The Travel Blogger
Web space for the travel enthusiasts. From backpacking to luxury travel vacations and destination resorts, The Travel Blogger is an open space for travelers from around the world to chat about their favourite getaways, luxury hotels, boutique resorts and destinations.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Galleries Condos Squamish
Located along the Sea to Sky Highway between prestigious West Vancouver and world-class resort Whistler, the Galleries Condominiums in Squamish are resort condos and luxury commercial properties for sale now!
What many people don’t know is that Squamish is now home to many great presales real estate properties that provide affordable, conveniently located and high-end features and finishes. Include the Squamish Galleries Condominium development at the Garibaldi Springs Golf Resort that is set for occupancy and move in later in the fall of 2007. With an eighteen hole golf course, biking and walking trails, shopping and fine dining restaurants within walking distance from the Galleries Condos in Squamish, these luxury condominium homes are some of the best kept real estate investment secrets in all of British Columbia for that matter. Also, the Galleries Condominiums are also close to Squamish hotels, and some of the world’s leading mountain biking and hiking trails for those outdoor enthusiasts looking for a residence condominium that is close to nature and what they most enjoy. Condominium residences at the Galleries presales real estate development in Garibaldi Springs Golf Resort also provide panoramic vistas of the Tantalus Mountain Range, various open floorplans and functional spaces that will be your home for decades to come.
Contacting the Galleries Homes
If you are looking for the sales representative for the Garibaldi Spring Galleries condominiums and commercial properties, you can visit the Galleries web site located online at http://www.galleriescondos.com/contact.php. For the residential live-work studios and Squamish presales condo properties at Galleries, you can contact Gerry Halstrom at 1.888.324.4653 (toll-free). For any commercial and retail space enquiries at the Squamish Galleries property development, please contact either Guy Kirby or John Pedlow at 604.925.4117 (not toll-free). For those who want to get onto the priority registration list for updates and construction news about the Galleries Garibaldi Springs Squamish condominium properties, please visit and fill out this online form: http://www.galleriescondos.com/regform.php. As you have learned, the Galleries condos in Squamish are part of the new Golf Resort at Garibaldi Springs, and you can learn more about this world-class resort online at their marketing website: http://www.garibaldigolf.com/. For renderings of the condominium suites and live/work studios at Garibaldi Springs Galleries condos in Squamish, BC, you can visit this following link for images: http://www.galleriescondos.com/renderings.htm#. For all downloadable documents on the Galleries Condos web site, you need the Adobe Acrobat reader and the docs include the sales brochure for the Garibaldi Springs residential Galleries presales properties, disclosure statement, amendments, and purchase agreement for home buyers and investors here. The pre-construction Squamish real estate development team includes Chris Block, Partner, at Chandler Architecture and Design, Gerry Halstrom, Associate at Sea to Sky Premier Properties, John Block, Director of Property Management, TiGERi Properties Group, Pat Campbell, Principal of DMG Landscape Architects, Myron Calof President, TiGERI Properties Group, Willow Springs Galleries Condos general contractor and Ada Bonini, Principal of BYU Design for marketing of Squamish Galleries Condominiums.
Three Types of Floorplans
There are different floor plan layouts available for your different needs and requirements when selecting a Garibaldi Springs home at the Galleries Squamish condominium properties. Firstly, there are garden patio flats at Galleries that include private landscaped patios with clay brick bordering as well as landscaping. The Galleries garden patio flats will come in either one or two bedroom layouts and most will also have an addition flex pad for use as a den, theater or home office or even a guest room. All condominium units at the garden patio flats level will have stainless steel and granite features. The Gallery Lofts condominiums in Squamish will be for professionals, artists, retailers and other business oriented homebuyers and investors. There are two floorplan layouts for the Squamish Gallery Lofts residences that include ground floor commercial/retail of about eight hundred square feet with an upper level residence or a Galleries loft studio with five hundred sq ft connected to a two storey residence. Either way, the Gallery Lofts residences at the Garibaldi Springs Golf Resort will come with landscaped patios, large street entrances, French doors (double entry), private stairways and much more. Lastly, the Galleries penthouse suite at the Squamish presales real estate development will feature resort style living with panoramic views of the glaciers and mountain ranges. Click here for the ground floor floorplans: http://www.galleriescondos.com/groundflr.htm. The second level floor plans at the Squamish Galleries condominiums includes: http://www.galleriescondos.com/2ndflr.htm. For the Galleries penthouse floorplans, click here: http://www.galleriescondos.com/3rdflr.htm. For full interior features and common area finishes and amenities at the Squamish Garibaldi Springs Galleries properties, click here: http://www.galleriescondos.com/features.htm.
