Rural P.E.I. thinking outside the single-family home box
CBC
The high demand for housing in Prince Edward Island has some rural towns expanding their housing stock, and many are making sure to develop mixed-density housing, like triplexes and apartment buildings.
The Rural Municipality of Kinkora, population 388, sits about halfway between Charlottetown and Summerside. Five years ago it built a subdivision and lots sat empty — but after the pandemic hit, that changed.
All the lots sold within two years, and now the municipality needs to create more, said Tina Harvey, Kinkora's CAO.
"We don't have any more building lots for sale right now in the community. We've expanded our boundaries," she said.
Kinkora is also adding another subdivision with up to 28 lots, which will be a mix of duplexes and single-family homes.
"Demand is high. We also have a number of seniors in our community who are still living in their own homes, who probably in the coming years would like to get out of those large homes and into something smaller, but not leave the community," Harvey said.
The area needs mixed-density housing, said Harvey, and there is another lot zoned for multi-family housing that will include duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, and seniors' housing.
"We are a cheaper alternative to the cities," Harvey said. "We're also service-rich."
There's a new daycare centre in Kinkora and the community hall is under renovation.
The municipality uses a group called Kinkora and Area Business Community to handle development, which is filled with community members from Kinkora and the surrounding area, said Harvey.
"They handle everything, from our infrastructure to sewer to roads, the street lights, everything like that — and that takes a burden off of council," she said.
One member of the group, Len Keefe, said there need to be more housing options, as single-family housing is very expensive, and the demand is great.
"We want to provide the structures for them to come here and live and grow our community," he said.
There's also growing demand for housing in nearby Kensington. A developer bought the former Legion building on Main Street and has plans to turn that into apartments, including eight low-income units.
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