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Hyper-local pillar — South Cambie, Vancouver

South Cambie (Vancouver) — Buyer Research Bible

Last reviewed by Bronson Job PREC, REALTOR®Sources: City of Vancouver local-area boundaries, Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 (2018), Vancouver School Board (VSB), TransLink (Canada Line), Vancouver Coastal Health, Vancouver Park Board, Province of BC (Bill 44 SSMUH)CC BY 4.0How we verify

Block-by-block buyer and investor research for the South Cambie micro-market — the inner-Vancouver neighbourhood between 16th Avenue and 41st Avenue, between Cambie Street and Oak Street, that brackets Queen Elizabeth Park, the Hillcrest Community Centre / former 2010 Olympics curling venue, and a 10-minute commute to four major teaching hospitals plus the BC Cancer Agency. Companion to the South Cambie area page and a complement to the broader Vancouver area pages.

The defendable opinion

South Cambie is the only inner-Vancouver neighbourhood where you can be inside an Eric Hamber catchment, a 5-minute walk to Canada Line, and a 12-minute drive to Vancouver General Hospital — and most listing agents will price the home as if those three things are the same value driver. They aren’t. The Hamber catchment moves the buyer pool. Canada Line proximity moves the rental yield. VGH + BC Cancer Agency moves the buyer’s commute calculus. Each is independently re-pricing the home in different buyer profiles. The South Cambie buyer who knows which profile they are — family, medical professional, or investor — can buy the right home for the right reason.

The Hamber catchment, the Canada Line walkshed, and the Oak Street medical corridor are three independent value drivers stacked on the same 25 blocks. Listing math treats them as one. Buyer math should price each separately — because each one is moving a different sub-segment of the buyer pool.
— What I tell every South Cambie buyer touring inside the rectangle

The five sub-areas, mapped

South Cambie is not a single block — it is five named pieces with different inventory mixes, different school proximity, and different Canada Line walking distances. Cambie Village is the northern commercial spine; the Queen Elizabeth Park edge is the prestige character-detached sub-area; West Cambie is the medical-corridor commute play; East Cambie / Ash Street is the recreation-amenity-dense sub-area next to Hillcrest; and the South Cambie south end is the Oakridge–41st-Avenue Canada-Line walkshed and Cambie Corridor Plan transition zone. Different sub-areas, different decisions.

Cambie Village (16th + Cambie commercial corridor)

49.258°N, 123.115°W

Cambie Village is the commercial heart of the northern edge of South Cambie, anchored at 16th Avenue and Cambie Street and stretching south along the Cambie spine. The strip carries the day-to-day amenity load for inner-Vancouver families: independent restaurants, coffee, pharmacy, BC Liquor, grocery, and the seasonal Sunday Cambie Farmers Market in summer. Inventory along the spine is C-2 commercial mid-rise mixed-use; one block off Cambie transitions to townhouse and stacked-townhouse product per Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3. King Edward Canada Line Station (25th Avenue) sits a short walk south — a meaningful walkshed asset for the area's two-block Cambie-adjacent inventory.

Queen Elizabeth Park edge

49.241°N, 123.113°W

The Queen Elizabeth Park edge runs along the western and southern boundaries of the park (33rd Avenue, Cambie Street, 37th Avenue, Ontario Street), where detached and duplex inventory backs onto Vancouver's highest natural point — approximately 150 metres elevation, with mature evergreens, the Bloedel Conservatory, the public golf course, the rose garden, and the quarry gardens. This is the most prestigious sub-area of South Cambie for character-detached buyers: 1920s–1940s heritage inventory on conventional 33-foot Vancouver lots, with park-adjacent walking, view exposure to the North Shore mountains, and the lowest inventory turnover of any South Cambie sub-area. Bill 44 SSMUH multiplex eligibility applies to the RS-1 lots; redevelopment optionality is real but constrained by character-retention guidance.

West Cambie (toward Oak Street)

49.245°N, 123.130°W

West Cambie is the stretch from approximately Heather Street west to Oak Street, between 16th Avenue and 33rd Avenue — quieter residential blocks dominated by 1930s–1960s detached inventory on conventional Vancouver lots, with character-retention pressure from the City. Oak Street is the western edge and the spine of the Vancouver health corridor: Vancouver General Hospital + BC Cancer Agency + BC Children's Hospital + BC Women's Hospital all sit on Oak between 8th Avenue and 33rd Avenue, putting West Cambie inside a 10–15 minute commute window for the entire Vancouver Coastal Health workforce. This is the sub-area where the medical-cluster commute calculus is loudest in the buyer pool — disproportionately attending physicians, residents, fellows, hospital administrators, and academic staff.

