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- Jan 4 - South Island's most expensive homes
Jan 4 - South Island's most expensive homes
UVic's new health tool for drinking, toddler waits 14 hours for emergency care, airport parking cost to double.
Good morning !
Happy Saturday! If you’re looking to take a break from alcohol after the holidays or just want to understand your personal risks when drinking, UVic has launched a new website that offers a glimpse of your health with and without booze.
Check out our second story to find out more. In our first, we run down the region's priciest properties.
— Robyn
Are you doing Dry January? |
Today’s approx. read time: 6 minutes
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NEWS
These are Greater Victoria's most expensive homes (most of them are in Oak Bay)
8408 Lawrence Rd. in Central Saanich. Photo: Engel & Volkers
When it comes to la crème de la crème of expensive–and expansive–houses, Oak Bay is home to 7 of the top 10 highest-assessed properties in Greater Victoria.
BC Assessment released its yearly appraisals this week, with stunning homes being gauged with staggering prices.
You can check your BC property assessment here. But if you want to know how the other half (other .001% perhaps?) lives, here’s a listing of the top Island and local residences.
BC Assessment evaluated 2.2M+ properties provincewide, reflecting market value as of last Canada Day. Keep in mind that while price is objective, real value is subjective and the two are not synonyms.
Topping the provincial list at $82M+ is a home on Vancouver’s Point Grey Road, home to Lululemon founder Chip Wilson and, this fall, to his infamous election sign.
Disputed Gulf Island still tops Van Isle region
Closer to home, James Island, an island off the coast of Sidney with a private airstrip and Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course is the third-highest-assessed property in BC at $57.5M. Two years ago it was appraised at $61.2M.
The Tsawout First Nation filed a title claim for the island—called ȽEL¸TOS—in court in 2018. In 2022, a BC approving officer rejected a Seattle billionaire’s attempt to subdivide the island, concluding it was not in the public interest and could impact Tsawout practices, archeological materials, and nearby seafood harvesting.
The second-priciest Island-region property is a Nanoose Bay acreage, and the Top 10 includes a trio of other Gulf Islands: Samuel, Domville, and Forrest.
When it comes to residential properties in Greater Victoria itself, see the Top 5 below:
3160 Humber in a 2022 Google Maps 3D image
#1: 3160 Humber in Oak Bay, at $17.3M. Specs: 5-bed, 7-bath, 11K+ square-foot house built in 1996 on a 1.9-acre property.
Image of 1850 Lands End from 2019 Victoria Luxury Group listing
#2: 1850 Lands End Rd. in North Saanich, $16.8M. Specs: 4-bed, 3-bath in a 3.4K square-foot home on 24 acres. This home, the Queen Mary Bay Estate, formerly occupied the top spot.
#3: 8408 Lawrence in Central Saanich, at $14.15M. Specs: 2006-built, 13K square feet on 5.6 acres. This property set a Victoria home sale price record a few years ago.
The last of the top 5 are both more than century old.
#4: 3175 Beach Dr., at $13.5M. Specs: 8-bedroom, 10K+ square-foot home built in 1913 and once home to the US Consul (1928-1942).
#5: 3150 Rutland, at $13.3M. Specs: 5-bed, 7-bath, 1914-built home on 2.2 acres.
A few other notable properties:
Just outside the top 5 is 3125 Beach Dr., at $13.3M for the total property. The 11K square-foot, two-storey home itself was built in 2022 and assessed at $4.7M. The original home, Valrose mansion, was built circa 1929 (photo / info via Oak Bay).
That #1 property on Humber has a neighbour, which just missed the top 10. The Sweet Pea manor, a former consulate for the small island nation of St. Kitts and Nevis, once had the highest asking price of any single-family home in Canada ($28.5M in 2009). It was listed for sale at $20M just over a decade ago and $15M just over a year ago, but has dropped out of the region's Top 5 with an assessment this year of $11.5M.
For commercial properties, the region's #1 is Uptown mall at $326.8M.
NEWS
UVic researchers launch website guide to drinking health risks
Photo: Evgeny Karandaev / Shutterstock
For those looking to commit to Dry January or cutting back on drinking as they kick off the new year, UVic has launched a tool to guide people on their alcohol consumption. From health risks and cost per drink to the benefits of drinking less, the new website combines years of research to help people understand the risks of consuming alcohol.
