00:07:32,680 --> 00:07:34,500
And so when I graduated, I like

254
00:07:34,500 --> 00:07:35,900
immediately thought, okay, well, I
need to pay for my degree.

255
00:07:35,900 --> 00:07:38,800
I went and got a job downtown.

256
00:07:39,140 --> 00:07:40,680
I got a suit, a briefcase.

257
00:07:40,680 --> 00:07:42,780
And like for like three weeks, I
went through a training program

258
00:07:42,780 --> 00:07:43,920
and I was like, I'm not doing
this.

259
00:07:43,920 --> 00:07:44,600
And so I quit.

260
00:07:44,600 --> 00:07:46,420
And I remember the guy being like,

261
00:07:46,420 --> 00:07:48,540
you know, it's crappy that you
decided three weeks after rather

262
00:07:48,540 --> 00:07:49,220
than a week.

263
00:07:49,220 --> 00:07:50,320
Cause I guess like the training

264
00:07:50,320 --> 00:07:51,840
program, they say costs $30 ,000.

265
00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:54,460
I was like, Oh, I'm so.

266
00:07:54,660 --> 00:07:54,760
Sorry.

267
00:07:54,760 --> 00:07:56,320
Like, like I didn't learn anything

268
00:07:56,320 --> 00:07:57,880
from you to go execute.

269
00:07:57,880 --> 00:07:59,840
It was just like really good for

270
00:08:00,020 --> 00:08:01,880
me to realize like I don't belong
here.

271
00:08:01,880 --> 00:08:04,400
And so I asked my brother if he
would start an inner city building

272
00:08:04,400 --> 00:08:06,800
company with me because I saw the
market was shifting and I thought

273
00:08:06,800 --> 00:08:08,600
there was a need for things
happening in the redevelopment.

274
00:08:08,600 --> 00:08:11,100
And so that was kind of my journey
of getting into development.

275
00:08:11,100 --> 00:08:13,520
So I've been in real estate for a
very long time.

276
00:08:13,720 --> 00:08:15,460
I was building infill houses,
primarily like semi -detached,

277
00:08:15,460 --> 00:08:17,300
tearing down older, you know,
wartime bungalows, building

278
00:08:17,300 --> 00:08:17,420
duplexes.

279
00:08:17,420 --> 00:08:19,380
But then in 2015, we saw this kind

280
00:08:19,380 --> 00:08:20,640
of like inflection point.

281
00:08:20,640 --> 00:08:22,430
So I've been doing it since like

282
00:08:22,430 --> 00:08:22,510
2007.

283
00:08:22,510 --> 00:08:23,570
In 2015, prices like had doubled,

284
00:08:23,570 --> 00:08:23,730
tripled.

285
00:08:23,730 --> 00:08:25,010
The biggest house we built was

286
00:08:25,010 --> 00:08:27,530
like a 3 -boy -2 million dollar
single family and triple car

287
00:08:27,530 --> 00:08:29,650
garage home in like a really
beautiful area of the city.

288
00:08:29,650 --> 00:08:32,730
And I think like the market in
Calgary was always so boom and

289
00:08:32,730 --> 00:08:33,030
bust.

290
00:08:33,030 --> 00:08:33,809
There was tons of volatility.

291
00:08:33,809 --> 00:08:36,970
But in 2015, my mom had passed
away and my dad was living in the

292
00:08:36,970 --> 00:08:37,110
suburbs.

293
00:08:37,110 --> 00:08:39,870
And we thought, okay, well, it's

294
00:08:39,870 --> 00:08:43,210
kind of crappy for my dad to be by
himself and 20, 30 minutes away,

295
00:08:43,210 --> 00:08:45,430
let's bring him into the inner
city.

296
00:08:45,430 --> 00:08:50,060
At the time, the only project that
seemed to make sense for us to

297
00:08:50,060 --> 00:08:52,560
build was a duplex, which was way
too big for my dad.

298
00:08:52,560 --> 00:08:57,900
And so we were kind of like,
should we go and see if we could

299
00:08:57,900 --> 00:08:58,800
build four units?
Because there was four units

300
00:08:58,800 --> 00:08:59,480
across the street.

301
00:08:59,480 --> 00:09:00,880
Everyone I talked to was like,

302
00:09:00,880 --> 00:09:01,740
can't do that.

303
00:09:01,740 --> 00:09:03,340
It doesn't work like that.

304
00:09:03,340 --> 00:09:06,060
You can do whatever you want, but
you're not going to get approved.

305
00:09:06,060 --> 00:09:08,440
And I was like, yeah, but it just
doesn't make sense.

306
00:09:08,440 --> 00:09:11,320
Why can't you build townhomes on a
site that right across the street?

307
00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:12,160
On all four corners, there's
townhomes.

308
00:09:12,160 --> 00:09:14,540
But for some reason, this street,
you can't build a townhome.

309
00:09:14,540 --> 00:09:15,260
Three corners had townhomes.

310
00:09:15,260 --> 00:09:17,120
and And so hired a guy who was

311
00:09:17,120 --> 00:09:18,880
like willing to do it with us.

312
00:09:19,040 --> 00:09:20,060
We got rejected.

313
00:09:20,060 --> 00:09:21,900
Like the city said, no, we went
through a process called Calgary

314
00:09:21,900 --> 00:09:22,500
Planning Commission.

315
00:09:22,500 --> 00:09:23,360
They also said no. And they're

316
00:09:23,360 --> 00:09:25,100
like, there's no point for you to
go to council.

317
00:09:25,100 --> 00:09:26,000
You got two out of three
rejections.

318
00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:27,440
You're just going to get a third
rejection.

319
00:09:27,440 --> 00:09:30,460
I thought, well, pot committed at
this point, might as well go.

320
00:09:30,520 --> 00:09:32,920
And we went and council debated
for like seven hours for us to go

321
00:09:32,920 --> 00:09:34,820
from what was allowed to be two
units to try to get to four units.

322
00:09:34,820 --> 00:09:37,100
And we ended up losing because a
new counselor just got elected,

323
00:09:37,100 --> 00:09:38,700
got scared last minute and voted
no, eight, seven.

324
00:09:38,700 --> 00:09:40,840
And so that was like a huge
inflection point.

325
00:09:40,840 --> 00:09:44,400
Like it was crappy that that
happened, but it also like, I got

326
00:07:25,620 --> 00:09:45,890
calls from the chief urban
planner.

327
00:09:45,890 --> 00:09:48,550
I didn't even know there was a
role on the chief urban planner at

328
00:09:48,810 --> 00:09:49,110
the time.

329
00:09:49,110 --> 00:09:50,770
I got to know what urban planning

330
00:09:50,770 --> 00:09:51,130
was.

331
00:09:51,130 --> 00:09:53,110
They basically pulled me in to be

332
00:09:53,110 --> 00:09:54,370
like, so what were you trying to
do?

333
00:09:54,370 --> 00:09:54,850
I'm like, it's pretty simple.

334
00:09:54,850 --> 00:09:56,810
We thought that we could try to do

335
00:09:56,930 --> 00:09:59,030
more than two units on these lots
because you could still build

336
00:09:59,470 --> 00:10:01,330
townhomes just like you already
allow in certain neighborhoods and

337
00:10:01,530 --> 00:10:02,790
certain very remote pockets.

338
00:10:02,790 --> 00:10:04,670
City agreed, created a new zoning

339
00:10:04,670 --> 00:10:05,990
district, brought us in on the
engagement.

340
00:10:05,990 --> 00:10:07,450
We knew it was going to happen.

341
00:10:07,450 --> 00:10:08,850
So in 2015, we went out and bought

342
00:10:08,850 --> 00:10:12,230
like 30 of these lots, raised the
capital fund to go out and

343
00:10:12,230 --> 00:10:15,030
basically execute on middle
housing now and move our entire

344
00:10:15,030 --> 00:10:17,790
infill, what was a side -by -side
program to saying, let's do four

345
00:10:17,790 --> 00:10:17,930
units.

346
00:10:17,930 --> 00:10:19,950
We went on to do like, I think

347
00:10:19,950 --> 00:10:22,470
from 2015 until, I don't know, we
were like 95 % of the city's

348
00:10:22,470 --> 00:10:24,230
applications on that zoning code
because no one had really caught

349
00:10:24,230 --> 00:10:25,030
on that it was working.

350
00:10:25,030 --> 00:10:26,770
I think we probably had built 150

351
00:10:26,770 --> 00:10:27,690
units in that kind of row house.

352
00:10:27,690 --> 00:10:28,570
And then, you know, 2020 COVID

353
00:10:28,570 --> 00:10:29,730
pandemic happens.

354
00:10:29,730 --> 00:10:30,950
We had so many of these townhomes

355
00:10:30,950 --> 00:10:31,470
for sale.

356
00:10:31,470 --> 00:10:33,070
We were competing with each other

357
00:10:33,070 --> 00:10:34,570
because there was no other
product.

358
00:10:34,570 --> 00:10:37,590
So people would go to two of our
houses in different neighborhoods.

359
00:10:37,590 --> 00:10:41,690
And so we just realized that we
had like really... probably

360
00:10:41,690 --> 00:10:42,630
produce too many too fast.

361
00:10:42,630 --> 00:10:43,830
But then, you know, there was this

362
00:10:44,130 --> 00:10:47,290
big push for rental housing and
MLI Select at the time was called

363
00:10:47,290 --> 00:10:47,690
Flex.

364
00:10:47,990 --> 00:10:49,270
There was almost like a loophole,

365
00:10:49,270 --> 00:10:52,190
like you've stumbled into this
thing backwards, where when they

366
00:10:52,190 --> 00:10:54,970
wrote the Roadhouse District, they
had permitted you to actually have

367
00:10:54,970 --> 00:10:59,170
secondary suites, which no one
really understood that it was a

368
00:10:59,170 --> 00:11:02,210
market or could work or was a
viable option.

369
00:11:02,430 --> 00:11:04,270
And so we kind of like had this
project.

370
00:11:04,270 --> 00:11:06,950
We sat on it for two years paying
like a MES lending like loan.

371
00:11:06,950 --> 00:11:10,290
We had approved BP, but we just
didn't want to put four more

372
00:11:10,290 --> 00:11:14,030
townhomes of like 650 grand, 700
into a market that wasn't moving.

373
00:11:14,030 --> 00:11:17,970
So we held it and like lost money
every single month.

374
00:11:17,970 --> 00:11:20,530
I'm talking like five grand a
month in mortgage payments in this

375
00:11:20,530 --> 00:11:20,670
way.

376
00:11:20,670 --> 00:11:22,090
Held it for like over two years.

377
00:11:22,090 --> 00:11:24,690
And then we were just like, what
if we just like scrap that project

378
00:11:24,690 --> 00:11:28,400
and added secondary suites and
built this thing as a rental?

379
00:11:28,400 --> 00:11:31,860
And then we figured out that if we
get a construction loan, we could

380
00:11:31,860 --> 00:11:33,320
do a select takeout.

381
00:11:33,320 --> 00:11:34,800
And then from that point, again,

382
00:11:35,120 --> 00:11:37,240
like another huge inflection point
for our development company,

383
00:11:37,240 --> 00:11:40,660
because we learned that there was
a huge demand for rental at the

384
00:11:40,920 --> 00:11:43,620
time, because not everyone could
get qualified for purchasing.

385
00:11:43,620 --> 00:11:46,400
And then, you know, RoundSquare
was a company that we had built

386
00:11:46,400 --> 00:11:48,300
this whole time has really
transitioned into this purpose

387
00:11:48,520 --> 00:11:49,620
built rental model.

388
00:11:49,620 --> 00:11:51,140
We have, you know, 160 active

389
00:11:51,870 --> 00:11:52,110
units.

390
00:11:52,110 --> 00:11:52,990
that we're building in the

391
00:11:52,990 --> 00:11:53,670
townhome space.

392
00:11:53,670 --> 00:11:56,110
But I would say the thing about

393
00:11:56,110 --> 00:11:58,690
the townhome stuff is like when
you start to pioneer and do things

394
00:11:58,690 --> 00:12:01,850
really well, you get pulled into
so many different directions.

395
00:12:01,850 --> 00:12:05,010
And so we went on to do like a 220
unit heritage restoration, seven

396
00:12:05,010 --> 00:12:05,810
-story building in Winnipeg.

397
00:12:05,810 --> 00:12:07,350
We did a medical center in

398
00:12:07,350 --> 00:12:07,750
Calgary.

