Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mayor Robertson Credits Vancouver's Economic Strategy For Highest Building Permit Values

The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2015 05:28 PM
    VANCOUVER — The mayor of Vancouver is crediting the city's economic strategy for record-high building permit values of $2.8 billion.
     
    Gregor Robertson said low taxes, less red tape and innovative incentive programs are helping to attract new investment and a boom in office space.
     
    The city said in a news release Wednesday that building permit values in 2014 increased by 28 per cent from the previous year, and by 77 per cent over the 2008 figure.
     
    Among the developments touted by the city is the $287-million construction of a new facility at BC Children's Hospital as a key contributor to the increase in permit values last year.
     
    Tsur Somerville, director of the Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate at the University of B.C., said the hospital project represents 10 per cent of last year's permit values, but it's just one development.
     
    It's not surprising that building permit values have risen sharply, but that has more to do with inflation than any economic plan, Somerville said.
     
    Removing that one project would bring permit values down to 2012 levels, he noted.
     
    Construction of bigger homes has also added to the value of building permits, but that does not amount to more housing starts in a city where affordability is a big issue, Somerville said.
     
    "If old houses are torn down and really big houses are being built for wealthy households to purchase then you get increases in permits but I wouldn't say that's a successful city strategy," he said.
     
    "It's wonderful to have an action plan but I think it's a little bit hasty to look at 2014 permit numbers and tie those things together."
     
    Somerville said office-space construction is cyclical and has increased in the last few years after little development between 2008 and 2010.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan

    Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan
    VANCOUVER - Elections BC has ruled energy giant Kinder Morgan does not need to register as a third party advertiser in the province's civic election campaign.

    Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan

    Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper

    Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper
    OTTAWA - The gunman who staged a deadly attack Wednesday on Parliament Hill was a terrorist whose despicable crime will only harden Canada's resolve to crack down on terrorists at home and abroad, Stephen Harper says.

    Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo
    U.S. officials name the dead Ottawa shooting suspect as Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, a Canadian born in 1982. He shot reserve soldier Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial before running inside Parliament and exchanging gunfire with guards

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies
    WINNIPEG - Police have charged a woman who was renting a storage locker where the remains of six babies were found, but they say it could be months before they know who the infants were or how they died.

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa
    TORONTO - Toronto's chief of police says officers in the country's largest city will be more visible today as a result of this week's attacks on soldiers in Ottawa and Quebec.

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill
    OTTAWA - The fatal shooting of a soldier at the National War Memorial and the subsequent gunfire on Parliament Hill on Wednesday have renewed concerns about security in the capital.

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill