Fenestration Review

Articles Business Intelligence
StatsCan building permits report: July 2017

September 13, 2017  By StatsCan



Sept. 12, 2017 – Canadian municipalities issued $7.9 billion worth of building permits in July, down 3.5% from June and the first decrease since March 2017. Lower construction intentions for commercial buildings and multi-family dwellings were mainly responsible for the national decline. Seven provinces posted decreases, with the largest decline in Ontario.

Provinces and census metropolitan areas: Ontario posts decline in multi-family dwellings, while British Columbia hits a record high
The total value of permits was down in seven provinces in July, led by lower construction intentions for multi-family dwellings and commercial buildings in Ontario.

The value of buildings permits fell 3.7% to $3.3 billion in Ontario, the first decline since April 2017. The decrease was mainly attributable to lower construction intentions in the residential sector, specifically multi-family dwellings, which fell 20.5% to $849.7 million in July. The decline in the value of multi-family dwelling permits followed three consecutive monthly increases. In contrast, the value of permits for single-family dwellings rose 7.9% to $1.1 billion in Ontario. Overall, the value of residential permits was up 4.2% compared with the same month in 2016.

The value of multi-family dwellings in British Columbia rose 14.2% from June to $771.8 million in July, the highest value on record. The increase was mainly attributable to higher construction intentions for apartments in the census metropolitan area (CMA) of Vancouver. Municipalities in this CMA issued $562.2 million in permits for multi-family dwellings, up 17.4% from June and the highest value on record.

Advertisement

The CMA of Toronto posted the largest decrease, as the total value of building permits fell 16.2% in July to $1.5 billion. The decline followed two consecutive monthly increases and was mainly attributable to lower construction intentions for multi-family dwellings.

Residential sector: Decline in multi-family component
Canadian municipalities issued $5.0 billion worth of residential building permits in July, down 2.2% from June and the first decline since April 2017. Lower construction intentions for multi-family dwellings more than offset a moderate gain in the single-family component. The residential sector was down in six provinces in July, with Ontario posting the largest drop.

Construction intentions for multi-family dwellings fell 7.4% in July to $2.5 billion, the first decline since March 2017. The value of multi-family dwelling permits was down in eight provinces in July on lower construction intentions for row houses in Ontario, specifically the Toronto CMA.

Conversely, single-family dwelling construction intentions rose 3.6% in July to $2.5 billion, largely attributable to gains in five provinces, led by Ontario. The increase followed an 11.7% drop in June.

In July, Canadian municipalities approved the construction of 13,830 multi-family units (down 4.2% from June) and 5,754 single units (up 4.6% from June).


Print this page

Advertisement

Stories continue below


Related



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*