399
00:12:07,750 --> 00:12:08,710
We've done a rooftop garden

400
00:12:08,710 --> 00:12:10,150
building with like 20 units.

401
00:12:10,750 --> 00:12:12,110
And so we went on and did a bunch

402
00:12:12,110 --> 00:12:14,810
of things all the way from
commercial to mixed -use heritage

403
00:12:14,810 --> 00:12:15,550
restoration, seven -story, six
-story buildings.

404
00:12:15,550 --> 00:12:17,370
And I would say all of that to
realize like...

405
00:12:17,370 --> 00:12:19,970
The thing that we were doing that
we were pioneering on that we

406
00:12:19,970 --> 00:12:21,530
recognized was this kind of gentle
density.

407
00:12:21,530 --> 00:12:23,970
There's REITs and pension funds
and really well -capitalized folks

408
00:12:23,970 --> 00:12:26,550
that do six -story, seven -story,
12, 15 really well.

409
00:12:26,550 --> 00:12:29,470
We learned real quick, you have to
have a lot of money.

410
00:12:29,850 --> 00:12:31,750
You have to compete at a high
level.

411
00:12:31,750 --> 00:12:33,750
There's really no room for errors
because the budgets are so

412
00:12:33,750 --> 00:12:34,330
massive.

413
00:12:34,330 --> 00:12:35,510
The complexities are extensive.

414
00:12:35,510 --> 00:12:38,030
It's not as easy as everyone
thinks.

415
00:12:38,210 --> 00:12:41,820
And so we went back and I think
just after the pandemic...

416
00:12:41,820 --> 00:12:44,600
Basically said, we're not going to
do any more kind of underground

417
00:12:44,600 --> 00:12:45,760
park aid structures, high rise,
mid rise.

418
00:12:45,760 --> 00:12:46,980
We're going to double down on
middle housing.

419
00:12:46,980 --> 00:12:49,140
And so we launched another fund
and Brown Square was actively

420
00:12:49,140 --> 00:12:49,620
doing 160 units.

421
00:12:49,620 --> 00:12:52,280
And at that time, still very

422
00:12:52,280 --> 00:12:55,120
involved in the city and very
involved in advocacy and moving

423
00:12:55,120 --> 00:12:55,840
things along.

424
00:12:55,840 --> 00:12:57,360
But the city of Calgary had voted

425
00:12:57,360 --> 00:12:59,000
to make it as of right.

426
00:12:59,000 --> 00:13:00,420
And so, you know, when that

427
00:13:00,420 --> 00:13:01,160
happened, everything changed.

428
00:13:01,160 --> 00:13:03,400
And just for like, I think there

429
00:13:03,400 --> 00:13:06,520
was like 3000 applications for
this housing form, you know,

430
00:13:06,520 --> 00:13:07,400
within a given year.

431
00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:10,010
So you can see the uptake was

432
00:13:10,010 --> 00:13:10,190
massive.

433
00:13:10,190 --> 00:13:11,450
And so it was great.

434
00:13:11,450 --> 00:13:13,590
Another inflection point for
myself was like, my brother

435
00:13:13,590 --> 00:13:16,690
doesn't really need me in the
development company proper

436
00:13:16,690 --> 00:13:18,170
anymore, because it's really a
system.

437
00:13:18,170 --> 00:13:19,310
It's a process.

438
00:13:19,450 --> 00:13:21,130
Land use is in place.

439
00:13:21,130 --> 00:13:23,030
There's not a lot of like...

440
00:13:23,030 --> 00:13:23,630
change and pioneering and things

441
00:13:23,630 --> 00:13:23,730
happening.

442
00:13:23,730 --> 00:13:25,070
And I met my partner, Darlene, who

443
00:13:25,070 --> 00:13:26,230
I've worked with before.

444
00:13:26,230 --> 00:13:27,530
She was a planning consultant at

445
00:13:27,530 --> 00:13:28,010
Urban Planner.

446
00:13:28,010 --> 00:13:30,570
She was the vice president of

447
00:13:30,750 --> 00:13:32,370
Basecamp Developments, had tons of
experience in development.

448
00:13:32,550 --> 00:13:36,310
And I said, Dar, I think there was
like this missing ecosystem that

449
00:13:36,300 --> 00:13:38,320
exists of people understanding
what the opportunity is in middle

450
00:13:38,320 --> 00:13:38,580
housing.

451
00:13:38,580 --> 00:13:39,960
And we basically just asked

452
00:13:40,240 --> 00:13:42,060
ourselves the question of like,
what would it actually require to

453
00:13:42,060 --> 00:13:44,780
scale this across Canada?
It's difficult for any one company

454
00:13:44,780 --> 00:13:47,480
to scale, which is also why it's
really awesome.

455
00:13:47,480 --> 00:13:50,240
Because a pension fund or REIT, a
large development company, it's

456
00:13:50,240 --> 00:13:54,040
hard for them to go out and
acquire 50 homeowners' homes and

457
00:13:54,040 --> 00:13:56,360
then assemble building teams that
want to build at these small

458
00:13:57,000 --> 00:13:57,180
scales.

459
00:13:57,180 --> 00:13:59,360
There hits this point where if you

460
00:13:59,360 --> 00:14:02,040
start to produce too many units,
you lose the ability to actually

461
00:14:02,040 --> 00:14:05,460
do this housing form well, which
makes it really beautiful because

462
00:14:05,460 --> 00:14:08,640
it's not like craft beer, right?
As soon as you go into

463
00:14:08,640 --> 00:14:09,440
distribution, you change it.

464
00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:11,320
But when you're a local taproom

465
00:14:11,460 --> 00:14:13,180
servicing a market, you can do
really well.

466
00:14:13,180 --> 00:14:15,680
As soon as you go into
distribution, it changes.

467
00:14:15,680 --> 00:14:17,320
And that's the thing about middle
housing.

468
00:14:17,320 --> 00:14:20,180
It's like what was successful was
a bunch of us small folks in

469
00:14:20,180 --> 00:14:21,840
community that were doing really
well.

470
00:14:21,840 --> 00:14:23,560
The challenge was, is there was no
playbook.

471
00:14:23,560 --> 00:14:25,360
There was no understanding of how
to do it.

472
00:14:25,360 --> 00:14:28,520
And the biggest thing that we
realized was that the person that

473
00:14:28,700 --> 00:14:31,020
is most equipped to do middle
housing really well is the

474
00:14:31,220 --> 00:14:35,000
homeowner because they have the
land at a land basis that none of

475
00:14:35,000 --> 00:14:36,840
us could acquire it for.

476
00:14:36,840 --> 00:14:39,640
And so we kind of just tried to re

477
00:14:39,640 --> 00:14:42,420
-engineer the system to say, what
if we put them at the center of

478
00:14:42,420 --> 00:14:45,700
the solution?
And so much of the work we do at

479
00:14:45,700 --> 00:14:47,140
middle is working with
municipalities, working with

480
00:14:47,320 --> 00:14:48,580
government, working with
homeowners.

481
00:14:48,580 --> 00:14:50,880
to not only build the foundational
information education, but to

482
00:14:50,880 --> 00:14:54,920
unite the ecosystem and figure out
how to get homeowners to be a part

483
00:14:54,920 --> 00:14:55,900
of the solution.

484
00:14:55,900 --> 00:14:57,360
And folks will always be like, oh,

485
00:14:57,560 --> 00:14:59,800
you're never going to get
everybody to redevelop their home.

486
00:14:59,800 --> 00:15:02,440
And it's like, well, that's really
not the point.

487
00:15:02,440 --> 00:15:05,200
The point is to make sure they
understand what the potential and

488
00:15:05,200 --> 00:15:07,890
opportunities are, but also the
ecosystem and folks around them in

489
00:15:07,890 --> 00:15:10,170
the industry have the ability to
support that homeowner or embark

490
00:15:10,170 --> 00:15:11,670
on doing that as well.

491
00:15:11,670 --> 00:15:12,770
And so that's the journey we've

492
00:15:12,770 --> 00:15:13,490
been on.

493
00:15:13,490 --> 00:15:14,110
And it's been cool, man.

494
00:15:14,110 --> 00:15:16,890
Like we've been embraced by so
many different groups, I would say

495
00:15:16,890 --> 00:15:19,490
across the country, not only
cities, like building groups, ULI,

496
00:15:19,490 --> 00:15:22,210
like different groups who've been
really strongly supportive of the

497
00:15:22,590 --> 00:15:24,250
work that we're doing and trying
to achieve.

498
00:15:24,250 --> 00:15:26,630
And so we see ourselves as like
capacity builders.

499
00:15:26,630 --> 00:15:28,810
We're working on, you know,
innovative policy here in Kelowna.

500
00:15:28,810 --> 00:15:31,090
We helped launch the first version
of the fast track.

501
00:15:31,090 --> 00:15:32,050
They're launching phase two.

502
00:15:32,050 --> 00:15:33,850
which gets you a building permit

503
00:15:33,850 --> 00:15:34,570
within 10 business days.

504
00:15:34,570 --> 00:15:35,650
We use GIS mapping technology to

505
00:15:35,650 --> 00:15:38,110
identify which one of those sites
basically met the requirements for

506
00:15:38,110 --> 00:15:39,150
those pre -approved lands.

507
00:15:39,150 --> 00:15:40,330
And so again, reducing the

508
00:15:40,330 --> 00:15:41,670
barriers, providing consistency
around cost, architecture, who can

509
00:15:41,670 --> 00:15:44,250
build it for what, what can I
build on my house?

510
00:15:44,250 --> 00:15:45,770
So just really trying to simplify
those things.

511
00:15:45,770 --> 00:15:50,150
And I know the GIS tool for us is
really cool because...

512
00:15:50,150 --> 00:15:55,410
You now type in an address and
it'll tell you whether or not you

513
00:15:55,410 --> 00:15:57,270
can develop on your home and what
you could develop.

514
00:15:57,270 --> 00:16:00,350
So what used to take us like
waiting for an architect to do a

515
00:16:00,350 --> 00:16:02,390
site plan test, pulling the
address, trying to check the

516
00:16:02,450 --> 00:16:02,870
zoning constraints.

517
00:16:02,870 --> 00:16:04,130
We've now reduced that friction to

518
00:16:04,130 --> 00:16:08,070
like it takes a minute to identify
at a high level whether or not

519
00:16:08,070 --> 00:16:09,270
that place makes sense.

520
00:16:09,270 --> 00:16:10,090
We're launching a Realtor

521
00:16:10,090 --> 00:16:11,490
integration now too.

522
00:16:11,490 --> 00:16:12,430
So with Realtor

523
00:16:12,430 --> 00:16:15,850
ca, type in the address and it'll
tell you whether or not that site

524
00:16:15,850 --> 00:16:16,430
is actively listed.

525
00:16:16,430 --> 00:16:17,750
But we've also done a scrape so

526
00:16:17,750 --> 00:16:21,490
you can look at a city and say,
okay, these are all the active

527
00:16:21,490 --> 00:16:24,870
listings that meet the requirement
for a middle housing project.

528
00:16:24,870 --> 00:16:25,970
Whoa, that's pretty cool.

529
00:16:25,970 --> 00:16:27,610
Yeah, it's a lot.

530
00:16:27,610 --> 00:16:30,410
Sorry, I know I just ranted there,
but to give everyone a bit of

531
00:16:30,410 --> 00:16:33,630
level sets of all the different
things we're working on.

532
00:16:33,630 --> 00:16:34,930
Yeah, that's awesome.

533
00:16:34,930 --> 00:16:36,510
With that software, is that

534
00:16:36,510 --> 00:16:38,490
specifically through your guys'
like website or how do people

535
00:16:38,490 --> 00:16:40,960
access it?
If you go to our website, you go

536
00:16:40,960 --> 00:16:44,760
to our website, we have a
community and within that

537
00:16:44,760 --> 00:16:46,700
community, there's what's called
the middle GIS tool.

538
00:16:46,700 --> 00:16:50,380
We also have a Performa tool, but
the middle GIS tool is currently

539
00:16:50,540 --> 00:16:52,820
beta in Calgary and Kelowna.

540
00:16:52,820 --> 00:16:55,400
And so you can type in your

541
00:16:55,400 --> 00:16:56,320
address and test it.

542
00:16:56,320 --> 00:16:57,860
In Calgary currently, there is no

543
00:16:57,860 --> 00:17:00,720
pre -approved plans, but our goal
is working with every municipality

544
00:17:00,720 --> 00:17:04,079
to have a site that has a pre
-approved plan.