Select pricing, floorplan availability and specific unit details are located online at the Garibaldi Springs Golf Resort Galleries Squamish web site at http://www.galleriescondos.com/graphics/Price%20Listmay06.pdf. As of April 2007, you can see that there is only one remaining Squamish Galleries penthouse unit left that is on the third floor with one thousand and twenty three square feet and priced at $340,900 (for two bedrooms, two baths and one flex pad). The second floor Galleries Squamish garden level flats and studios include everything from 2L and 2M which are 786 sq ft and $232,500 one bedroom condominium residences to GP J and GP K at 1344 square footage and $368,400 two bedroom Galleries condos. There are also some commercial spaces still available. For financing and bank pre-qualification mortgage help, please contact Paul Hudson at RBC Royal Bank at 604.898.2244 about the Galleries Squamish condos property development for details.
For more Whistler travel, accommodations and Squamish real estate investment opportunities, click here.
Labels: Galleries Condos, Recreational property, Resort Condominiums, Retirement Homes, Squamish Real Estate
Monday, February 26, 2007
Travel Real Estate – Before you purchase your recreational property
There are certain tips and checklists that travel enthusiasts must attend to when deciding whether or not to purchase recreational real estate at Canada’s winter resorts. Travel real estate as it is termed is recreational full ownership or fractional ownership based. Again, taken from Ski Press Magazine.
Owning versus Renting – The Pros & Cons
When it comes to spending quality time in ski country, the choice is clear: buy or rent. Not surprisingly, that is the last thing that’s clear. What is very unclear is which one is right for you. So let’s look at this rationally.
What’s so great about owning your own little slice of heaven?
- There actually is pride in ownership of recreational property
- You have a place to store your ski gear
- You might make a capital gain on the real estate property
- Your friends will all want to visit
- There will be extra virgin olive oil in the cupboard when you start preparing dinner
What’s not so great about ownership of recreational property?
- You’re stuck, baby. You know where you’re going… and going… and going
- Your friends will all want to visit… and stay in your place for free
- If it breaks, you have to fix it or pay for someone else to fix it.
- It’ll break
- You’ll get repetitive stress syndrome from writing cheques to cover the mortgage, condo fees, resort-association fees, special assessments, and user fees
On the other hand, you can rent recreational real estate. Renting is good isn’t it?
- Renting costs less up front
- You can visit new places every year
- If it breaks, it’s not your problem
- You’ll never look at something you don’t like and use the word ‘renovate’
Renting recreational property isn’t without its own drawbacks, though.
- So long, cash, it’s been good to know you
- You’re always a stranger, in a strange land
- Don’t even think about brining a black light into the bedroom
- You take higher quality cooking utensils camping than they supply in the condo
Can Renting Your Recreational Condo cover your Mortgage?
In a word, no. At least not if you’re thinking along the lines of a traditional 75 per cent mortgage. No way, here’s why.
Gross vs Net: Yes, that’s an expensive recreational condo you’re staying in and maybe thinking of buying. But unless you live at the resort, someone else is going to have to manage it for you. They take anywhere from 40% to 50% off the top for their services. Before other expenses.
Other Expenses 1: things break and have to be replaced; not wilful damage kind of break, but dropped glass, damaged appliance, leaking plumbing kind of break. Your insurance – another expense-doesn’t cover that. And then there’s phone, TV, hydro…. Those are all other expenses.
Other Expenses II: In at least three of the four highlighted areas, there’s a resort association that markets the resort. They charge homeowners a fee, kind of like another level of tax, based on size or revenue. And then there’s the actual property tax.
Other Expenses III: Common area expenses never go away. And special assessments – fix the roof, fix the pool, fix the hot tub, replace the furniture – seem to crop up more frequently than you’d expect.
