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Costco Isn’t Just Selling Bulk Goods Anymore — It’s Selling Homes Too

Posted by Jeff Robson on January 28, 2026
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Costco’s traditional model — big warehouse footprint, strong memberships, and everyday value — just got a serious real-estate upgrade. Developers are now stacking apartment housing directly on top of Costco warehouses, creating mixed-use communities that tackle both the housing crunch and retail demand. What started with a bold project in South Los Angeles could be the blueprint for cities across North America.

What’s the Costco Housing Model?

In Los Angeles, a developer called Thrive Living is building the first Costco Warehouse with 800 rental apartment units above it. About 184 units will be set aside for low-income households, while the remaining units are marketed as affordable or workforce housing. The ground level stays retail — Costco — with the apartments above, surrounded by amenities like underground parking, rooftop recreation, and fitness spaces.

This isn’t a tiny pilot. It’s a fully integrated mixed-use property that blends everyday needs with residential life and jobs, and it’s privately financed without low-income tax credits.

Why This Matters

  1. Maximizes Land Value and Utility
    Big-box retail footprints are huge, often miles from dense urban nodes. Putting housing above retail uses land far more efficiently than stand-alone warehouses or single-use housing projects. That’s a huge advantage in cities with limited developable land.
  2. Convenience Drives Quality of Life
    Residents literally live steps from everyday essentials — groceries, pharmacy, optical, and lifestyle goods — reducing car dependency and creating walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods.
  3. Housing Supply + Retail Foot Traffic Synergy
    Retail anchored by daily needs benefits from built-in foot traffic, while housing benefits from proximity to jobs and services. That’s a win-win in CRE economics.
  4. Potential to Lower Overall Costs
    Shared infrastructure (foundation, parking, utilities), combined approvals, and possibly modular construction can tip the economics in favour of more affordable development — especially versus traditional housing builds that struggle with land and compliance costs.

How This Could Benefit Calgary

Calgary is expanding rapidly, and affordable housing continues to be a key issue in the city’s growth story. Here’s how a Costco-style model could work here:

  • Density + Accessibility: Calgary’s urban areas and transit corridors are prime spots for mixed-use. If a Costco apartment project were near transit or major job centres, it could not only add housing units but also connect residents directly to services and work without car reliance.
  • Boost to Workforce Housing: Calgary’s workforce — from service workers to early-career professionals — often gets squeezed by rising rents. A model that locks in units at affordable or workforce rates would diversify the housing stock without requiring heavy subsidy.
  • Economic Anchor + Job Creation: A project like this doesn’t just deliver homes — it creates jobs (retail + construction) and stabilizes retail income, which is attractive to investors and municipalities alike.
  • Supports Urban Planning Goals: Calgary planners already talk about densification and mixed-use nodes in areas like Beltline, East Village, or transit-oriented zones. Adding a model that integrates retail with housing fits that vision, reduces sprawl, and keeps infrastructure more efficient.

Why Experts in Mixed-Use Leasing Should Pay Attention

As specialists in mixed-use leasing, we live where retail intersects with residential — and the Costco concept pushes that boundary:

  • It validates anchor retail as a housing catalyst, not just a traffic generator.
  • It creates new revenue streams — retail lease income paired with residential rent — improving investment appeal.
  • It forces better community integration — shared spaces, shared infrastructure, and a market-driven approach to affordable housing.

Calgary is ready for creative approaches that increase housing supply, improve quality of life, and retain strong retail economics. Costco’s mixed-use housing model may not be the silver bullet, but it’s a serious template worth studying.

Relevant Information Reviewed From:

Globe and Mail 

Entrepreneur 

Housing Finance 

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