545
00:17:04,010 --> 00:17:06,329
And our future state is like,
okay, well, we know these pre

546
00:17:06,329 --> 00:17:06,630
-approved plans.

547
00:17:06,630 --> 00:17:08,050
We know that the land that they

548
00:17:08,050 --> 00:17:09,550
sit on, we understand the risks.

549
00:17:09,550 --> 00:17:11,230
What we envision in the future is

550
00:17:11,230 --> 00:17:13,730
like we have contractors that know
how to build these or modular

551
00:17:13,910 --> 00:17:15,030
developers that know how to build
them.

552
00:17:15,410 --> 00:17:18,829
Can we then like have someone run
their performa, fill out a finance

553
00:17:18,829 --> 00:17:21,869
tool and basically get them all
their components that they need to

554
00:17:21,869 --> 00:17:27,280
basically say, okay, I do have a
viable project now and I can move

555
00:17:27,280 --> 00:17:27,900
forward with it.

556
00:17:27,900 --> 00:17:29,820
And so that's exactly what we're

557
00:17:29,820 --> 00:17:32,620
trying to do is take all the
things that we've learned.

558
00:17:32,620 --> 00:17:34,560
empowered by technology to give
people that leg up on their

559
00:17:34,560 --> 00:17:35,680
ability to deliver on their
projects.

560
00:17:35,680 --> 00:17:35,840
Okay.

561
00:17:35,840 --> 00:17:38,420
So just to bring it back to

562
00:17:38,420 --> 00:17:42,640
Kelowna, so your website, if you
want the GIS tool, you can type in

563
00:17:42,700 --> 00:17:44,280
your address and it'll tell you
what you can do.

564
00:17:44,280 --> 00:17:46,500
And then you can pick a pre
-approved plan there.

565
00:17:46,500 --> 00:17:46,720
Correct.

566
00:17:46,720 --> 00:17:46,940
Yeah.

567
00:17:46,940 --> 00:17:47,420
Yeah, exactly.

568
00:17:47,420 --> 00:17:48,740
So currently Colonna has three

569
00:17:48,740 --> 00:17:49,500
approved plans.

570
00:17:49,660 --> 00:17:50,800
They're launching another number

571
00:17:50,800 --> 00:17:51,360
of them.

572
00:17:52,010 --> 00:17:53,730
And so the idea is like we would

573
00:17:53,810 --> 00:17:54,630
have all the pre -approved plans
listed.

574
00:17:53,990 --> 00:17:56,130
We haven't quite gotten to the
point where we started to put all

575
00:17:56,130 --> 00:17:58,830
of the contractors and architects
on the website, but that's the

576
00:17:58,830 --> 00:17:59,090
future state.

577
00:17:59,090 --> 00:18:01,170
We're still early days with the

578
00:18:01,170 --> 00:18:01,510
tool.

579
00:18:01,510 --> 00:18:03,390
And honestly, we're taking a bunch

580
00:18:03,390 --> 00:18:06,230
of feedback and getting people to
kind of tell us what works, what

581
00:18:06,430 --> 00:18:06,550
doesn't.

582
00:18:06,550 --> 00:18:07,550
And again, like...

583
00:18:07,550 --> 00:18:10,010
So, you know, Taylor and I met at
middle school.

584
00:18:10,010 --> 00:18:11,930
That was a full day.

585
00:18:11,930 --> 00:18:12,970
We actually are launching a

586
00:18:12,970 --> 00:18:13,070
program.

587
00:18:13,070 --> 00:18:15,110
It's called Middle U. It's in

588
00:18:15,110 --> 00:18:16,510
partnership with the University of
Calgary.

589
00:18:16,670 --> 00:18:18,230
It's going to be all online.

590
00:18:18,430 --> 00:18:19,770
And the idea is like, how do we

591
00:18:19,770 --> 00:18:22,120
actually get people through
scenario modeling through the

592
00:18:22,120 --> 00:18:24,080
emotional roller coasters of
building, you know, a place?

593
00:18:24,080 --> 00:18:27,140
And so that is a certified course
through the University of Calgary.

594
00:18:27,140 --> 00:18:27,920
And our hope is that.

595
00:18:28,340 --> 00:18:29,840
You know, we bring people through

596
00:18:29,840 --> 00:18:32,340
a certificate of middle housing
that they've taken this course.

597
00:18:32,340 --> 00:18:33,340
They have strong fundamentals.

598
00:18:33,340 --> 00:18:34,740
It's 100 hours of instructional

599
00:18:34,740 --> 00:18:35,120
delivery.

600
00:18:35,120 --> 00:18:36,920
And then we tie that in the

601
00:18:36,920 --> 00:18:37,220
future.

602
00:18:37,220 --> 00:18:38,200
to hopefully a funding mechanism

603
00:18:38,200 --> 00:18:40,840
and a tool that can help you
actually deliver on your project.

604
00:18:40,840 --> 00:18:45,620
And so, you know, in a high level,
we see ourselves as like a venture

605
00:18:45,620 --> 00:18:47,060
fund, a venture scale for middle
housing.

606
00:18:47,060 --> 00:18:49,740
How do we scale fund?
And depending on the level of

607
00:18:49,740 --> 00:18:51,560
support you might need or might
not need, some people just like,

608
00:18:51,560 --> 00:18:52,900
they need to go right to different
levels.

609
00:18:52,900 --> 00:18:54,780
And we're just trying to basically
be that support tool for those

610
00:18:54,840 --> 00:18:55,340
levels that they're at.

611
00:18:55,340 --> 00:18:55,640
That's awesome.

612
00:18:55,640 --> 00:19:00,470
So in Kelowna is like a test spot
for you guys to get all this

613
00:19:00,470 --> 00:19:00,870
started.

614
00:19:01,070 --> 00:19:01,210
Yeah.

615
00:19:01,210 --> 00:19:04,490
So Kelowna is like one of the most
progressive, I would say like.

616
00:19:04,490 --> 00:19:06,850
infill policies in Canada, like,
you know, very, very progressive

617
00:19:06,850 --> 00:19:08,990
administrative board that wants to
see things happen from a city

618
00:19:08,990 --> 00:19:09,230
perspective.

619
00:19:09,230 --> 00:19:10,790
And I think they've been exploring

620
00:19:10,790 --> 00:19:13,790
different tools and they've been
on kind of the cutting edge of a

621
00:19:13,790 --> 00:19:15,030
lot of this.

622
00:19:15,190 --> 00:19:16,410
I would say that the challenges in

623
00:19:16,410 --> 00:19:19,690
Kelowna are unique, you know, to
the city of like your guys' real

624
00:19:19,690 --> 00:19:23,240
estate market, which you probably
know better than I do.

625
00:19:23,240 --> 00:19:25,820
How do we actually get things to
pencil today based on the market

626
00:19:25,820 --> 00:19:28,360
that we find ourselves in?
And so I think that's what we're

627
00:19:28,360 --> 00:19:29,620
continuing to run up against.

628
00:19:29,620 --> 00:19:31,280
It's like we can do a bunch of

629
00:19:31,280 --> 00:19:33,620
things, but there's some macro
level environment things that have

630
00:19:33,620 --> 00:19:37,440
to change in order for us to see
project viability.

631
00:19:37,440 --> 00:19:41,520
And this is where I go back to the
very first thing I said to you.

632
00:19:41,520 --> 00:19:43,910
If you're a homeowner, you're
better positioned than any other

633
00:19:44,050 --> 00:19:46,930
developer in the industry to
deliver on your home because you

634
00:19:46,930 --> 00:19:48,490
purchased your land 10, 20, 15
years ago.

635
00:19:48,490 --> 00:19:52,590
And so we know that there's
viability if homeowners can be a

636
00:19:52,590 --> 00:19:53,750
part of the solution.

637
00:19:54,350 --> 00:19:56,930
They're not going to be able to do

638
00:19:56,930 --> 00:19:57,430
it by themselves.

639
00:19:57,430 --> 00:19:58,870
There's going to be developers and

640
00:19:59,110 --> 00:20:00,090
builders that partner with them.

641
00:20:00,090 --> 00:20:01,510
What we're trying to do is create

642
00:20:01,510 --> 00:20:03,730
the infrastructure to allow for
those things to happen, for

643
00:20:03,730 --> 00:20:06,610
homeowners to feel like they're
educated, they know what they need

644
00:20:06,610 --> 00:20:09,250
to get done, provide a bit of a
facilitation support to bring the

645
00:20:09,250 --> 00:20:11,170
industry together and make sure
the right policy and there's

646
00:20:11,170 --> 00:20:13,150
innovative tools to help them move
through that journey.

647
00:20:13,150 --> 00:20:14,070
And you're not.

648
00:20:14,070 --> 00:20:14,710
you're not.

649
00:20:14,710 --> 00:20:16,410
competing now, right?
Like you're not an infill

650
00:20:16,410 --> 00:20:18,070
developer, like you are simply on
the education side, basically.

651
00:20:18,070 --> 00:20:18,230
100%.

652
00:20:18,230 --> 00:20:20,010
Like I know a lot of folks are

653
00:20:20,010 --> 00:20:23,430
like nervous to kind of share with
us at times when we get an

654
00:20:23,430 --> 00:20:28,290
industry, but it's like, no, our
goal is not to be the delivery

655
00:20:28,290 --> 00:20:28,450
mechanism.

656
00:20:28,450 --> 00:20:30,010
It's to take homeowners and pair

657
00:20:30,010 --> 00:20:31,170
them with delivery mechanisms.

658
00:20:31,170 --> 00:20:32,850
It's to help delivery folks,

659
00:20:32,850 --> 00:20:35,250
developers find the right pieces
of land so that they can do the

660
00:20:35,250 --> 00:20:37,490
right things and design high
functioning places that make sense

661
00:20:37,490 --> 00:20:39,090
for the community and people are
happy.

662
00:20:39,090 --> 00:20:40,190
And so we see ourselves as
capacity.

663
00:20:40,310 --> 00:20:40,490
builders.

664
00:20:40,490 --> 00:20:41,650
We're trying to support you on

665
00:20:41,650 --> 00:20:42,410
your goals and delivery.

666
00:20:43,210 --> 00:20:44,350
And most importantly, I would say

667
00:20:44,350 --> 00:20:46,950
the thing that we realize is that
if we don't include homeowners,

668
00:20:46,950 --> 00:20:50,170
you'll never get to scale what you
want to do because they'll always

669
00:20:50,170 --> 00:20:50,790
be pushed back.

670
00:20:50,790 --> 00:20:51,730
And because politicians and

671
00:20:51,730 --> 00:20:53,730
administration and cities will
always feel like if homeowners

672
00:20:53,730 --> 00:20:57,130
aren't a part of the solution or
not a part of the equation, then

673
00:20:57,130 --> 00:20:59,630
we'll continue to struggle to
deliver within these established

674
00:20:59,630 --> 00:21:00,410
communities because they were
there.

675
00:21:00,410 --> 00:21:01,950
We need to figure out how to
include them.

676
00:21:01,950 --> 00:21:05,490
And so that's the way that we see
it.

677
00:21:05,490 --> 00:21:07,310
We're trying to basically say...

678
00:21:07,310 --> 00:21:08,670
We're simplifying the process so

679
00:21:08,670 --> 00:21:10,730
that an everyday citizen can do
this.

680
00:21:10,730 --> 00:21:15,080
And if we do that, it's only going
to help developers because their

681
00:21:15,080 --> 00:21:17,020
processes are going to be more
predictable, more efficient to

682
00:21:17,020 --> 00:21:17,480
move through the system.

683
00:21:17,480 --> 00:21:17,620
Amazing.

684
00:21:17,620 --> 00:21:21,040
Can we do like a shared screen and
you can walk us through briefly on

685
00:21:21,220 --> 00:21:23,720
like a real life scenario, whether
it's Kelowna or Calgary or

686
00:21:23,720 --> 00:21:24,440
anywhere, but just...

687
00:21:24,440 --> 00:21:26,120
How do the numbers work?

688
00:21:26,120 --> 00:21:28,040
Maybe touch on financing and land
acquisition and stuff?

689
00:21:28,040 --> 00:21:31,680
I don't have anything to pull up
at the moment, but I can walk you

690
00:21:31,680 --> 00:21:34,040
through what we're seeing work in
certain neighborhoods and cities.

691
00:21:34,040 --> 00:21:36,860
I guess I'll start by saying in
Calgary and Edmonton, again, two

692
00:21:37,060 --> 00:21:39,780
of the most progressive cities
when you talk about infill and

693
00:21:39,780 --> 00:21:40,380
middle housing specifically.

