Our Urban Village Cohousing

Cohousing lite: An innovative project with Tomo Spaces offers a promising solution to Vancouver’s housing and social isolation crises.

2D line drawing, showing a street lined with single family houses on the left and a low-rise apartment on the right. An illustration of our urban village is in the middle, coloured in green and showing the gentle scale of the density

Our Urban Village offers a sustainable, social model for adding gentle density to single-family neighbourhoods. (Madeleine Hebert / Happy Cities)

The happier missing middle

Can we design multi-unit housing to nurture strong, supportive social relationships? Hundreds of hours of research led us to believe the answer is yes. Our Urban Village (formerly called Tomo House) brings this idea to life.

Happy Cities collaborated with local developer Tomo Spaces, a creative design team (Lanefab and MA+HG Architects), and Our Urban Village to pilot a new form of socially connected, missing middle housing called “cohousing lite.” Our work included:

  1. Design principles for wellbeing to guide the development of the project, building on Happy Cities research on wellbeing in multi-unit housing

  2. A post-occupancy study comparing residents’ wellbeing before and after move in, to identify how living in community-oriented housing can nurture health, belonging, social connection, and more

About Our Urban Village

Our Urban Village is a three-storey, 12-unit cohousing project in Vancouver. It combines a small cluster of private homes with shared indoor and outdoor social spaces, including a common house, courtyard, shared laundry, and parking.

Cohousing groups face many barriers to development, including long project timelines, expensive land, complex municipal policy, and significant time commitments. Many groups that form are unable to overcome these challenges and complete their project. Our Urban Village piloted an innovative “cohousing lite” model, collaborating with a local developer to reduce many of these financial and time barriers. The project prioritizes resident wellbeing and social connection, and offers an innovative model for developing low-rise, “missing middle” housing in a largely single-family residential neighbourhood.

Our research outlines key learnings from this cohousing lite community to explore how cities can add gentle density and grow in a sustainable and social way.

A modern apartment building with a metallic exterior and green brick accents at the base, complete with a bike parked out front and people nearby, suggesting a residential or mixed-use urban environment.

Our Urban Village, view from Main Street.

Project architects, Marianne Amodio and Harley Grusko, on the building’s wide outdoor walkways.

What we learned

Happy Cities designed a research methodology to measure how residents’ wellbeing changed before and after moving into Our Urban Village. Our results find that—as research and the residents themselves predicted—interactions with neighbours, social support, and trust in neighbours have significantly increased since moving in. The results highlight impactful actions that can be implemented in future, community-oriented, missing middle developments to boost sense of community, wellbeing, and belonging.

Explore a snapshot of our results below, or download the report to learn more.

Aerial view of a three-storey, modern mult-unit housing in a residential neighbourhood. One of the building facades is green, and lined with exterior walkways and winding stairs that connect units to a courtyard below

Our Urban Village includes wide outdoor walkways and a shared courtyard. (Matheson Photography)

Learn more about community housing models:

Read about local, inspiring community housing models—like cohousing and co-operative housing—and learn about how to apply design principles to transform any multi-unit building into a place where people know and support their neighbours.

More stories about Tomo Spaces and Our Urban Village

East Van cohousing project leads to 0% loneliness. CBC Early Edition

South Main co-housing project welcomes residents in search of community. CTV News

Developer Mark Shieh sees shared living spaces as a way to bring fractured communities together. The Globe and Mail

What’s behind the Tomo name of a new cohousing project? Georgia Straight

Making connections. The Globe and Mail

Cohousing project in Vancouver. Daily Hive

Cohousing Lite enters the Vancouver housing lexicon. The Courier

Funding acknowledgment

This research received funding from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) through the National Housing Strategy Demonstrations Initiative. The views expressed are the views of the authors and CMHC accepts no responsibility for them.

Previous
Previous

Tysons, Virginia placemaking framework

Next
Next

North Vancouver active design study