4 generations, 4 homes, 1 lot: Vancouver family builds own private neighborhood



To help their kids afford housing in the Vancouver area, John and Kathleen Higgins demolished their family home of three decades to build 4 homes on the same lot for their kids, grandkids, and 94-year-old great-grannie.

In 1988, John and Kathleen Higgins bought a modest 1,300-square-foot rancher on a cul-de-sac in Delta, British Columbia, where they raised their seven children. Convinced that the typical 66-foot suburban lot was a waste of land, they began dreaming up alternatives, envisioning smaller homes clustered together to maximize space and community.

After years of pitching the idea to neighbors and local officials, the couple finally gained unanimous approval from the city in 2016 to demolish their old home and replace it with two duplexes—four homes in total—each with its own land title.

The new homes, two at 830 square feet and two at 1,150 square feet, provide a fresh start for the entire family. John and Kathleen now live in one unit, staying rooted in the neighborhood they’ve loved for decades.

Their sons, James and Patrick, each own a unit, a lifeline in a region where homeownership often feels out of reach. The fourth unit belongs to their daughter, who rents it to her 94-year-old grandmother, now surrounded by two great-grandchildren and one more on the way.

https://www.instagram.com/mysmallerhouse
John Higgins (architect) [email protected]
Thanks to Patrick Higgins for additional footage: Higginsfilm.com
https://www.instagram.com/higginsfilm/

On *faircompanies: https://faircompanies.com/videos/4-generations-4-homes-1-lot-vancouver-family-builds-own-private-neighborhood/

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50 thoughts on “4 generations, 4 homes, 1 lot: Vancouver family builds own private neighborhood”

  1. I'm seriously surprised by these comments! It seems like this concept of housing is completely foreign to them! In Asia, South-America and parts of Southern Europe this concept of housing is completely normal!

    Sad, but I think the West is way too individualistic!

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  2. My parents bought their house around the same year in the 80s, but the small East Van lot could never do this 😭 well, at least my sister got something like this… In Lethbridge with her in-laws nearby (they're good in-laws)

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  3. This is how it must be. Good to have the immediate family around for anything and everything. What's life without family around. Sense of safety and security. Really nice to see this.

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  4. My only Gripe is that there is no garage, meaning no shop. If you could have designed it to somehow have at least one garage you could all share when the need be it would be a big big win for me

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  5. The largest benefit of this is too the children. They will grow up being so loved, with the best start in life they could possibly have. The splitting of families has always been so tragic to me for that very reason. I also hope to make this arrangement for my family one day, on a bit more land and with common areas, but the philosophy is the same. 'Till death do us part' should apply to the entire family.

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  6. This is outrageous. The Liberal/NDP's that don't live anywhere near here need to put a stop to this before it happens again! One of those units needs to be set aside for a migrant! Four separate units=four times the carbon footprint! Look at all those cars on this lot…it was made for 2 cars…now it has 6! No solar and none of those cars are electric. Outrageous. These people are out of control.
    More property tax, though. So that's good.

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  7. I love this for their family. Especially with the housing crisis alot of families could benefit from this. This is exactly what I was talking to my mother about on 2 of our properties. I'm definitely sharing this video with her.

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