694
00:21:40,380 --> 00:21:42,880
So in the city of Calgary, this is

695
00:21:42,880 --> 00:21:45,960
not advice that I'll go buy
something and then say, hey, I

696
00:21:45,960 --> 00:21:47,940
listened to your podcast and you
said it'd be fine.

697
00:21:47,940 --> 00:21:48,960
Anyway, call me before you buy
anything.

698
00:21:49,080 --> 00:21:50,680
But for the vast majority of the
city within the established

699
00:21:50,680 --> 00:21:53,700
neighborhood, hoods, most lots
you're allowed to do eight units

700
00:21:53,700 --> 00:21:54,560
as of right.

701
00:21:54,560 --> 00:21:58,780
So on a standard 50 by 126 ,000

702
00:21:58,780 --> 00:22:00,640
square foot lot, you can deliver
up to eight units.

703
00:22:00,640 --> 00:22:00,900
Eight units.

704
00:22:00,900 --> 00:22:01,080
Yeah.

705
00:22:01,080 --> 00:22:03,500
So four primary units and four
secondary suites.

706
00:22:03,500 --> 00:22:05,580
And so the most common forms that
you would see.

707
00:22:05,740 --> 00:22:07,720
getting delivered would be a four
by four.

708
00:22:07,790 --> 00:22:11,190
So you'd have on a corner lot,
four row houses with four

709
00:22:11,550 --> 00:22:11,830
secondary suites.

710
00:22:11,830 --> 00:22:13,310
And then on a mid block lot, you'd

711
00:22:13,310 --> 00:22:17,590
kind of have this cottage court of
a duplex in the front, a duplex in

712
00:22:17,590 --> 00:22:19,250
the back, and both duplexes would
have secondary suites.

713
00:22:19,250 --> 00:22:21,170
Most of Alberta has laneways.

714
00:22:21,170 --> 00:22:22,730
So everything's parked off the

715
00:22:22,730 --> 00:22:25,470
lane, which I know is not
necessarily the case in Kelowna.

716
00:22:25,470 --> 00:22:28,450
And so that's been the thing
that's really drove in the system,

717
00:22:28,450 --> 00:22:30,110
I'd say the last three years.

718
00:22:30,110 --> 00:22:32,210
And most of the people that are

719
00:22:32,210 --> 00:22:32,530
building those.

720
00:22:32,530 --> 00:22:34,130
When we started back in 15, it was

721
00:22:34,130 --> 00:22:34,910
all sale.

722
00:22:34,910 --> 00:22:35,890
There was a transition after the

723
00:22:35,890 --> 00:22:38,620
pandemic where a lot of this went
rental.

724
00:22:38,620 --> 00:22:41,800
And the reason why it went rental
is because a lot of folks were

725
00:22:41,800 --> 00:22:44,640
using the CMHC MLI Select program,
which I'm sure it's the hottest

726
00:22:44,640 --> 00:22:47,160
thing on the market now because
everyone says, you can own this

727
00:22:47,160 --> 00:22:48,480
place for 5 % down.

728
00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:49,940
And I think it's just like a hot

729
00:22:49,940 --> 00:22:50,120
tagline.

730
00:22:50,120 --> 00:22:52,300
I would say it's not that easy.

731
00:22:52,300 --> 00:22:54,180
We tell everyone that.

732
00:22:54,180 --> 00:22:56,230
And if you have 5 % down and

733
00:22:56,230 --> 00:23:00,250
you're trying to do a $3 million
project, you can't do it.

734
00:23:00,250 --> 00:23:01,630
You don't just need 150 grand.

735
00:23:01,630 --> 00:23:02,210
significantly more complex and

736
00:23:02,210 --> 00:23:02,610
nuanced.

737
00:23:02,610 --> 00:23:03,450
And it's only gotten more

738
00:23:03,450 --> 00:23:04,310
difficult to deliver.

739
00:23:04,310 --> 00:23:06,850
And so I would say we're starting

740
00:23:07,070 --> 00:23:09,470
to see the pendulum maybe shift
back to where folks are now

741
00:23:09,670 --> 00:23:11,290
considering to do more sale, not
just rental.

742
00:23:11,290 --> 00:23:14,410
Have you had any pushback from
neighbors about like eight units

743
00:23:14,410 --> 00:23:16,490
on their formerly one house lot?
100%.

744
00:23:16,490 --> 00:23:18,710
Like this is the thing that
Edmonton and Calgary and every

745
00:23:18,870 --> 00:23:20,350
city across North America is
facing is like, we were

746
00:23:20,350 --> 00:23:21,310
traditionally single family homes.

747
00:23:21,410 --> 00:23:22,570
And now we're putting in, you

748
00:23:22,710 --> 00:23:23,830
know, eight units as of right.

749
00:23:23,830 --> 00:23:25,290
And so It definitely has been

750
00:23:25,320 --> 00:23:25,600
controversial.

751
00:23:25,700 --> 00:23:26,960
There's like a fine balance.

752
00:23:26,960 --> 00:23:28,960
So we've seen really great
examples where eight units kind

753
00:23:28,960 --> 00:23:32,000
of... seamlessly integrate into
these communities you have to

754
00:23:32,180 --> 00:23:34,840
realize like people think the
context of these communities are

755
00:23:35,100 --> 00:23:37,480
wartime bungalows but they're not
because they've always been

756
00:23:37,480 --> 00:23:39,840
evolving so there's semi -detached
homes there's like huge single

757
00:23:39,840 --> 00:23:42,990
family homes that are three
stories that look like they could

758
00:23:43,310 --> 00:23:46,230
be eight units and so we've seen
some really interesting like

759
00:23:46,230 --> 00:23:49,770
contexts where they fit and they
fit in a way that has made sense i

760
00:23:49,770 --> 00:23:52,970
would just say to you that like
the reason why middle like has

761
00:23:52,970 --> 00:23:56,330
really taken this solution that we
have to be homeowner centric is

762
00:23:56,330 --> 00:23:58,410
because we understand that like
there's homeowners in community

763
00:23:58,410 --> 00:24:01,530
that feel like this is happening
to them not for them or with them

764
00:24:01,530 --> 00:24:04,450
like as a developer i realized
that that was the case because

765
00:24:04,650 --> 00:24:07,010
it's not like i was sitting here
overly concerned about what was

766
00:24:07,010 --> 00:24:09,940
happening in their community
because you have a million other

767
00:24:09,940 --> 00:24:11,560
things that you're concerned
about.

768
00:24:11,560 --> 00:24:15,360
Like, are you going to be able to
build on cost, on time, on budget?

769
00:24:15,360 --> 00:24:17,360
What is the cost implications if
you don't or you miss?

770
00:24:17,360 --> 00:24:21,700
And so I would just say like all
of those things are really, really

771
00:24:21,700 --> 00:24:21,920
critical.

772
00:24:21,920 --> 00:24:23,400
And it's not as simple as just

773
00:24:23,400 --> 00:24:24,960
saying like, oh, we're just
concerned about the community

774
00:24:24,960 --> 00:24:25,360
engagement piece.

775
00:24:25,360 --> 00:24:27,000
yeah it is no question a challenge

776
00:24:27,000 --> 00:24:29,720
and this is like a really good
example for folks who get you know

777
00:24:29,720 --> 00:24:32,060
really concerned about like what
does this look like so from the

778
00:24:32,060 --> 00:24:34,840
street this looks like you know a
duplex and next to you know a

779
00:24:34,840 --> 00:24:39,110
single family home and infill but
it's actually six units because

780
00:24:39,270 --> 00:24:42,190
it's got two secondary suites and
it's got two laneways And so this

781
00:24:42,190 --> 00:24:44,910
is six units on what was typically
a single family home.

782
00:24:44,910 --> 00:24:48,390
have to What size lot is that?
Is that like a 120 by?

783
00:24:48,390 --> 00:24:49,530
Yeah, 50, 50 foot frontage.

784
00:24:49,530 --> 00:24:52,650
Yeah, so 6 ,000 square feet with a

785
00:24:52,650 --> 00:24:54,470
lane loaded kind of backyard.

786
00:24:54,670 --> 00:24:56,290
That is one of the pre -approved

787
00:24:56,290 --> 00:25:00,030
plants that we're working on right
now with the city of Calgary, city

788
00:25:00,030 --> 00:25:04,470
of Edmonton to kind of make it so
those things can get built as of

789
00:25:04,570 --> 00:25:04,730
right.

790
00:25:04,730 --> 00:25:05,930
Community concerns are valid in

791
00:25:05,930 --> 00:25:11,340
our mind and there's a lot of
things we can do to help mitigate

792
00:25:11,340 --> 00:25:11,560
them.

793
00:25:11,560 --> 00:25:13,960
And I think one of the biggest

794
00:25:13,960 --> 00:25:15,840
challenges we're having.

795
00:25:15,840 --> 00:25:17,200
is that when examples don't land

796
00:25:17,200 --> 00:25:19,340
strong, like when you have
examples that are landing poorly

797
00:25:19,340 --> 00:25:20,660
in community, it's really
challenging.

798
00:25:20,660 --> 00:25:24,820
And so how do we figure out a way
to create better built forms that

799
00:25:24,820 --> 00:25:28,240
land in community?
And one of the ways we think we

800
00:25:28,240 --> 00:25:29,740
can do that is by working with,
you know.

801
00:25:29,740 --> 00:25:33,360
the city the community and
honestly at times even higher

802
00:25:33,360 --> 00:25:35,280
caliber designers of architects
who can't make it feasible to work

803
00:25:35,280 --> 00:25:40,070
on 150 by 120 but can potentially
make it work to work on one that

804
00:25:40,070 --> 00:25:42,250
could be replicated in many
different communities i'm going to

805
00:25:42,250 --> 00:25:46,450
pull up the gis tool too even
though it's in beta just for you

806
00:25:46,450 --> 00:25:48,610
guys Take a peek at here as well.

807
00:25:48,610 --> 00:25:49,790
So this is the map.

808
00:25:49,790 --> 00:25:50,950
This is in Calgary.

809
00:25:50,950 --> 00:25:52,170
You type in an address.

810
00:25:52,170 --> 00:25:55,910
It'll tell you kind of a bunch of
details about the actual, you

811
00:25:55,910 --> 00:25:57,330
know, address that you see.

812
00:25:57,330 --> 00:25:58,750
And then obviously, you know, you

813
00:25:58,750 --> 00:26:00,750
can look at the context of what's
around there.

814
00:26:00,890 --> 00:26:03,110
And so here's an example of like
you're on a corner site.

815
00:26:03,210 --> 00:26:06,850
One of the best use cases on a
corner site is what we call a 4x4.

816
00:26:06,930 --> 00:26:07,870
So you see the rendering.

817
00:26:07,870 --> 00:26:09,310
This is done by an architect group

818
00:26:09,310 --> 00:26:10,250
called FAS.

819
00:26:10,250 --> 00:26:12,310
And so, you know, it shows you

820
00:26:12,310 --> 00:26:13,310
what it could look like.

821
00:26:13,310 --> 00:26:15,310
And then, you know, maybe not as

822
00:26:16,040 --> 00:26:18,560
conducive for a mid -block
configuration, but this is what a

823
00:26:18,560 --> 00:26:19,280
mid -block configuration is.

824
00:26:19,280 --> 00:26:19,680
integration.

825
00:26:19,680 --> 00:26:23,140
And I would say like a lot of
these are no's, but they could be

826
00:26:23,140 --> 00:26:23,320
yeses.

827
00:26:23,320 --> 00:26:25,720
I just wanted to kind of show you

828
00:26:25,720 --> 00:26:28,420
high level what the site is kind
of looking like and how we're

829
00:26:28,420 --> 00:26:28,980
doing it.

830
00:26:28,980 --> 00:26:29,640
That's pretty cool.

831
00:26:29,640 --> 00:26:31,440
It just says this will work.

832
00:26:31,440 --> 00:26:32,420
These two won't.

833
00:26:32,420 --> 00:26:32,920
That's pretty cool.

834
00:26:32,920 --> 00:26:34,960
That is very cool.

835
00:26:34,960 --> 00:26:37,580
What normally would happen here is
like you would have realtor

836
00:26:37,580 --> 00:25:17,140
ca linked.

837
00:25:17,140 --> 00:26:39,140
normally would happen here is like

838
00:26:39,240 --> 00:26:40,360
you would have realtor
ca linked.

839
00:26:40,580 --> 00:26:44,040
And so now it would highlight
whatever ones that were listed in

840
00:26:44,040 --> 00:26:45,440
that community now would be on
here.

