Lower Mainland Court-Ordered Sales Spike: Distressed Land Sells Below Debt as Developers Scoop Up Bargains
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Court-ordered sales are rapidly reshaping the Lower Mainland development landscape as over-leveraged projects collapse under debt pressure. In Port Coquitlam, NorthStar Developments—led by Gordon Wylie and Jeff Brown—acquired the stalled "The Met" site from Quarry Rock Development for $11.6 million in November 2024, a figure below assessed value and far short of the $23 million owed to 57 creditors. The site, where construction had only reached the parkade level, has been rebranded as Livy and is now marketing studios starting at $299,000 with shared amenities like co-working pods and a golf simulator. Meanwhile, Landa Global Properties, led by CEO Kevin Cheung, has picked up three distressed assets in the past year: the 38-unit Siena in Burnaby Heights, the 17-unit Park & Granville townhouse project in South Vancouver, and the long-vacant Theodore lot in Kerrisdale.


This wave of distress sales marks a sharp break from previous downturns. Unlike the brief 2008-2009 slump, which produced relatively few Vancouver foreclosures, industry veterans are calling the current construction and sales collapse the worst in their lifetimes. Brokers specializing in multi-family development sites report a growing pipeline of court-ordered sales stretching from Vancouver to Langley. Mark Goodman, whose brokerage focuses on apartment and multi-family sites, describes the current environment as a "monumental re-set" and predicts at least two more years of pain. Jennifer Darling at Colliers notes that while distressed land sales attracted multiple competing offers until early 2025, optimism has since stalled as uncertainty over pricing persists and bids increasingly fall below outstanding debt levels.
WANLING WANG Commentary
From a senior Greater Vancouver agent's perspective, this court-ordered sales cycle is less about immediate price crashes and more about a slow-motion transfer of assets from over-leveraged builders to cashed-up operators. For local buyers, the opportunity is selective: genuine affordability is appearing in pockets like Port Coquitlam, but only where a solvent developer has taken clean control. Sellers and landholders should not expect a quick rebound; the brokers closest to these transactions are explicitly pricing in two more years of pain. The key is not to overreact to one headline discount, but to understand that this reset is separating well-capitalized projects from distressed ones neighbourhood by neighbourhood. Clients with dry powder and patience are in a strong position, but only if they read the creditor stack and municipal risk before signing.