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Cost of Living

Buying a mobile home was the best financial decision his family made just don't call it a trailer

Buying a mobile home and moving into a community in Calgary has made Stephan Gardners life measurably better, especially from a financial perspective. But don't call it a trailer park, says one advocate.

For Stephan Gardner, buying the home in Calgary's Greenwood Village didn't feel like settling

Stephan Gardner stands in front of his mobile home in Greenwood Village, a mobile home community in Calgary. He says buying the home is the best financial decision he's made in his life. (Submitted by Stephan Gardner)

Buying a mobile home has made Stephan Gardner's life measurably better, especially from a financial perspective.

Gardner lives with his wife and sonin Greenwood Village, a mobile home park, in Calgary, Alta.

"I don't feel I settled here," he told CBC'sCost of Living."We just walked in and we were like, 'This place is amazing.' "

The family had been renting a home in the city, and feared they would be evicted after it was sold to a new owner.They were paying $2,100 a month rent, plus utilities. That high cost was preventing Gardner from puttingmoney toward his personal debt.

"I know what it's like to have only, like, cans of tuna to feed your kid, you know, and you [don't] eat for two days or three days just to save money," he said.

LISTEN | How mobile homes provide a way into the housing market:

Trailer parks are the O.G. of affordable housing. Where else can you find a three-bedroom home with two baths for less than $200,000?! Danielle Nerman explains why moving into one could be the best financial decision you'll ever make. Just don't call it a trailer park.

Skyrocketing housing costs

During their house hunt, Gardner and his wifeweren't impressed with the houses and condosavailable to them. Some seemed like "money pits," he said.But they didn't want to keep renting because it didn't feel like a good financial decision.

Gardner didn't know that any mobile home communities existed in Calgary, until he stumbled across anMLSlisting and was impressed by what he saw.

Gardner says the lower price of the mobile home means lower mortgage payments, which has allowed him to pay down some debt. (Danielle Nerman/CBC)

They purchased a mobile home for $158,000. Now, "every month I put about anywhere from $1,000 to $1,200 dollars on my debt, which is unbelievable," he said.

In addition to mortgage payments of $376 every two weeks, they also pay $840 a month for the pad in the park that their home sits on, which includes water and sewer utilities, waste, recycling and green bin collection, as well as snow removal.

Gardner is among a number of new home owners in Canada who are embracing manufactured homes as housing costsskyrocket, and a way to own a home with outdoor space.

He said that people should forget about the stigma associated with mobile home parks and give them a second look.

"You'll never be as happy as you are in a mobile home," Gardner said. "Because it's affordable and you have options and you'll be able to save all this money."

Others he's met since buying his mobile home have been able to use the extra money to buy electric vehicles, invest, or to travel.

They are not trailer parks, and they're not trailers anymore.- Al Kemp, executive director ofManufactured Home Park Owners Alliance of B.C.

Al Kemp is the executive director of the Manufactured Home Park Owners Alliance of B.C., which has about 350 community owners. He says it's important to be clear that the homes are not "trailers," andstrongly prefers the term "manufactured home" over "mobile home."

"They are not trailer parks and they're not trailers anymore. A manufactured home today is built to a national building code standard called Z-240," he said. He specifies that means homes are built with solid metal frames,two-by-four or two-by-sixwood construction, drywall as opposed to panelled walls,and roofsguaranteed to last 25 years.

"They're designed to last as long, with major renovations every 25 years or so, just like your home and my home are designed. So CMHC [Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation] totally backs them from the mortgage insurance standpoint."

Kemp is critical of popular culture, like the TV show Trailer Park Boys, that portrayspeople who live in mobile homes in a stereotypical and negative way.

He says thesepreconceived notions make it more difficult to work with local and provincial politicians to build mobile home communities.

Stigma, zoning issues persist

Anna Lund, an associate professor of law atthe University of Alberta, wrote a research paper on mass evictions of mobile homes that was published in April 2021. The paper confirmed Kemp's concerns andnoted that government reports have found that stigma surrounding mobile homes might cause local politicians to avoid constructing new parks in their communities or try to shut down existing ones.

Those existing parks may besituated in less than ideal locations, "noisy, unsafe areas, close to incompatible commercial and industrial uses and far from residential amenities," according to Lund.

The study also noted that these reports recommendmaking zoning more inclusive. That is, allowing mobile homes to mix with conventional housinginstead of being set apart,and using the term "manufactured homes" to avoid perpetuating the idea that residents are transient.

About half of all mobile homes in Canada are in B.C. and Alberta, according to the study.

A recently sold mobile home is seen in Greenwood Village. According to a recent research paper, government reports have recommend making zoning more inclusive by allowing mobile homes to mix with conventional housing instead of being set apart. (Danielle Nerman/CBC News)

Kemp said many people already see the appeal of mobile homes.

"Not only are they an attractive, affordable housing alternative, but they're also a good investment on the way to, you know, a site-built home or a larger home or whatever a young family's plans are," he said.

"I've seen existing well-cared for manufactured homes that are 10, 15, 20 years old, are now selling in British Columbia for between $500- and $600,000."

Darcy Moore, a real estate agent with Re/Max in Spruce Grove, Alta., has been selling homes for 20 years. She estimates that mobile homes make up between 80 and 90 per cent of the homes she sells.

Prices, salesrising

Prices for mobile homes are increasing, said Moore, but not to the soaring heights of site-built homes.

"A [mobile] home that's maybe 20 years old would have sold five years ago for $60,000. Now it sells for $80,000," she said.

"Say five years ago, I would list a home and sometimes it would sit for a year, sometimes longer," she said.

Now, homes might sell in a couple months. In one particularly popular park nearby, Moore noted that a home might be on the market for as little as a week.

It is difficult to track national or even provincial figuresaroundmobile home sales, because statistics may not be gathered by every local real estate board.

Some data provided by the Canadian Real Estate Association show that prices are increasing, along with sales, in parts of B.C. and Ontario.

A view of Greenwood Village Mobile Home Community. Real estate data shows that sales of mobile homes have increased over the past five years in parts of B.C. and Ontario, and prices are rising as well. (Danielle Nerman/CBC News)

The median sale price of a mobile home in Vancouver was $169,950 in 2017, and it has since jumped to $327,000100 in 2021. Comparably, in Ottawa, the median sale price for mobile home in 2017 was $75,000, and in 2021 it increased to $160,000.

The number of mobile homes sold in the Northern B.C. region, for example, jumped from 499 in 2017 to 651 in 2021.

Popular with retirees, young families

Moore notes she's seen people buy homes near her in Spruce Grove, and move them further north in Alberta or to B.C., because the homes can be cheaper to purchase than new builds.

She sees both retirees and young people in the market for mobile homes. She also says she seesa few cases each year of young families who first bought larger homes, and then downgraded to more affordable mobile homes.

Kemp says he hears about young people and young families who want to move into mobile home communities, but in parts of B.C., all the communities are full. So, he's lobbying the province to make some Crown land available to build more.

Gardner said he's inspired by seeing others who have made the decision not to be "house poor" by living in mobile homes or tiny homes, and who put that extra money into savings or investments.

"It's ended up being the best option and the best choice that I've ever made in terms of my financial life," he said.


Stephan Gardner and Al Kemp interviews produced by Danielle Nerman.