841
00:26:45,440 --> 00:26:49,020
And it would tell you whether or
not it was a green or red and you

842
00:26:49,020 --> 00:26:50,420
could click on that.

843
00:26:50,420 --> 00:26:51,020
That's awesome.

844
00:26:51,020 --> 00:26:53,880
So I guess basically like once
this is up and running, is it

845
00:26:53,880 --> 00:26:58,040
primarily built for investors then
to look for active listings?

846
00:26:58,040 --> 00:26:59,400
And then what's a possibility to
build on that?

847
00:26:59,400 --> 00:27:01,280
I would say it's built for like
all three.

848
00:27:01,280 --> 00:27:02,800
would say it's built for like all
three.

849
00:27:02,800 --> 00:27:07,380
If you think about like the three
customers that we tend to

850
00:27:07,380 --> 00:27:07,640
interfere with.

851
00:27:07,640 --> 00:27:09,800
face a lot with is like government

852
00:27:09,800 --> 00:27:12,920
municipalities like what do they
know is possible on the lands that

853
00:27:12,920 --> 00:27:16,560
they have how do they create
better systems and processes so

854
00:27:16,740 --> 00:27:18,260
that everyone in community knows
what's possible because one of the

855
00:27:18,260 --> 00:27:21,010
challenges we have is like when
you have someone that's

856
00:27:21,010 --> 00:27:23,690
unsophisticated doing this for the
first time submitting applications

857
00:27:23,690 --> 00:27:27,470
and then getting kicked back and
kicked back and delayed it's

858
00:27:27,470 --> 00:27:30,790
problematic for everybody cities
don't make more money when you

859
00:27:30,790 --> 00:27:32,670
have bad applicants, right?
Because they pay the same price.

860
00:27:32,670 --> 00:27:36,490
It's not like you pay less if
you're a shitty applicant and you

861
00:27:36,490 --> 00:27:39,370
have to resubmit your plans 14
times and you have to talk to the

862
00:27:39,370 --> 00:27:39,950
planner 30 times.

863
00:27:39,950 --> 00:27:41,090
Like that's actually cumbersome

864
00:27:41,090 --> 00:27:41,570
for the municipalities.

865
00:27:41,710 --> 00:27:42,910
And so how do we streamline

866
00:27:42,910 --> 00:27:44,690
processes for municipalities and
get to better outcomes?

867
00:27:44,690 --> 00:27:47,430
The citizen often don't know what
they can do and neither does the

868
00:27:47,430 --> 00:27:48,930
realtor, quite frankly, at times
because they're not development

869
00:27:48,930 --> 00:27:49,050
experts.

870
00:27:49,050 --> 00:27:49,350
So that's smart.

871
00:27:49,350 --> 00:27:52,950
Yeah, no, like, I mean, it's not a
bad thing, but it's a good thing.

872
00:27:52,950 --> 00:27:54,730
It's like, how do we get the
realtor?

873
00:27:54,730 --> 00:27:55,410
We see realtors.

874
00:27:55,410 --> 00:27:56,310
coming to all of our programming.

875
00:27:56,310 --> 00:27:58,630
And I love having conversations
because they recognize that not

876
00:27:58,630 --> 00:28:01,210
only is this important for them to
understand their markets, it's

877
00:28:01,450 --> 00:28:02,030
important for their clients.

878
00:28:02,030 --> 00:28:03,050
So we've had realtors now that

879
00:28:03,150 --> 00:28:05,990
send their clients to us before
they decide whether or not they

880
00:28:05,990 --> 00:28:07,490
want to sell, buy, develop.

881
00:28:07,490 --> 00:28:08,670
Because I think the thing that I

882
00:28:08,850 --> 00:28:10,670
love most about realtors now is a
lot of them are not short

883
00:28:10,670 --> 00:28:10,810
-sighted.

884
00:28:10,810 --> 00:28:12,190
They're not just looking for a one

885
00:28:12,190 --> 00:28:12,430
-time commission.

886
00:28:12,430 --> 00:28:14,070
They recognize that referral, that

887
00:28:14,070 --> 00:28:16,230
word about that maybe this guy
will go on to buy three or this

888
00:28:16,230 --> 00:28:18,850
one will go on to buy two or four
or they'll be... a developer and

889
00:28:19,180 --> 00:28:21,600
i'll be the person that sells
those products or helps and buys

890
00:28:21,600 --> 00:28:21,740
them so they have this like desire
to learn more and i think like

891
00:28:21,740 --> 00:28:26,760
that is the gap that we're filling
is like i didn't know where we

892
00:28:26,760 --> 00:28:30,360
would have went back in the day
when we did this we just learned

893
00:28:30,360 --> 00:28:32,440
by mistakes and i think we have so
much information and we have a

894
00:28:32,440 --> 00:28:34,600
process and now we're leveraging
technology to make it easier for

895
00:28:34,600 --> 00:28:37,320
more people to understand what the
opportunities are specific to

896
00:28:37,320 --> 00:28:40,540
colonna i mean obviously i feel
this works to colonna i mean

897
00:28:40,540 --> 00:28:43,580
obviously i feel this works better
in Alberta, and you can correct me

898
00:28:43,580 --> 00:28:43,780
if I'm wrong, but Kelowna land
prices are pretty expensive,

899
00:28:43,780 --> 00:28:45,640
right?
So if someone wants to go and buy

900
00:28:45,640 --> 00:28:48,890
a $800 ,000, $900 ,000 house to
tear it down and do infill, do the

901
00:28:48,890 --> 00:28:50,870
numbers still work here as an
investment?

902
00:28:50,870 --> 00:28:51,850
Or is this primarily like...

903
00:28:51,850 --> 00:28:53,310
Hey, I'm a current homeowner.

904
00:28:53,310 --> 00:28:54,910
I've owned this house for 10
years.

905
00:28:54,910 --> 00:28:58,610
However, I want to make it more of
like a generational living.

906
00:28:58,610 --> 00:29:01,690
You know, I want to bring my
parents in or somewhere for my

907
00:29:01,690 --> 00:29:04,030
kids to live on a separate
dwelling plus some rental income.

908
00:29:04,030 --> 00:29:06,230
Like, are you seeing more
opportunity on homeowners wanting

909
00:29:06,230 --> 00:29:10,430
to build four units to have a
little bit of revenue income and

910
00:29:10,430 --> 00:29:13,010
provide housing for family as
well?

911
00:29:13,010 --> 00:29:14,850
Or like, where does this fit best
Kelowna specific?

912
00:29:15,010 --> 00:29:15,070
Yeah.

913
00:29:15,070 --> 00:29:16,310
You know, what's funny is like, so

914
00:29:16,310 --> 00:29:20,070
two things I would say like
colonists in like a bit of a real

915
00:29:20,070 --> 00:29:23,730
estate, it feels like a bit of a
lull here, like in terms of sales

916
00:29:23,730 --> 00:29:25,910
and volumes and historically
compared to where you typically

917
00:29:25,910 --> 00:29:30,510
have been, I think there's some
lows that have been, but then it

918
00:29:30,510 --> 00:29:31,410
seems to kind of swing.

919
00:29:31,410 --> 00:29:33,070
Like you kind of have these years

920
00:29:33,090 --> 00:29:35,490
or months that come by and it's
high again.

921
00:29:35,490 --> 00:29:36,190
And so.

922
00:29:36,370 --> 00:29:37,370
I think, no question, the

923
00:29:37,430 --> 00:29:38,570
homeowner -centric model makes a
ton of sense.

924
00:29:38,570 --> 00:29:39,210
There's viability in it.

925
00:29:39,210 --> 00:29:40,330
How do we bring more homeowners

926
00:29:40,330 --> 00:29:42,300
through the process?
From an investor standpoint, on

927
00:29:42,300 --> 00:29:43,980
the purpose -built rental side,
it's tough, right?

928
00:29:43,980 --> 00:29:45,700
Because you're right.

929
00:29:45,700 --> 00:29:47,240
The land prices are a million

930
00:29:47,240 --> 00:29:47,520
bucks.

931
00:29:47,520 --> 00:29:48,920
You're trying to build six units,

932
00:29:48,920 --> 00:29:51,360
and then there's an affordability
requirement that two of those six

933
00:29:51,360 --> 00:29:55,100
have to be at 30 % of the median
if you're going to go after the

934
00:29:55,100 --> 00:29:57,340
rental model with CMHC.

935
00:29:57,340 --> 00:29:58,640
There are use cases right now,

936
00:29:58,640 --> 00:30:00,700
though, where we've seen people
make the numbers make sense and

937
00:30:00,700 --> 00:30:01,280
work through it.

938
00:30:01,280 --> 00:30:02,760
So there's a part of the folks

939
00:30:02,760 --> 00:30:05,720
that are... active right now that
are delivering these.

940
00:30:05,720 --> 00:30:08,520
What I would say is the city is
actively working on reducing some

941
00:30:08,520 --> 00:30:10,340
of the barriers and costs, whether
it be DCC fees, off -site

942
00:30:10,340 --> 00:30:11,820
improvements, Fortis improvements,
and also funding potential models

943
00:30:11,820 --> 00:30:12,980
that exist that make this more
viable.

944
00:30:12,980 --> 00:30:16,100
I also think the sale numbers can
make sense in Kelowna, maybe not

945
00:30:16,100 --> 00:30:19,720
so much a rental market, but this
idea of, okay, if I was to build

946
00:30:19,720 --> 00:30:21,280
these units and sell them, how
would they perform?

947
00:30:21,280 --> 00:30:23,020
I think there's probably more use
cases for sale than... there is

948
00:30:23,020 --> 00:30:23,220
rental.

949
00:30:23,220 --> 00:30:25,000
And I think rental can work, but

950
00:30:25,000 --> 00:30:26,420
your expectations would have to be
tempered.

951
00:30:26,420 --> 00:30:30,240
We tell everyone this CMHC, like
everyone thinks they're going to

952
00:30:30,240 --> 00:30:30,840
get rich quick.

953
00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:31,820
It's not like that.

954
00:30:31,820 --> 00:30:35,320
It's a 50 year amortization with a
10 year requirement on the

955
00:30:35,320 --> 00:30:35,720
affordable piece.

956
00:30:35,720 --> 00:30:35,320
And so if you're doing this to

957
00:30:35,320 --> 00:30:39,320
make a ton of money in a short
amount of time, it's not the tool

958
00:30:39,440 --> 00:30:40,020
for you.

959
00:30:40,020 --> 00:30:41,860
What I think is interesting about

960
00:30:42,000 --> 00:30:43,260
Kelowna is the type of product
typology that's missing.

961
00:30:43,260 --> 00:30:46,860
So this idea of three bedroom
family oriented at home, I think

962
00:30:46,860 --> 00:30:50,860
there's a lot of room for, I think
if you're building, you know,

963
00:30:50,860 --> 00:30:54,380
Stuff that's going to compete with
a fairly robust condo market,

964
00:30:54,380 --> 00:30:56,600
rental market in the apartment
side, it's going to be tough.

965
00:30:56,600 --> 00:30:59,280
And so there's room for sure, but
it's got to be in the housing

966
00:30:59,280 --> 00:31:00,400
diversity and options that you're
building.

967
00:31:00,400 --> 00:31:01,540
So you mentioned earlier about
modular.

968
00:31:01,540 --> 00:31:03,100
So you mentioned earlier about
modular.

969
00:31:03,100 --> 00:31:05,120
So is modular a solution for some
of this?

970
00:31:05,120 --> 00:31:05,860
Yeah, yeah.

971
00:31:05,860 --> 00:31:08,360
So a few of the pre -improved

972
00:31:08,360 --> 00:31:09,520
plans that were designed were
actually modular ready.

973
00:31:09,520 --> 00:31:12,780
And so they were fully... designed
so that you can deliver modularly

974
00:31:12,780 --> 00:31:16,680
what i would say is like again the
same complexities and limitations

975
00:31:16,680 --> 00:31:18,960
right like there's not a lot of
people that have done modular

976
00:31:18,960 --> 00:31:20,740
especially at the infill scale but
then also like what are the

977
00:31:20,740 --> 00:31:22,740
complexities that come along with
it but then what are the

978
00:31:22,740 --> 00:31:26,020
limitations so you get outside of
like there's not a lot of

979
00:31:26,120 --> 00:31:28,520
customization that can happen in
these things and so You get this

980
00:31:28,520 --> 00:31:29,520
huge efficiency in terms of
timeline.

981
00:31:29,700 --> 00:31:30,500
You get some cost efficiencies.