East Cambie / Ash Street

49.245°N, 123.110°W

East Cambie / Ash Street covers the blocks east of Cambie Street toward Ontario Street, between 16th Avenue and 37th Avenue — a slightly denser grid than the western half, with more 1950s–1970s detached inventory and a meaningful share of post-2010 multiplex and townhouse infill responding to the Cambie Corridor Plan and the Bill 44 SSMUH framework. Riley Park sits immediately east of this sub-area, anchored by the Hillcrest Community Centre + Aquatic Centre + curling rink complex (the former 2010 Olympics curling venue), giving East Cambie families a recreation amenity that rivals any inner-Vancouver neighbourhood. The Canada Line is reachable via either King Edward (north end) or Oakridge–41st Avenue (south end) by a flat short walk or one-bus connection.

South Cambie south end (toward 41st + Oakridge)

49.234°N, 123.117°W

The south end of South Cambie covers the blocks south of 37th Avenue, transitioning toward 41st Avenue and the Oakridge–41st Avenue Canada Line Station / Oakridge Park redevelopment zone. Inventory mix is the most varied in the neighbourhood: detached on 33-foot lots, duplex, townhouse, and a growing share of stacked-townhouse and low-rise condo product responding to Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 zoning entitlements. Eric Hamber Secondary sits on Willow Street at 33rd Avenue, anchoring the family-buyer pool for this sub-area; Oakridge Park (the Westbank-led redevelopment of the former Oakridge Centre) sits a short walk south of 41st Avenue and is reshaping the southern walkshed on a 10-year horizon. This is the most actively transacting South Cambie sub-area for buyers prioritising Canada Line walkshed.

Schools — Eric Hamber Secondary + Mini School / IB

Most South Cambie addresses feed Eric Hamber Secondary (5025 Willow Street at 33rd Avenue) for grades 8–12 — the school carries a French Immersion programme and the Hamber Mini School (a programme of choice for academically inclined students with an application-based admission stream) and offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme in grades 11–12. The school anchors the family-buyer demographic across the entire neighbourhood, and a substantial share of South Cambie’s detached and duplex inventory transacts on the strength of the catchment.

Elementary feeders depend on the specific block: Edith Cavell Elementary (4050 Yukon Street, K–7), Emily Carr Elementary (4070 Yukon Street near 25th Avenue, K–7), or Henry Hudson Elementary (1551 West 6th Avenue, partial overlap on the northern edge of the neighbourhood) all serve different parts of the South Cambie grid. Verify the live VSB catchment finder for the specific address before paying a school-catchment premium.

Some addresses on the southern edge of South Cambie may fall into the Sir Winston Churchill Secondary catchment (7055 Heather Street) instead of Eric Hamber depending on the specific lot and any periodic VSB boundary review. The Hamber Mini School and IB Diploma Programme are both application streams, not pure catchment access — family buyers relying on either need to confirm the application timeline and current eligibility before treating it as guaranteed access.

The Canada Line + Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3

South Cambie is bracketed by two Canada Line stations: King Edward Station (Cambie Street at 25th Avenue) sits at the northern edge and Oakridge–41st Avenue Station (Cambie Street at 41st Avenue) sits at the southern edge. Most South Cambie addresses fall within a 5–15 minute walk of one of the two stations. The Canada Line opened on August 17, 2009, and runs from Waterfront to either YVR Airport or Richmond–Brighouse, with downtown reachable in approximately 15 minutes from King Edward and 20 minutes from Oakridge–41st.

The Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 was adopted by Vancouver City Council in 2018 and represented the City’s largest single TOD upzoning to date: it rezoned the parcels along the Cambie Street spine and the side streets adjacent to the Canada Line stations (King Edward, Oakridge–41st Avenue, and Marine Drive) for higher-density mixed-use, townhouse, and stacked-townhouse product. The framework covers the corridor from 16th Avenue south to the Fraser River and is the planning instrument that delivered the substantial residential pipeline along the corridor over the late-2010s and 2020s.

