Current Affairs
Rising up from the north facing marina, ferry terminal and commercial district in the heart of the bay, the community of Horseshoe Bay spreads south and west to encompass the entire peninsula, including the Gleneagles golf course, community centre and elementary school. For such a relatively small community by area it offers amazingly diverse homes, views and housing options. All of which are connected by a walkable and rideable network of trails.
The Coast Salish peoples inhabited this important area since before recorded history. Early nineteenth century logging operations were then followed by the passenger rail line from Deep Cove. This led to a burgeoning village in the 1920s and 1930s with cottages, accommodations, commerce and recreation oriented towards summer visitors. By the 1950s Horseshoe Bay became the site of the new ferry terminal and a stop on the new Upper Levels highway.
In addition to the high end waterfront homes, the community has a wide range of single family homes and prices, which tend to be priced below comparable properties elsewhere in West Vancouver. A substantial % of homes are owned for rental purposes and cash-flow positive opportunities are available. A brand-new waterfront condo and townhouse development, adjacent to the Libby Lodge Senior Home and the marina, has added some much needed multi-family stock.
Due to it’s geography and development history Horseshoe Bay is the ultimate in “village” style living, while still enjoying all the benefits of being in the city.
For more information on current listings and potential opportunities check out my website.
(Bloomberg) — Some chief executive officers are so eager for their employees to get vaccinated against Covid-19 that they’re granting workers time off or cash incentives to get shots.
Striking a persuasive tone on vaccination will become ever more important as executives hasten a return to the office. Employees at jeweler Tiffany & Co. in the U.S. have been instructed to work at least two days from the office from the beginning of March — whether they’re vaccinated or not.
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said at a conference last month that more of the firm’s bankers would have been back in the office by now if vaccine distribution had been faster in the first quarter.
Working from home is an “aberration that we are going to correct as quickly as possible,” he said.
To all of you who supported Special Olympics with the Polar Plunge, I can’t thank you enough.
As many businesses struggled to survive the pandemic, Amazon.com was quietly building a national grocery chain.
The first Amazon Fresh store opened to the public in Los Angeles in September. Store No. 11 opened Thursday, and Amazon is working on at least 28 more, from Philadelphia to the Sacramento suburbs. The company is also testing the “Just Walk Out” cashierless shopping technology created for its Go convenience stores at an Amazon Fresh location in Illinois.
More than a decade after it started selling groceries, Amazon has a tiny sliver of the $900 billion U.S. grocery market and has watched traditional chains finally start figuring out how to sell food online. Amazon Fresh, industry watchers say, is a way for the company to become even stickier with devoted Prime members, as well as appeal to a broad cross-section of America, from lower-income shoppers who frequent discounters like Walmart Inc. to wealthier customers looking to pick up online orders.
When COVID-19 closed the Facebook Inc. offices in Tel Aviv, Michelle Lourie found herself working in a shed on the kibbutz where she lives with her family in Israel. It’s a far cry from Tel Aviv, a city techno-edgy enough to merit being called the world’s startup capital. In addition to fielding visits from her three small children in her new digs, the product manager had to contend with the bleats of goats grazing outside and an internet connection that was spotty at best.
It was the perfect setting for her latest project.
Over the past year, Lourie and her team in Tel Aviv developed Instagram Lite in collaboration with a New York–based team including Instagram engineering, product, design and research.
This new app for Android is designed to provide people living in rural and remote communities with a high-quality Instagram experience using minimal data.
The app, which is rolling out in more than 170 countries, arrived not a moment too soon. During the past year, Instagram has become a lifeline for many to connect with loved ones or find a small moment of inspiration, be it a photo of a friend’s newborn or a video of puppies discovering snow.
