Dawar has spent his career in residential real estate across Metro Vancouver. But the part that became a genuine passion wasn't the transactions - it was what they could add up to. Early in his career he noticed a pattern. Clients who bought carefully, sold at the right moment, and rolled their equity into the next step were quietly building something that looked impossible when they started.
That insight became his signature. He'd sit down with a new client, understand the real goal - not just the next purchase, but the ten-year picture - and design a strategy around it. A $400K condo becomes a townhouse becomes a detached home. Each step planned before you take it. Each sale timed to maximise what you carry into the next one.
Over the years, those first-wave clients became real estate success stories. Working-class Canadians - people like his own family - who started with what they could afford and ended up with the kind of wealth they never expected to build. That track record, and what it meant for those families, is what drew him immediately to BC's new SSMUH legislation the moment it passed.
For a Port Moody homeowner who had already made those smart moves and landed on a detached lot, the multiplex rules are a completely new chapter - turning one property into generational income without selling what they'd worked decades to build. Port Moody Multiplex is the practice Dawar built around that opportunity.