For South Cambie specifically: Cambie-Street-adjacent parcels carry RM-9N and RM-9 high-density entitlements; one block off Cambie transitions to townhouse and stacked-townhouse; cul-de-sac and interior parcels remain governed by the RS-1 / R1-1 framework. The C-2 commercial designation runs along the Cambie spine itself. Per BC Transit-Oriented Development literature, properties within an 800-metre walking radius of rapid-transit stations typically experience price appreciation premiums in the 10–20% range; both King Edward and Oakridge–41st Avenue have been operative for over 16 years, so the Canada Line premium is fully priced into South Cambie inventory at this point.

The Oak Street medical corridor — in 2 sentences

Vancouver General Hospital (855 West 12th Avenue), BC Cancer Agency (600 West 10th Avenue), BC Children’s Hospital (4480 Oak Street), and BC Women’s Hospital (4500 Oak Street) all sit on Oak Street between approximately 8th Avenue and 33rd Avenue — putting any South Cambie address inside a 10–15 minute commute window for the entire Vancouver Coastal Health workforce.

That single-employer-cluster proximity to four major teaching hospitals plus a provincial cancer agency is one of the structural reasons South Cambie carries a deep, predictable rental demand pool — and it is why West Cambie (Heather Street to Oak Street) is disproportionately home to attending physicians, residents, fellows, hospital administrators, and academic staff.

Queen Elizabeth Park + VanDusen + Hillcrest — the amenity bundle

South Cambie sits at the centre of one of the most amenity-dense tiles in inner Vancouver. Queen Elizabeth Park (Cambie Street and 33rd Avenue) is the highest natural point in the City of Vancouver at approximately 150 metres elevation, sited on the Little Mountain volcanic plug. The park is owned and managed by the Vancouver Park Board and includes the Bloedel Conservatory (a triodetic dome housing tropical plants and free-flying birds, opened 1969), the Queen Elizabeth Park public golf course (a pitch-and-putt), the rose garden, the quarry gardens (built on the site of two former rock quarries), and an eastern lookout offering an unobstructed view to the North Shore mountains and downtown Vancouver.

VanDusen Botanical Garden (5251 Oak Street at 37th Avenue) sits one block west of South Cambie’s western boundary — 22 hectares of curated plantings, the Elizabethan Hedge Maze, the Stone Garden, and the LEED Platinum Visitor Centre. VanDusen is one of the highest-rated botanical gardens in Canada and is a year-round amenity for Vancouver residents.

Hillcrest Community Centre (4575 Clancy Loranger Way at Midlothian Avenue, immediately east of South Cambie next to Riley Park) hosted the curling competitions during the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games — known during the Games as the Vancouver Olympic / Paralympic Centre. After the Games, the venue was converted to a permanent community recreation facility with a 50-metre lap pool, a leisure pool, hot tub, sauna, steam room, an eight-sheet curling rink, a fitness centre, gymnasiums, the Riley Park Branch of the Vancouver Public Library, and meeting rooms. It is one of the most amenity-dense community centres in the City of Vancouver and is operated by the Vancouver Park Board.

Bill 44 SSMUH + R1-1 multiplex zoning

BC’s Bill 44 (the Small-Scale Multi-Unit Housing framework, in force 2024) requires municipalities to allow specified densities on existing single-family and duplex lots. The City of Vancouver implemented the framework in 2024 by replacing the long-standing RS-1 single-family zoning with the new R1-1 zone, which allows up to six units on a standard 33-foot Vancouver lot subject to siting and servicing rules — well above the provincial Bill 44 minimum.

For South Cambie specifically: most interior cul-de-sac and side-street parcels are now R1-1 multiplex-eligible. Cambie-Street-adjacent parcels are governed by the higher-density Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 entitlements (RM-9N / RM-9 + townhouse / stacked-townhouse on the side streets). The C-2 commercial designation runs along the Cambie spine itself. The Queen Elizabeth Park edge carries character-retention guidance that constrains demolition-and-rebuild redevelopment but does not preclude multiplex addition under the R1-1 rules.

Verify the current City of Vancouver zoning layer for the specific parcel before pricing any redevelopment optionality. The R1-1 multiplex proforma is real but constrained by servicing capacity, neighbourhood character guidance, and the cost stack — do not underwrite a multiplex proforma to the offer math without independent feasibility advice. See the Bill 44 / SSMUH guide for the deeper provincial-framework explainer.