982
00:31:30,500 --> 00:31:31,600
Sometimes it's even at par.

983
00:31:31,600 --> 00:31:34,680
But the challenge today is like
there's this gap for modular where

984
00:31:34,680 --> 00:31:37,760
if you're going to provide modular
construction, who funds like the

985
00:31:37,880 --> 00:31:39,320
building of those?
Generally speaking, when you're

986
00:31:39,320 --> 00:31:41,980
doing construction draws, you get
draws based on how far you've

987
00:31:41,980 --> 00:31:42,760
gotten on site.

988
00:31:42,760 --> 00:31:43,920
Traditionally, banks don't fund

989
00:31:44,080 --> 00:31:46,740
mods that are being built in a
factory until they arrive at site.

990
00:31:46,740 --> 00:31:48,700
But factories need 100 % payment
once those things leave factory.

991
00:31:48,700 --> 00:31:51,700
There's a huge funding gap that
hasn't quite been solved about who

992
00:31:51,700 --> 00:31:53,380
deals with that portion of the
funding.

993
00:31:53,380 --> 00:31:53,660
Interesting.

994
00:31:53,660 --> 00:31:54,100
I haven't heard that.

995
00:31:54,100 --> 00:31:54,360
funding.

996
00:31:54,360 --> 00:31:54,640
Interesting.

997
00:31:54,640 --> 00:31:56,000
I haven't heard that.

998
00:31:56,220 --> 00:31:56,760
That's interesting.

999
00:31:56,760 --> 00:31:57,900
It's a good point.

1000
00:31:57,980 --> 00:31:59,400
When you hear about modular and

1001
00:31:59,400 --> 00:32:02,040
you hear about this, to me, it
just makes so much sense.

1002
00:32:02,040 --> 00:32:03,820
And I just don't understand why we
don't see it.

1003
00:32:03,820 --> 00:32:04,120
At all.

1004
00:32:04,120 --> 00:32:06,420
I guess that answers a bit why.

1005
00:32:06,420 --> 00:32:09,360
Modular factories are good at
producing modular homes.

1006
00:32:09,360 --> 00:32:12,100
They're not necessarily good at
the last mile logistics of on

1007
00:32:12,100 --> 00:32:13,460
-site construction, delivery and
placement.

1008
00:32:13,680 --> 00:32:18,480
And so if you're a modular factory
and you're staying in your own

1009
00:32:18,480 --> 00:32:20,940
lane and you can produce these
homes.

1010
00:32:20,940 --> 00:32:23,500
Someone's got to deal with the
transportation, trucking, and

1011
00:32:23,500 --> 00:32:23,720
logistics.

1012
00:32:23,720 --> 00:32:25,180
And then someone else has to deal

1013
00:32:25,180 --> 00:32:26,040
with the onsites.

1014
00:32:26,100 --> 00:32:27,680
And so if you go to a general GC

1015
00:32:27,680 --> 00:32:31,320
and say, a general contractor, I
need you to do all my service

1016
00:32:31,320 --> 00:32:32,650
hookups, landscaping, foundations,
but that's it.

1017
00:32:32,650 --> 00:32:34,950
You're taking away like 70 % of
their scope.

1018
00:32:34,950 --> 00:32:39,530
Why would a GC want to only do
that part of the scope and not the

1019
00:32:39,530 --> 00:32:40,670
rest?
And so what we're finding is like

1020
00:32:40,670 --> 00:32:42,830
there isn't enough people who are
just experts in delivery of

1021
00:32:42,830 --> 00:32:45,670
modular because it's never really
caught on at scale.

1022
00:32:45,670 --> 00:32:48,430
And so part of what I think we
need to see is a bit of an

1023
00:32:48,430 --> 00:32:48,550
upscaling.

1024
00:32:48,550 --> 00:32:49,830
of what that last module logistics

1025
00:32:49,830 --> 00:32:50,610
looks like.

1026
00:32:50,610 --> 00:32:50,730
Opportunity.

1027
00:32:50,730 --> 00:32:51,030
Anyone listening.

1028
00:32:51,030 --> 00:32:51,990
You know, it's funny.

1029
00:32:51,990 --> 00:32:54,310
We did have Ryan Smith on from
City of Kelowna.

1030
00:32:54,310 --> 00:32:55,610
Yeah, a few episodes ago.

1031
00:32:55,610 --> 00:32:57,230
And we were kind of speaking about

1032
00:32:57,230 --> 00:32:58,450
some of this as well.

1033
00:32:58,450 --> 00:33:00,620
But to stay on like the funding

1034
00:33:00,620 --> 00:33:02,860
point that there's that bit of a
gap there.

1035
00:33:02,860 --> 00:33:05,680
It's similar to, you know, if a
homeowner owns their home, but

1036
00:33:05,680 --> 00:33:08,580
they can't qualify for like the
equity takeout to start this

1037
00:33:08,580 --> 00:33:08,680
process.

1038
00:33:08,680 --> 00:33:10,040
It seems like you guys are way

1039
00:33:10,040 --> 00:33:11,560
ahead of the curve on everything
else.

1040
00:33:11,560 --> 00:33:12,520
And kind of you're working with
the government as well.

1041
00:33:12,520 --> 00:33:15,500
Do you see anything coming down
the pipeline that would help

1042
00:33:15,780 --> 00:33:17,860
facilitate, like a homeowner has
their property, they have a bunch

1043
00:33:17,860 --> 00:33:21,220
of equity, but they have no
income, so they can't

1044
00:33:21,220 --> 00:33:23,130
conventionally qualify for a
mortgage.

1045
00:33:23,130 --> 00:33:26,670
Are there any programs that are
coming down the pipe to help them

1046
00:33:26,670 --> 00:33:30,250
do some of these infill projects?
Like if that's the barrier for

1047
00:33:30,250 --> 00:33:32,910
them right now?
I think there's been a lot of

1048
00:33:32,910 --> 00:33:35,430
conversation around this idea of
being cash core, think there's

1049
00:33:35,430 --> 00:33:38,050
been a lot of conversation around
this idea of being cash core, but

1050
00:33:38,050 --> 00:33:40,470
house rich, right?
Like if you think about our

1051
00:33:40,470 --> 00:33:42,030
boomers are historically the one
who bought it.

1052
00:33:42,030 --> 00:33:44,760
There's a ton of people like that.

1053
00:33:44,760 --> 00:33:46,840
it. There's a ton of people like

1054
00:33:46,840 --> 00:33:47,340
that.

1055
00:33:47,340 --> 00:33:47,940
Yes.

1056
00:33:47,940 --> 00:33:48,120
Yeah.

1057
00:33:48,120 --> 00:33:48,400
Yeah.

1058
00:33:48,400 --> 00:33:51,380
And so we've done a lot of
networking exercises.

1059
00:33:51,380 --> 00:33:54,500
We've done surveys and intakes to
understand what is that capital

1060
00:33:54,500 --> 00:33:59,380
stack barrier that we need to get
them to a project.

1061
00:33:59,380 --> 00:34:03,940
And then even once you get them to
the project, what is the approval

1062
00:34:03,940 --> 00:34:05,900
requirements to actually proceed
forward with the development?

1063
00:34:05,900 --> 00:34:10,020
I think there's a model there, no
question.

1064
00:34:10,020 --> 00:34:13,699
I think the question is, is how do
you shore up the risk, right?

1065
00:34:14,040 --> 00:34:17,520
Because there's an equity stack
risk that needs to be shored up

1066
00:34:17,800 --> 00:34:19,920
for whoever funds that initial
equity stack.

1067
00:34:19,920 --> 00:34:24,800
But also like, this is the thing
that I think is going to take time

1068
00:34:24,900 --> 00:34:24,800
and it's not going to happen
overnight.

1069
00:34:24,900 --> 00:34:26,860
A homeowner who lives in the
community, for them to think that

1070
00:34:26,860 --> 00:34:28,580
a boomer is going to become a
developer, it's a hard thing,

1071
00:34:28,620 --> 00:34:30,120
right?
You're going to go out and take on

1072
00:34:30,120 --> 00:34:32,679
a $3 million construction project
when you've never done any of this

1073
00:34:32,679 --> 00:34:36,560
before, and you've got to go live
somewhere for, let's call it, 12

1074
00:34:36,560 --> 00:34:37,639
months.

1075
00:34:37,639 --> 00:34:38,940
And you're retired.

1076
00:34:38,940 --> 00:34:39,440
Yeah.

1077
00:34:39,440 --> 00:34:42,000
So what I would say to you is that

1078
00:34:42,000 --> 00:34:46,900
person is showing up with us in
small amounts, but when they do

1079
00:34:46,900 --> 00:34:47,940
show up, it's generally with their
kids.

1080
00:34:47,940 --> 00:34:50,429
Like their kids are young
professionals who need homes, who

1081
00:34:50,429 --> 00:34:53,270
are renting and who are like
understanding that this is an

1082
00:34:53,270 --> 00:34:54,010
opportunity for them now.

1083
00:34:54,010 --> 00:34:55,650
And so you kind of need that

1084
00:34:55,650 --> 00:34:55,790
community.

1085
00:34:55,790 --> 00:34:56,790
Like it takes a village.

1086
00:34:56,790 --> 00:34:59,830
And I would say the financing
piece is one part, but then the

1087
00:34:59,830 --> 00:35:05,290
actual cultural risk aversion
piece is just a whole nother layer

1088
00:35:05,290 --> 00:35:07,010
that we're trying to unpack.

1089
00:35:07,210 --> 00:35:09,230
part of it is like they don't know

1090
00:35:09,230 --> 00:35:10,170
what they don't know.

1091
00:35:10,170 --> 00:35:12,380
And so if we don't have a

1092
00:35:12,380 --> 00:35:14,240
foundation of education or
information or understanding the

1093
00:35:14,240 --> 00:35:18,120
process, if we don't have good
examples of people who have moved

1094
00:35:18,120 --> 00:35:21,340
through the system, that could be
those early adopters who have

1095
00:35:21,340 --> 00:35:21,720
successfully done it.

1096
00:35:21,720 --> 00:35:22,280
None of this matters.

1097
00:35:22,280 --> 00:35:26,330
And so I would say those first few
in community are going to be

1098
00:35:26,330 --> 00:35:30,630
absolutely critical, not only to
do well for those people who

1099
00:35:30,630 --> 00:35:32,010
embark on this, but to land well.

1100
00:35:32,010 --> 00:35:33,910
And the people that can do it

1101
00:35:34,090 --> 00:35:34,770
right now are the developers,
right?

1102
00:35:34,770 --> 00:35:37,190
Are the realtors, are the
investors, are the folks who are

1103
00:35:37,190 --> 00:35:37,350
savvy.

1104
00:35:37,350 --> 00:35:39,390
And what we... need to do a better

1105
00:35:39,390 --> 00:35:42,530
job at is I think making sure
those projects are landing well in

1106
00:35:42,530 --> 00:35:45,530
community so that we can work with
homeowners eventually in

1107
00:35:45,530 --> 00:35:49,090
communities, the citizens and
cities to actually allow for this

1108
00:35:49,090 --> 00:35:50,130
to happen at a more robust,
scalable way.

1109
00:35:50,130 --> 00:35:51,170
going to go Yeah, totally.

1110
00:35:51,330 --> 00:35:51,350
Totally.

1111
00:35:51,350 --> 00:35:54,090
And I guess if someone is
interested, what does it look like

1112
00:35:54,090 --> 00:35:57,210
to work with you guys?
Like, what's the cost?

1113
00:35:57,210 --> 00:36:00,470
I know you're talking about like,
you know, the 100 hour course, you

1114
00:36:00,470 --> 00:36:02,690
put on some of these daily things.

1115
00:36:02,690 --> 00:36:04,390
I think some of the cost is

1116
00:36:04,390 --> 00:36:06,210
potentially subsidized by the
city, which is great.

1117
00:36:06,210 --> 00:36:08,530
But yeah, can you walk us through
what it looks like if someone

1118
00:36:08,530 --> 00:36:11,250
wants to work with you?
We kind of have a suite of product

1119
00:36:11,250 --> 00:36:13,970
tools that we built as a way to
kind of help folks through

1120
00:36:13,970 --> 00:36:11,470
navigating the system.

1121
00:36:11,470 --> 00:36:11,890
So our middle school.

1122
00:36:11,890 --> 00:36:14,610
Depending on the municipality, if
we have a partnership or not,

1123
00:36:14,610 --> 00:36:16,930
anywhere from like $100 to $350,
$500 for the full day.