The online tool, at knowalcohol.ca, can be personalized to a specific age, sex, and number of drinks consumed to give users a glimpse of their personal health risks. It will even tell you the equivalent of cigarettes smoked per drink, a comparison that often helps people contextualize cancer risks since cigarettes have long been associated with these concerns. One UVic researcher told Capital Daily that people should consider one drink as the equivalent of one cigarette.
Site feature estimates risk of dying early
If a 50-year-old man who consumes 10 drinks a week were to use the tool, he would find his risk of dying early from alcohol is 1.7% higher than a non-drinker, with 6.6 minutes of life lost per drink. If he were to cut back to four drinks per week, the tool estimates his risk of dying early would be 0.2% and he would lose 2.6 minutes of life per drink. At two drinks per week, his risk would be 0%.
The new UVic website says it’s common for people to underestimate how many drinks they consume each week. It also recommends that people below 25 should “delay drinking for as long as possible.”
In US, surgeon general just called for reduction of drinking guidelines
In an advisory yesterday, the surgeon general said the current limit of 10-15 drinks per week should be lowered, that warning labels should be on alcohol bottles, and that the link to cancer is well established. In 2023, Canada lowered its recommended drinking amount to two drinks per week from its previous recommendation of 10-15 drinks.
Island researchers say municipalities & province must do more to address high drinking
This tool could be particularly handy for residents of the Island, where drinking—including binge drinking—is higher than the rest of the province and country.
Researchers from the UVic-led Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation (CAPE) project have consistently said BC and other provinces are failing to properly enforce health-oriented alcohol policies, focusing too much on improving sales and not warning people of the growing body of evidence that alcohol is linked to several cancers.
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⭐️ Capital Picks
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🦭 Aquatic hitchhiker: A sea lion caused a commotion on Highway 4 last weekend. [CTV]
🌸 Thetis Lake in bloom: Flowers are starting to bud in the CRD park. [Facebook photos]
🗞️ In Other News
It’s going to cost you more to park short-term at YYJ
Beginning in March, the price of short-term, flat-fee parking will double to $4 for two hours maximum. The Victoria Airport Authority said it’s raising the cost to park at the airport’s 166 short-term spots next to the terminal to raise revenue but also to deter people from parking there longer. Long-term parking fees will remain $1 for a half-hour, $18 per day for up to five days, and $9 for each additional day. [Times Colonist]
3-year-old forced to wait 14 hours at Vic General emergency room
Three days before Christmas, Parker Coutts had a burning fever, and with no options, her mother Kristi Meredith took her to hospital where they waited overnight to see a doctor. Meredith says nurses were able to take an X-ray but she was told they would have to wait for a doctor to perform a rapid swab. More than a half-day later, Parker was given a prescription for Scarlet fever. Meredith also says that despite assurances, nobody from the hospital followed up on her toddler’s tests. [CHEK]
Collision on Hwy 14 in Sooke leaves driver, age 63, dead at scene
Her westbound Acura collided with an eastbound truck late yesterday afternoon at a sharp corner on Sooke Road (Hwy. 14) near Connie Road. The truck driver was uninjured. A stretch of Hwy. 14 was closed and then reopened around 9pm. [RCMP]
🗓️ Things to do
🏊♂️ Crystal Pool referendum: Pop-up info session at Mayfair. 11am-3pm today. [Info]
😂 Jono Zalay: The comedian will perform his standup at Hecklers tonight. 7pm; 10pm. [Info]
🏠 Tour Emily Carr House: Join free guided tours of the historical house today. 10am; 12pm; 2pm. [Info]
😍 Dating Workshop: A Fresh Start in Love: This workshop on dating and love will be at Esquimalt Gorge Park today. 12-3pm. [Info]
⛵ Johnstone Reef Race: Welcome the new year with a fun race around Johnstone Reef, starting at Royal Victoria Yacht Club tomorrow. 1pm. [Info]
🕹️🚙 Remote Control Car Race #8: Race mini-cars with Coast Offroad Racing at Quadra Village Community Centre tomorrow. 8am-6pm. [Info]
🏛 Final days of Stonehenge at RBCM; the exhibit closes at end of museum's Sunday hours.
👀 In Case You Missed It
Friday’s headlines: Orca J35 loses another calf; Capital Daily’s Top 5 stories of 2024; BC teen with bird flu no longer infectious or on oxygen. [Jan. 3]
Tax changes for 2025: Home-flipping tax takes effect this week, income tax rebate to come. [CP/ CBC]
Corgi stranded at Clover Point rescued by VicPD on New Year’s Day. [Victoria News]
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