Small-house advocate Jake Fry sees need for alternatives

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      Jake Fry thinks of West 2nd Avenue between Larch and Trutch streets as one of the loveliest areas in Vancouver.

      Fry told city council at a public hearing in September this year that he believes this is so because of the variety of housing on this stretch.

      He mentioned the early-1900s period as well as modern residences, many with infill housing at the back. He also cited three-storey apartment buildings and other kinds of accommodation that serve different households.

      Diversity of housing has a natural appeal for Fry. He’s a builder with a background in carpentry. He founded Smallworks, a company that constructs laneway homes. Fry also cofounded Small Housing B.C., a group that advocates the addition of small, ground-oriented homes in single-family neighbourhoods.

      According to Fry, there are many examples of these in Vancouver, from townhouses to duplexes, laneway homes, and heritage homes that have been turned into three or four suites.

      However, Fry believes that there aren’t enough.

      He also said that there are other opportunities that can be explored. One example is for adjacent properties to work together and create pocket neighbourhoods of small detached homes clustered around a common space.

      “I can’t stress it enough that the important factor is really to look at what we can do to create a mix of housing that addresses multiple needs within a single neighbourhood,” Fry told the Georgia Straight in a phone interview.

      It is often said that established Vancouver neighbourhoods have a deep attachment to single-family homes, and that is the supposed reason why the city is not producing enough new housing.

      However, Fry doesn’t agree that this is what is holding back the city. “I think people in Vancouver desperately want alternative forms of housing,” he said.

      Fry suggested that although city hall has started to move toward increasing housing options in low-density neighbourhoods, it has to become more open to choices.

      “I think there’s a will there,” Fry said. “But I think, generally, what we’ve looked at historically is we’ve looked at very strong regulatory practices that can be very protective. And in that environment, what happens is that…not a lot of new ideas get forwarded.”

      He explained that what needs to happen is for city staff to be given a clear direction that “neighbourhoods have to perform better and accommodate more people…rather than a protective stance where you’re trying to regulate what happens in a neighbourhood in a restrictive manner.”

      “We’re encouraging them to become…far more facilitative in allowing more types of homes to coexist with one another,” Fry said. “You know, so that on a typical street, you could see three or four different types of these homes. And we’re also encouraging them to be much…quicker in their review process than they’re going through at the current rate.”

      This challenge isn’t just for Vancouver. Other municipalities in the Lower Mainland are also facing housing problems.

      Many of these issues are going to be taken up when Small Housing B.C. holds a summit in Vancouver on Saturday (November 17) at the Sheraton Wall Centre (1088 Burrard Street).

      The theme for the daylong conference, which Fry described as the first of its kind in Canada, is “collaborate to accelerate”.

      At the public hearing wherein Fry mentioned that specific stretch of West 2nd Avenue, he urged city council to adopt a more “robust” approach in increasing housing
      options for single-family neighbourhoods.

      This can be achieved, according to Fry, by “releasing the hand from the scruff of the neck of planning”.

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