1124
00:36:16,930 --> 00:36:18,710
And so that you spend a full day.

1125
00:36:18,710 --> 00:36:18,350
We bring in experts from every

1126
00:36:18,510 --> 00:36:20,030
field to come in and chat.

1127
00:36:20,030 --> 00:36:22,420
We have a networking event.

1128
00:36:22,420 --> 00:36:25,860
Oftentimes, we'll have a walking
tour depending on the community

1129
00:36:25,860 --> 00:36:27,000
that we're in.

1130
00:36:27,000 --> 00:36:28,840
But it's essentially like giving

1131
00:36:28,840 --> 00:36:33,180
you as much information as we can
in kind of a boot camp style one

1132
00:36:33,180 --> 00:36:33,520
-day event.

1133
00:36:33,520 --> 00:36:34,240
And then after that, we've

1134
00:36:34,240 --> 00:36:36,840
launched Middle U, which we'll
launch in the fall.

1135
00:36:36,840 --> 00:36:41,490
That program is going to be kind
of in that $3 ,000 range.

1136
00:36:41,730 --> 00:36:44,710
for 100 hours of instructional
hours with a certification at the

1137
00:36:44,710 --> 00:36:44,850
end.

1138
00:36:44,850 --> 00:36:46,150
Again, there'll be some

1139
00:36:46,450 --> 00:36:49,130
opportunities, we're hoping, where
that's subsidized and funded,

1140
00:36:49,130 --> 00:36:52,570
depending on where you're coming
from or the groups that we get to

1141
00:36:52,570 --> 00:36:53,970
fund that program.

1142
00:36:53,970 --> 00:36:55,370
But after that, let's say you're

1143
00:36:55,370 --> 00:36:57,470
moving through and you have a real
live project and you want to move.

1144
00:36:57,470 --> 00:37:01,200
We launched two programs in
earnest as a response to the

1145
00:37:01,200 --> 00:37:01,420
education.

1146
00:37:01,420 --> 00:37:03,120
One of them was called our

1147
00:37:03,120 --> 00:37:03,180
Accelerator.

1148
00:37:03,180 --> 00:37:04,980
So we have over 70 experts from

1149
00:37:05,120 --> 00:37:06,900
across Canada that have all worked
in the middle housing space.

1150
00:37:06,900 --> 00:37:08,320
developers, accountants, lawyers,
surveyors, like...

1151
00:37:08,320 --> 00:37:10,640
Just builders, anyone you can
think of who have basically said

1152
00:37:10,640 --> 00:37:13,120
they're willing to donate their
time and sit down with people for

1153
00:37:13,220 --> 00:37:15,700
an hour to learn and give them
information and feedback on their

1154
00:37:15,700 --> 00:37:15,880
project.

1155
00:37:15,880 --> 00:37:18,300
It's an hourly rate.

1156
00:37:18,300 --> 00:37:20,300
We pay those folks.

1157
00:37:20,300 --> 00:37:21,720
That's a program where we're still

1158
00:37:21,720 --> 00:37:23,020
retooling, but we think is
incredibly powerful.

1159
00:37:23,020 --> 00:37:28,410
So the accelerator is a great way
for someone to say, I want to talk

1160
00:37:28,410 --> 00:37:32,790
to this person about financing
because I need to know if I can do

1161
00:37:32,790 --> 00:37:33,150
this.

1162
00:37:33,150 --> 00:37:35,330
Or I want to talk to this person

1163
00:37:35,330 --> 00:37:36,230
about building within this
specific jurisdiction.

1164
00:37:36,230 --> 00:37:38,510
That's a tool that we have on our
website.

1165
00:37:38,510 --> 00:37:42,030
The next one that we have is kind
of our master's program.

1166
00:37:42,030 --> 00:37:45,200
And I would say that this one,
we're refining two levels of

1167
00:37:45,200 --> 00:37:45,360
master.

1168
00:37:45,360 --> 00:37:46,820
One is like, we meet with you once

1169
00:37:46,980 --> 00:37:47,280
a month.

1170
00:37:47,280 --> 00:37:48,660
You bring anything you want to go

1171
00:37:48,660 --> 00:37:49,120
over.

1172
00:37:49,120 --> 00:37:52,000
We go over that on your project.

1173
00:37:52,000 --> 00:37:54,920
It's kind of an opportunity for
you to have another set of eyes to

1174
00:37:55,080 --> 00:37:56,240
ask questions because often it's
lonely.

1175
00:37:56,240 --> 00:37:58,760
Like you don't know who has your
best interest.

1176
00:37:58,760 --> 00:38:00,820
You have an architect, you have a
builder, but everyone's getting

1177
00:38:00,820 --> 00:38:02,280
paid to do something and deliver
for you.

1178
00:38:02,280 --> 00:38:05,080
And oftentimes you don't know if
that's the best thing.

1179
00:38:05,080 --> 00:38:07,700
And so that I remember, you know,
in my journey, that would happen

1180
00:38:07,700 --> 00:38:08,160
all the time.

1181
00:38:08,160 --> 00:38:09,700
Contractor said he could build

1182
00:38:09,980 --> 00:38:10,080
something.

1183
00:38:10,160 --> 00:38:11,120
Designer said that it was

1184
00:38:11,120 --> 00:38:11,620
feasible.

1185
00:38:11,620 --> 00:38:13,760
And then you get to go do it.

1186
00:38:13,760 --> 00:38:17,100
And they're like, oh yeah, no, no,
we didn't know that it would be

1187
00:38:17,100 --> 00:38:17,800
that much.

1188
00:38:17,800 --> 00:38:19,820
And it's like, it's triple the

1189
00:38:19,820 --> 00:38:21,460
price that you both told me.

1190
00:38:21,460 --> 00:38:23,320
I could deliver this for.

1191
00:38:23,320 --> 00:38:26,660
And so we try to add as like
another set of eyes, oftentimes on

1192
00:38:26,780 --> 00:38:29,740
larger projects, like folks will
hire what's called like an owner's

1193
00:38:29,740 --> 00:38:29,960
rep.

1194
00:38:29,960 --> 00:38:31,640
And that's like for folks to have

1195
00:38:31,640 --> 00:38:33,180
someone on the ground on large
projects to basically represent

1196
00:38:33,180 --> 00:38:33,600
their interests.

1197
00:38:33,680 --> 00:38:35,080
We're trying to do this in a

1198
00:38:35,080 --> 00:38:37,540
little bit of an augmented way on
smaller scale projects to bring

1199
00:38:37,540 --> 00:38:38,500
all the expertise.

1200
00:38:38,500 --> 00:38:40,160
And so that's kind of like a

1201
00:38:40,160 --> 00:38:42,860
coaching, a one hour session that
we do monthly with folks.

1202
00:38:42,860 --> 00:38:44,080
We've launched another program,
which is basically like a tool

1203
00:38:44,080 --> 00:38:45,480
that we're currently building
where it's an augmented

1204
00:38:45,480 --> 00:38:45,680
development.

1205
00:38:45,680 --> 00:38:46,500
management tool where we build

1206
00:38:46,500 --> 00:38:47,160
this interface.

1207
00:38:47,160 --> 00:38:48,480
And the hope of that interface is

1208
00:38:48,480 --> 00:38:51,080
to basically work with you on a
more consistent weekly basis where

1209
00:38:51,080 --> 00:38:53,830
you're still going to need a
builder, probably maybe a

1210
00:38:53,830 --> 00:38:58,030
developer, or you're still going
to need all those pieces, but

1211
00:38:58,030 --> 00:39:00,930
we're building a framework tool
that allows you to interface with

1212
00:39:00,930 --> 00:39:01,870
us, track your developments.

1213
00:39:01,870 --> 00:39:03,730
We're trying to like outline every

1214
00:39:03,730 --> 00:39:06,570
single step that needs to be done,
almost give you like a digital

1215
00:39:06,570 --> 00:39:09,370
dashboard where, you know, it's
going to be as valuable as you

1216
00:39:09,370 --> 00:39:11,930
make it based on the information
that you put in.

1217
00:39:11,930 --> 00:39:13,150
Again, this is something that
we've been contemplating.

1218
00:39:13,150 --> 00:39:13,390
contemplating.

1219
00:39:13,390 --> 00:39:15,230
We have two customers right now

1220
00:39:15,230 --> 00:39:17,570
that are kind of in that more
advanced program.

1221
00:39:17,570 --> 00:39:19,210
We've also funded a few
demonstration projects based on

1222
00:39:19,210 --> 00:39:22,060
what you just talked about,
Taylor, this idea of we were to

1223
00:39:22,060 --> 00:39:26,480
fund that capital stack portion on
a few projects, would that unlock

1224
00:39:26,600 --> 00:39:29,440
a few projects?
And so we're funding a first time

1225
00:39:29,440 --> 00:39:32,420
homeowner right now who had a
capital stack gap to help them get

1226
00:39:32,420 --> 00:39:33,160
over the finish line.

1227
00:39:33,160 --> 00:39:33,360
Cool.

1228
00:39:33,360 --> 00:39:34,860
That is pretty awesome.

1229
00:39:34,980 --> 00:39:36,740
We had Steven Jagger from Addy

1230
00:39:36,740 --> 00:39:37,680
come on as well.

1231
00:39:37,680 --> 00:39:39,880
I know he was, I don't know if he

1232
00:39:39,880 --> 00:39:44,020
was working with you guys or not,
but he... did start one of the

1233
00:39:44,020 --> 00:39:47,580
first fast track programs in
Kelowna to try and facilitate some

1234
00:39:47,580 --> 00:39:48,220
of this.

1235
00:39:48,220 --> 00:39:49,760
So it'd be interesting to see if

1236
00:39:49,760 --> 00:39:54,560
they get into funding some of
these as well, like some

1237
00:39:54,820 --> 00:39:55,040
crowdfunding.

1238
00:39:55,040 --> 00:39:55,260
Yeah.

1239
00:39:55,260 --> 00:39:55,400
Yeah.

1240
00:39:55,400 --> 00:39:57,020
We launched one of our projects on

1241
00:39:57,020 --> 00:39:58,040
Addy as a crowdfunding project.

1242
00:39:58,040 --> 00:39:59,360
We raised, I think it was 150 ,000

1243
00:39:59,360 --> 00:40:00,440
through Addy on a demonstration
project.

1244
00:40:00,440 --> 00:40:02,400
I love what those guys are after.

1245
00:40:02,400 --> 00:40:04,820
I think there's a lot of room in

1246
00:40:04,820 --> 00:40:07,440
that idea of like, you know, for
community by community, if you

1247
00:40:07,440 --> 00:40:10,520
could kind of get a bunch of
people behind the program, what I

1248
00:40:10,640 --> 00:40:12,840
would say about Addy is like,
still so complex and nuanced.

1249
00:40:12,840 --> 00:40:14,800
And there's so much money that
needs to be paid before you even

1250
00:40:14,800 --> 00:40:17,700
know whether or not you're going
to have a successful project.

1251
00:40:17,700 --> 00:40:21,420
And so for me, it's like we have
to find a better way to move

1252
00:40:21,420 --> 00:40:23,440
through that system because we're
pretty sophisticated in terms of

1253
00:40:23,440 --> 00:40:24,800
our development, our understanding
of legal contracts, what's

1254
00:40:24,800 --> 00:40:25,280
required.

1255
00:40:25,280 --> 00:40:27,620
And I would say if we have a tough

1256
00:40:27,620 --> 00:40:28,980
time navigating that process, you
can imagine.

1257
00:40:28,980 --> 00:40:30,580
a citizen's even going to have a
tougher time.

1258
00:40:30,580 --> 00:40:33,380
And I would say, let alone the
complexity, even if you get

1259
00:40:33,380 --> 00:40:34,780
through the complexities and
navigating that process, why would

1260
00:40:34,780 --> 00:40:36,960
you ever fund someone who's never
done this before?

1261
00:40:36,960 --> 00:40:38,980
Like in a market right now where
people are fairly nervous about

1262
00:40:38,980 --> 00:40:41,260
what's happening, like you want me
to fund John, who's never built

1263
00:40:41,260 --> 00:40:44,100
anything ever before in his life
to do his first project.

1264
00:40:44,100 --> 00:40:46,720
And so that's where I think we can
play a huge role because it's

1265
00:40:46,720 --> 00:40:46,900
like...

1266
00:40:46,900 --> 00:40:47,420
No, don't worry.

1267
00:40:47,420 --> 00:40:49,180
John's not going to be by himself.

1268
00:40:49,180 --> 00:40:50,220
He's powered by middle.

