• Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Yeah, but it won’t fill the housing gap.

    Those houses still have to be assembled somewhere.

    The more likely solution is a big fibre optic rollout and getting all information workers out of the cities.

      • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Yeah; in most of the places where there are housing issues, the problem isn’t skilled labour to build houses or a lack of building materials (although those can become issues) — it’s the cost and availability and accessibility of land. There’s no “on site” to assemble them on.

        • Bobble7@lemmy.ca
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          19 hours ago

          the problem isn’t skilled labour to build houses

          Can you provide any references for this? My naive web searches find that most sources say there is a significant skill labour shortage, so if you can provide sources which I can learn from that would be helpful.

          it’s the cost and availability and accessibility of land

          Housing shortage is a multi-dimensional problems with what you mention here included. One plank in the BCH platform that attempts to address this is the release federal lands for new housing. I suppose it will remain to be seen how that works out, if Carney is elected.

    • turnip@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      We should give tax credit for wfh too perhaps.

      Except our government doesn’t actually want housing prices to fall, or for there to be less people in the city.

      • Arkouda@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        More people should be living in the city so the wilderness can remain the wilderness. Build up, not out.

        • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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          7 hours ago

          I’m kind of on the fence with your opinion. Living in Montreal I’ve seen some old broken down neighbourhoods being turned into new condominium cities, but without enough city/social planning. (Griffintown) This caused incredible problems for the local infrastructure, commerce, and services. Sewers, aqueducts, electricity, roads, public transports, kindergartens, schools, medical clinics, etc. The concentration of people increased too much, too fast.

          Instead, I think we need to increase density slowly, but spread it out over the city. Not everyone needs to live in 300 sq ft closets downtown. Having smaller apartment buildings with 4/5 storeys replacing old duplexes and triplexes in adjacent neighborhoods, with units that are better adapted to family life with several rooms and enough space to move around could be even more beneficial. And include social housing mixed in with regular housing would have a positive impact as well. But, that’s a pretty Montreal-specific scenario. I know in Toronto it’s very different and their needs are different, for example.