Cultural fabric — post-Canada-Line gentrification

South Cambie’s contemporary character was reshaped by the Canada Line opening on August 17, 2009 and the subsequent Cambie Corridor Plan upzonings. The neighbourhood was historically a quiet residential band of 1920s–1960s detached inventory between two commercial spines (Cambie and Oak); the post-2009 arrival of rapid transit at King Edward and Oakridge–41st Avenue catalysed a wave of redevelopment that brought townhouse, stacked-townhouse, and low-rise condo product to the corridor and the side streets adjacent to the stations.

The buyer pool today is mixed Anglo + Chinese-Canadian + Iranian-Canadian, skewed toward high-tenured professional households — physicians and academic staff connected to the Oak Street medical cluster, design and creative professionals connected to the Cambie commercial spine, and family buyers prioritising the Eric Hamber catchment. South Cambie is one of the few inner-Vancouver neighbourhoods where the rental and ownership cohort overlap meaningfully — physicians and medical residents rent in the West Cambie sub-area before transitioning to ownership in the same neighbourhood.

Worked example — South Cambie detached at $3.2M

Setup

4-bedroom 2,800 sq ft 1940s detached, West Cambie sub-area, Eric Hamber Secondary catchment, 12-minute drive to Vancouver General Hospital, 8-minute walk to King Edward Canada Line Station. Purchase price: $3,200,000. Down payment: 25% = $800,000. Financed: $2,400,000.

Property Transfer Tax (no exemptions)

Base PTT (BC bracket schedule): 1% × $200,000 + 2% × $1,800,000 + 3% × $1,000,000 + 5% × $200,000 = $2,000 + $36,000 + $30,000 + $10,000 = $78,000. The 5%-tier additional tax above $3M materially shapes the closing-day cash on inner-Vancouver detached purchases. Run the live numbers through the PTT calculator.

First-Time Home Buyer (FTHB) exemption

The FTHB exemption is threshold-limited and does not apply at this purchase price — $3.2M sits well above the partial-exemption ceiling. Confirm the current threshold against the BC government Property Transfer Tax page.

R1-1 multiplex redevelopment optionality

On a standard 33-foot Vancouver lot, the R1-1 zoning allows up to six units. The proforma value of that optionality depends on the cost stack (demolition, soft costs, hard costs, financing, marketing) and the achievable per-unit sale price for the resulting multiplex product — both highly site-specific. Do not underwrite a multiplex value to the offer math without independent feasibility advice from a builder, architect, or development consultant who has run real Vancouver R1-1 numbers.

Closing-day cash

Down payment + PTT + legal + adjustments is the all-in number that rarely shows in the listing math. For a $3.2M South Cambie detached, the all-in closing-day cash typically lands $880,000–$890,000 before furniture, moving, or any post-completion improvements. Run a complete number through the closing-day cash calculator.

The South Cambie detached at $3.2M is not a $3.2M decision — it’s a $3.28M–$3.30M decision once you add PTT, legal, and adjustments. The 5%-tier PTT above $3M is the line item that rewires which block you can actually afford.
— What I tell every South Cambie detached buyer running the numbers

Three buyer profiles, three different decisions

The honest practitioner answer to “is South Cambie a good buy” depends on which of three profiles a buyer falls into. Each profile re-prices the home for different reasons and ends up shopping a different sub-area of the rectangle.

Profile A — Family buyer prioritising Eric Hamber catchment

Treats Eric Hamber Secondary (with the Mini School and IB Diploma options) as the primary value driver. Typically buying detached or duplex inventory east of Cambie or along the Queen Elizabeth Park edge. Holding period: 10–20 years (through the children’s school cycle). Underwrites the catchment access — not the Canada Line walkshed or the medical corridor — as the structural reason for the purchase.

Profile B — Medical professional prioritising VGH / BC Cancer commute

Working at Vancouver General Hospital, BC Cancer Agency, BC Children’s Hospital, BC Women’s Hospital, or one of the academic medicine units in the corridor. Prioritises the 10–15 minute commute up Oak Street — typically buying in West Cambie (Heather Street to Oak Street) or on a block with direct Oak Street access. Holding period: variable, often 5–10 years for fellows and residents transitioning to attending positions, longer for established attending physicians.

Profile C — Investor underwriting Canada Line walkshed

Underwrites rental yield against the Canada Line King Edward + Oakridge–41st Avenue walkshed and the Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 redevelopment optionality. Typically buying townhouse or low-rise condo product along the Cambie spine, the south end, or the Cambie Village corridor. The Canada Line premium is fully priced into existing inventory, so the investor edge is in the redevelopment optionality (R1-1 multiplex on interior lots, RM-9 / RM-9N on Cambie-adjacent parcels) rather than the corridor premium itself.

Frequently asked questions

  • What schools are in the South Cambie catchment?

    Most South Cambie addresses feed Eric Hamber Secondary (5025 Willow Street at 33rd Avenue) for grades 8–12 — the school carries a French Immersion programme and the Hamber Mini School (a programme of choice for academically inclined students) and offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. Elementary feeders depend on the specific address: Edith Cavell Elementary (4050 Yukon Street), Emily Carr Elementary (4070 Yukon Street near 25th Avenue), or Henry Hudson Elementary (1551 West 6th Avenue, partial overlap on the northern edge). The southern edge of South Cambie may fall into the Sir Winston Churchill Secondary catchment (7055 Heather Street) for grades 8–12 depending on the lot. Verify the live VSB catchment finder for the specific address before paying a school-catchment premium — the Hamber Mini School and IB Diploma are both application streams, not pure catchment access.

  • How close is South Cambie to the Canada Line?

    South Cambie is bracketed by two Canada Line stations: King Edward Station (Cambie Street at 25th Avenue) sits at the northern edge of the neighbourhood and Oakridge–41st Avenue Station (Cambie Street at 41st Avenue) sits at the southern edge. Most South Cambie addresses fall within a 5–15 minute walk of one of the two stations, depending on the exact block. The Canada Line opened on August 17, 2009, and runs from Waterfront to either YVR Airport or Richmond–Brighouse, with downtown reachable in approximately 15 minutes from King Edward and approximately 20 minutes from Oakridge–41st Avenue. Per BC Transit-Oriented Development literature, properties within an 800-metre walking radius of rapid-transit stations typically experience price appreciation premiums in the 10–20% range; both King Edward and Oakridge–41st Avenue have been operative for over 16 years, so the Canada Line premium is fully priced into South Cambie inventory at this point.

  • Is South Cambie zoned for multiplexes under Bill 44 / SSMUH?

    Yes — most South Cambie RS-1 single-family lots are now multiplex-eligible under the Province's Bill 44 (the Small-Scale Multi-Unit Housing framework, in force 2024) plus the City of Vancouver's implementing R1-1 zoning that replaced RS-1 in 2024. The City's R1-1 framework allows up to six units on a standard 33-foot lot subject to siting and servicing rules. Cambie-Street-adjacent parcels are governed by the Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 zoning entitlements (RM-9N / RM-9 high-density along the spine, with townhouse / stacked-townhouse on the side streets). The C-2 commercial designation runs along the Cambie spine itself. For redevelopment optionality, pull the current City of Vancouver zoning layer for the specific parcel and confirm whether the parcel sits inside Cambie Corridor Phase 3 entitlements, the R1-1 SSMUH framework, or a character-retention overlay — the answer changes the proforma materially.

  • Why is South Cambie attractive to medical professionals?

    The Vancouver health corridor sits on Oak Street between approximately 8th Avenue and 33rd Avenue: Vancouver General Hospital (855 West 12th Avenue), BC Cancer Agency (600 West 10th Avenue), BC Children's Hospital (4480 Oak Street), and BC Women's Hospital (4500 Oak Street) all sit within a 10–15 minute drive (or, depending on the specific address, a walkable distance) from any South Cambie home. That single-employer-cluster proximity to four major teaching hospitals plus the BC Cancer Agency makes South Cambie one of the most consistently chosen Vancouver neighbourhoods for attending physicians, residents, fellows, hospital administrators, and academic staff. It is also why the rental yield on West Cambie homes is structurally strong: the medical workforce sustains a deep, predictable rental demand pool.

  • Is Queen Elizabeth Park really the highest point in Vancouver?