1269
00:40:50,220 --> 00:40:52,620
So he'll have, you know, the full
resources and power of our team

1270
00:40:52,620 --> 00:40:54,300
behind him to make sure he
actually gets through the project.

1271
00:40:54,300 --> 00:40:54,480
Yeah.

1272
00:40:54,480 --> 00:40:55,520
What was interesting to me when we

1273
00:40:55,520 --> 00:40:57,800
first started speaking, it was
like, yeah, like middle housing,

1274
00:40:57,800 --> 00:40:58,410
you're focused on infill.

1275
00:40:58,410 --> 00:41:00,230
Like that was what I thought, you

1276
00:41:00,230 --> 00:41:01,030
know, the company was.

1277
00:41:01,030 --> 00:41:02,490
But, you know, after the

1278
00:41:02,490 --> 00:41:05,490
presentation and speaking to you
afterwards, finding out that, you

1279
00:41:05,490 --> 00:41:06,650
know, you guys were supported.

1280
00:41:06,650 --> 00:41:08,130
financially by federal grants is

1281
00:41:08,130 --> 00:41:10,590
how you're making it so affordable
and accessible to people.

1282
00:41:10,590 --> 00:41:14,050
To me, it's not like, oh, you guys
have built a company to help with

1283
00:41:14,050 --> 00:41:14,610
middle housing.

1284
00:41:14,610 --> 00:41:16,410
It's you've built a company to

1285
00:41:16,410 --> 00:41:18,530
help that middle education, middle
consulting piece, right?

1286
00:41:18,530 --> 00:41:21,090
It's a huge endeavor and it's
pretty scary for people to go in

1287
00:41:21,090 --> 00:41:24,350
and tear down a house and try and
build a fourplex.

1288
00:41:24,350 --> 00:41:25,590
But if you're able to consult...

1289
00:41:25,590 --> 00:41:27,550
on a like small fee because the

1290
00:41:27,550 --> 00:41:30,110
government is encouraging you guys
and supporting you guys to help

1291
00:41:30,110 --> 00:41:30,630
with that.

1292
00:41:30,630 --> 00:41:32,590
It's like, go with the flow,

1293
00:41:32,590 --> 00:41:34,390
right?
Go with the government policy of

1294
00:41:34,390 --> 00:41:36,190
if this is what they're
supporting, it's obviously what

1295
00:41:36,430 --> 00:41:37,110
they want.

1296
00:41:37,110 --> 00:41:38,350
So, you know, after speaking with

1297
00:41:38,350 --> 00:41:41,630
you for a while, I was like, It's
not an expensive bill because the

1298
00:41:41,630 --> 00:41:42,670
government wants to facilitate
this.

1299
00:41:42,670 --> 00:41:42,950
Right.

1300
00:41:43,050 --> 00:41:44,890
So, yeah, I appreciate what you

1301
00:41:44,890 --> 00:41:46,750
guys are doing in that space.

1302
00:41:46,750 --> 00:41:48,750
Yeah, no. And I mean, like I'm an

1303
00:41:48,750 --> 00:41:51,290
entrepreneur and I understand
we're not a nonprofit and we're

1304
00:41:51,290 --> 00:41:53,030
building, you know, different
tools that we're able to be

1305
00:41:53,030 --> 00:41:53,570
profitable on.

1306
00:41:53,570 --> 00:41:55,270
But I think none of it matters.

1307
00:41:55,270 --> 00:41:58,420
Like when you think about the
funnel, it's not going to matter

1308
00:41:58,420 --> 00:42:00,760
if people don't feel like they
have the foundations of education

1309
00:42:01,020 --> 00:42:04,060
and understanding of what it takes
to move through it.

1310
00:42:04,060 --> 00:42:05,440
So we could build every suite of
tool.

1311
00:42:05,440 --> 00:42:06,300
We could build a fund.

1312
00:42:06,300 --> 00:42:08,720
We could be a development manager.

1313
00:42:08,720 --> 00:42:10,280
You could do a bunch.

1314
00:42:10,280 --> 00:42:12,060
of different things but none of

1315
00:42:12,060 --> 00:42:15,860
that matters if people just don't
know what they don't know and so i

1316
00:42:15,860 --> 00:42:19,320
think like What we went to the
government for when we worked with

1317
00:42:19,320 --> 00:42:21,560
the housing supply challenge was,
you know, they wanted to see

1318
00:42:21,560 --> 00:42:22,020
actual movement and housing
starts.

1319
00:42:22,020 --> 00:42:24,040
And we said, that's really tough
to do if we don't understand what

1320
00:42:24,040 --> 00:42:25,200
the knowledge policy barrier gaps
are.

1321
00:42:25,200 --> 00:42:28,060
And so we kind of identified what
we thought those gaps were and

1322
00:42:28,060 --> 00:42:29,380
started to provide solutions for
those gaps.

1323
00:42:29,380 --> 00:42:31,680
And so, like I said, we think
we're finding the right

1324
00:42:31,680 --> 00:42:31,940
ingredients.

1325
00:42:31,940 --> 00:42:33,280
It's unique depending on the

1326
00:42:33,280 --> 00:42:35,240
municipality and the framework in
which you're working with.

1327
00:42:35,240 --> 00:42:37,640
working with Regina and Saskatoon,
and we've had conversations with

1328
00:42:37,640 --> 00:42:39,860
even smaller municipalities,
Airdrie, Red Deer, Lethbridge,

1329
00:42:39,860 --> 00:42:43,940
very, very small places that are
also very keen to figure out what

1330
00:42:43,940 --> 00:42:46,360
it can look like for them to get
more of this housing form built.

1331
00:42:46,360 --> 00:42:49,200
So I would just say, Taylor, we've
landed on the fact that there's

1332
00:42:49,200 --> 00:42:49,940
consensus that this housing form
matters.

1333
00:42:49,940 --> 00:42:52,580
It can be incredibly beneficial to
communities and cities all across

1334
00:42:52,580 --> 00:42:53,510
the country.

1335
00:42:53,510 --> 00:42:55,910
How do we prepare them with the

1336
00:42:55,910 --> 00:42:59,410
right tool sets, education, and
foundation to deliver on those?

1337
00:42:59,410 --> 00:42:59,690
things.

1338
00:42:59,690 --> 00:43:01,650
And we were lucky enough to be a

1339
00:43:01,650 --> 00:43:04,470
part of the housing supply
challenges, which you're talking

1340
00:43:04,470 --> 00:43:07,330
about with the federal government,
where we are one of four finalists

1341
00:43:07,330 --> 00:43:08,230
across the country.

1342
00:43:08,230 --> 00:43:11,310
There was 260 applications and we

1343
00:43:11,310 --> 00:43:15,670
advanced as a finalist through the
year in a competition, which made

1344
00:43:15,670 --> 00:43:19,330
a huge difference and kind of gave
us that boost to be able to keep

1345
00:43:19,980 --> 00:43:20,260
going.

1346
00:43:20,260 --> 00:43:21,820
The cool part about it is we're

1347
00:43:21,820 --> 00:43:24,220
seeing people come out the other
end now, right?

1348
00:43:24,220 --> 00:43:27,140
Like that are developing, that are
on their journey, that are doing

1349
00:43:27,140 --> 00:43:27,540
it.

1350
00:43:27,540 --> 00:43:30,440
And I think the other thing about

1351
00:43:30,440 --> 00:43:33,640
us that's been really interesting
is like whatever you need in order

1352
00:43:33,640 --> 00:43:36,660
to actually deliver is what we
want to give you.

1353
00:43:36,660 --> 00:43:39,660
I know there's people on our
community page that like are

1354
00:43:39,660 --> 00:43:41,060
lurking, that are active members
that are watching.

1355
00:43:41,060 --> 00:43:44,780
And I'll see them two months down
the road and they'll say, man, I'm

1356
00:43:44,780 --> 00:43:47,410
so glad that guy posted that
message because I had no idea that

1357
00:43:47,410 --> 00:43:48,630
they were doing that.

1358
00:43:48,630 --> 00:43:50,650
And I basically went back to my

1359
00:43:50,890 --> 00:43:52,790
project and refined it and changed
this.

1360
00:43:52,790 --> 00:43:53,730
And it's like, perfect.

1361
00:43:53,730 --> 00:43:54,190
Like that's exactly.

1362
00:43:54,190 --> 00:43:58,370
Well, what we want to do is we
want to be a resource for where

1363
00:43:58,370 --> 00:44:01,810
you are at your journey and make
sure if that's interfacing with us

1364
00:44:01,810 --> 00:44:04,730
on our socials, on our digitals,
coming to the courses, coming to

1365
00:44:04,730 --> 00:44:06,250
the networking programs that we're
throwing.

1366
00:44:06,370 --> 00:44:07,950
That's what we're trying to do.

1367
00:44:07,950 --> 00:44:08,050
Yeah.

1368
00:44:08,050 --> 00:44:10,710
Maybe we'll finish off with that.

1369
00:44:10,850 --> 00:44:12,960
With the last question is when's

1370
00:44:12,960 --> 00:44:15,320
the next event in Kelowna?
Yeah.

1371
00:44:15,320 --> 00:44:15,540
Yeah.

1372
00:44:15,540 --> 00:44:18,680
So we don't have a date yet booked

1373
00:44:18,680 --> 00:44:19,740
for the Kelowna region at the
moment.

1374
00:44:19,740 --> 00:44:22,860
I would say like we're working on
with the city right now on the

1375
00:44:22,860 --> 00:44:26,900
second phase, I guess would be
like the third phase of their fast

1376
00:44:26,900 --> 00:44:27,020
track.

1377
00:44:27,020 --> 00:44:30,520
So I think as that the new plans.

1378
00:44:30,520 --> 00:44:32,720
launch and give a bit of diversity
because i know there was some

1379
00:44:32,720 --> 00:44:36,640
feedback on the first set of plans
that launched i think we'll see

1380
00:44:36,640 --> 00:44:40,640
more interest but we have plans to
host middle school through the

1381
00:44:40,640 --> 00:44:43,560
fall and then also in the fall the
launch of middle u which would be

1382
00:44:43,560 --> 00:44:47,240
open to folks all across canada as
i said because it'd be done mostly

1383
00:44:47,240 --> 00:44:50,180
online a great opportunity for
folks to kind of get in and learn

1384
00:44:50,300 --> 00:44:53,280
the foundations and then also run
through some use case modeling

1385
00:44:53,280 --> 00:44:57,080
awesome all right well we'll see
you in the fall then definitely

1386
00:44:57,080 --> 00:44:59,740
thank you so much for coming on
and oh that was awesome think all

1387
00:44:59,740 --> 00:45:03,040
right well we'll see you in the
fall then definitely thank you so

1388
00:45:03,040 --> 00:45:06,560
much for coming on and oh that was
awesome You're doing some crazy

1389
00:45:06,660 --> 00:45:06,780
things.

1390
00:45:06,780 --> 00:45:07,480
we'll Yeah.

1391
00:45:07,480 --> 00:45:09,360
I really appreciate you guys
having me on.

1392
00:45:09,360 --> 00:45:09,640
me on.

1393
00:45:09,640 --> 00:45:10,700
Your vision board must just look

1394
00:45:10,700 --> 00:45:10,940
insane.

1395
00:45:10,940 --> 00:45:11,260
It is.

1396
00:45:11,260 --> 00:45:14,460
And I think like, it's funny
because we talk about that all the

1397
00:45:14,460 --> 00:45:14,560
time.

1398
00:45:14,560 --> 00:45:15,300
Like most entrepreneurs don't die

1399
00:45:15,300 --> 00:45:15,660
from starvation.

1400
00:45:15,660 --> 00:45:16,920
They die from like, you know,

1401
00:45:16,920 --> 00:45:17,120
indigestion.

1402
00:45:17,260 --> 00:45:18,440
And so we're just like trying to

1403
00:45:18,440 --> 00:45:21,100
be mindful and stay focused on our
niche and what we do well.

1404
00:45:21,100 --> 00:45:24,020
And I think a bit of it is like,
what is the thing that we think is

1405
00:45:24,020 --> 00:45:25,830
going to make the most meaningful
difference?

1406
00:45:25,830 --> 00:45:27,210
And that's what we're after.

1407
00:45:27,210 --> 00:45:28,270
So whatever you're after, you're

1408
00:45:28,270 --> 00:45:30,030
after, keep it up.

1409
00:45:30,030 --> 00:45:31,170
Doing the right things, dude.

1410
00:45:31,170 --> 00:45:32,310
Thanks, man.