Rack vs Reality: The nightly rack rate for your condominium recreational property seems high. But to hedge their bets, most big resort condos wholesale blocks of room nights to package companies. Don’t bank on the rack rate.
One Season; Two Shoulders: Shoulder seasons – early and late- attract, well cheapskates. Your recreational condo will either be vacant or inexpensive for all but the heart of the season.
So buy with your eyes open. Yes, there’s some income. There just may not be as much as you think.
Emerging Recreational Real Estate Markets: Three to Ponder
Not everywhere can be – or wants to be – Whistler, Banff, or Tremblant. If you’d like to spend your time in this kind of place big ski-town locals claim their town used to be, here are three spots you might want to consider purchasing recreational property.
Fernie, British Columbia
Fernie is a century-old mining town that’s making a big splash in mountain resort tourism. Anchored by Fernie Alpine Resort’s 2,500 acres of power-perfect skiing, the town is enjoying unprecedented international profile. “We’ve been discovered by the Brits and Aussies,” claims mayor Randall MacNair.
While Fernie’s travel destination skier business is likely to get a real boost when Cranbrook’s airport – about a hour and a half drive – goes international, in the not too distant future, the town has already become a favourite of Calgarians.
And why not? Aside from FAR’s groomed runs, alpine bowls and tempting backcountry, Fernie’s a hotspot for cat skiing, and snowmobiling in winter; fishing, hiking, mountain biking and golf in the summer. An increasingly sophisticated mix of good dining, shopping, and high-touch spas, appended to what Mayor MacNair likes to call a “real town,” makes Fernie one hot item.
Golden, BC
Kicking Horse Mountain Resort seemed, for so many years, to be almost ghostlike, a chimera whispered on the wind blowing down from Rogers Pass. But with 2,750 acres and a vertical of 1,260 metres, Kicking Horse Mountain Resort has kicked some life into formerly sleepy Golden.
“Golden’s gone crazy,” claims Janet Crandell, publisher of the Golden Star Weekly. “We’ve travelled light years from where we were just a decade ago because of the real estate recreational development of the ski hill.”
Three hours from Calgary and six from Edmonton, Golden is also cashing in on the petrocrazed economy of recreationally challenged Alberta and remaking itself into a four-season destination resort town. It has great skiing, a whole roster of summertime activities, and new resort real estate lodging project are being snapped up as fast as plans can be approved.
Big White, British Columbia
Big White Ski Resort, snuggled up against the Monashee Mountains, has spent the past half decade building itself into a regional powerhouse. With 777 metres of vertical, 2,765 acres and almost double that of accessible nearcountry terrain, and an average snowfall of 750 centimetres (that’s 27.5 feet!), Big White Ski Resort is one BC’s big players. Its village offers a critical mass of lodging, real estate opportunities and all the usual amenities.
But unlike the others, it also has nearby Kelowna – one of Canada’s fastest growing cities – as an urban lure. “A lot of growth around here is being fuelled by retired and semi-retired people who are embracing a very active lifestyle,” says Steve MacNaull, business reporter for the Kelowna Daily Courier. “They’re building big homes and want all the toys to pursue their passions.”
What are you waiting for?
How much does owning recreational real estate cost?
Let’s start with minimum requirements – basics for a family of four:
- Ski country vacation home: $200,000 plus (up to $5 million)
- Yearly property taxes, resort association fees, utilities, $8000 plus
- Monthly recreational condo common-area costs: $150 plus
- Special assessments (new roof, etc.): unpredictable
- Recreational property insurance: $1000 plus
- New bed linens, towels, duvets, etc.: $500
- Outfitting kitchen: $1500
- New TV and sound system: $2500
- New furniture: $10000 plus
- Refitting the “owners closet” to hold your stuff: $750
- Season passes (you’re not day skiers any more): $2800 plus
- Membership in the Saturday/Sunday ski club (so you can cut lift lines): $1500
- Incidentals: 5% of above
Labels: Checklist, Fractionals, Quarter Ownership, Recreational property, Recreational Real Estate, Resort Property, Shared, Tips, Travel Accommodations