    Yes — the summit of Queen Elizabeth Park sits at approximately 150 metres above sea level, the highest natural point inside the City of Vancouver's municipal boundaries. The park sits on the Little Mountain volcanic plug and was developed on the site of two former rock quarries (the quarry gardens are the visible legacy). The Bloedel Conservatory (a triodetic dome housing tropical plants and free-flying birds, opened 1969) sits at the summit; the Queen Elizabeth Park public golf course (a pitch-and-putt) sits on the southern slope; the rose garden sits between the Bloedel and the eastern lookout. The eastern lookout is the most popular wedding-photo spot in Vancouver and offers an unobstructed view to the North Shore mountains and downtown Vancouver. The park is owned and managed by the Vancouver Park Board.

  • What was Hillcrest Centre during the 2010 Olympics?

    The Hillcrest Community Centre (4575 Clancy Loranger Way at Midlothian Avenue, on the eastern edge of South Cambie next to Riley Park) hosted the curling competitions during the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games — known during the Games as the Vancouver Olympic / Paralympic Centre. After the Games, the venue was converted to a permanent community recreation facility, with an aquatic centre (50-metre lap pool, leisure pool, hot tub, sauna, steam room), a curling rink (eight sheets), a fitness centre, a library branch, the Riley Park Branch of the Vancouver Public Library, gymnasiums, and meeting rooms. It is one of the most amenity-dense community centres in the City of Vancouver and is operated by the Vancouver Park Board in partnership with the Hillcrest Community Centre Association.

  • What does the Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 actually do?

    The Cambie Corridor Plan Phase 3 was adopted by Vancouver City Council in 2018 and represented the City's largest single TOD upzoning to date: it rezoned the parcels along the Cambie Street spine and the side streets adjacent to the Canada Line stations (King Edward, Oakridge–41st Avenue, and Marine Drive) for higher-density mixed-use, townhouse, and stacked-townhouse product. The framework covers the corridor from 16th Avenue south to the Fraser River and is the planning instrument that delivered the substantial residential pipeline along the corridor over the late-2010s and 2020s. Cambie-Street-adjacent parcels in South Cambie carry RM-9N and RM-9 high-density entitlements; one block off Cambie transitions to townhouse and stacked-townhouse; cul-de-sac and interior parcels remain governed by the RS-1 / R1-1 framework. The Phase 3 plan is the single most important planning instrument for South Cambie property-value math.

  • What kind of buyer profile is South Cambie best suited for?

    Three distinct buyer profiles converge on South Cambie for three different reasons. Family buyers prioritising Eric Hamber catchment (with the Mini School / IB option) treat the schools as the primary value driver — typically buying detached or duplex inventory east of Cambie or along the Queen Elizabeth Park edge. Medical professionals working at VGH / BC Cancer Agency / BC Children's / BC Women's prioritise the 10-minute commute up Oak Street — typically buying in West Cambie or anywhere within a short Oak-Street drive. Investor buyers prioritising rental yield underwrite the King Edward + Oakridge–41st Avenue Canada Line walkshed — typically buying townhouse or low-rise condo product along the Cambie spine or along the south end. The honest practitioner answer is that most listing agents price the home as if all three drivers are the same value — they aren't. Each is independently re-pricing the home in different buyer profiles, and the buyer who knows which profile they are can buy the right home for the right reason.

South Cambie is the right answer for a family that wants Eric Hamber, a medical professional that wants the Oak Street commute, or an investor that wants Canada Line walkshed plus R1-1 redevelopment optionality. It is the wrong answer if you need new construction, large lots, or a single-driver thesis — the rectangle is layered, and the buyer who wants only one driver is paying for three.
— The honest one-liner I give every South Cambie buyer who asks for it
Verified sources (3)Click to expand

Every claim on this page is sourced to a primary government, regulator, or industry-association URL. We re-verify quarterly; the verification dates below show when each source was last confirmed against the live government page.

Fact ID: bc.tod.transit_oriented_development · v1View in Codex →
Verified sources (2)Click to expand

Every claim on this page is sourced to a primary government, regulator, or industry-association URL. We re-verify quarterly; the verification dates below show when each source was last confirmed against the live government page.

Fact ID: bc.bill44_2023_ssmuh · v1View in Codex →
Bronson Job PREC, REALTOR®
Bronson Job PRECREALTOR® · GVR Member #6015742 · FVREB Member #FJOBBR