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Key Indicator Alert: Non-residential building permits on the rise in Canada

Municipalities issued $6.5 billion in building permits in September, up 13.4%.

September's increase was the result of gains in all three components of the non-residential sector. The total value of building permits increased in seven provinces and two territories.

In the non-residential sector, the value of permits rose 41.7% to $3.2 billion. This increase was generated by a substantial gain in institutional permits, and lesser increases in the industrial and commercial components. Major increases occurred in Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta.

DETAILS
Non-residential sector: Institutional permits double
After two consecutive monthly declines, the value of institutional permits more than doubled (+108.8%) in September to a record $986 million. The increase came mostly from planned medical and educational building projects in Ontario and Saskatchewan.

Construction intentions for commercial buildings rose by 11.7% to $1.5 billion after three consecutive declines. Overall, seven provinces reported increases in commercial permits, with most of the gains occurring in Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec.

In the industrial sector, contractors took out $679 million in permits in September, more than 50% above the average value recorded in 2008. This was a 64.4% increase, which more than offset a 16.8% decline in these permits in August. The increase came mostly from maintenance buildings in Ontario and utility buildings in Alberta.

Residential sector: Second consecutive monthly decline for multi-family dwellings
Municipalities issued $1.2 billion in multi-family dwellings in September, down 11.6% from August and the second consecutive monthly decline.

Ontario and British Columbia accounted for most of the decline among the six provinces that reported a decrease in multi-family dwellings.

At the same time, permits for single-family dwellings fell 0.7% to $2.1 billion, a third consecutive decline. Significant decreases occurred in Ontario and British Columbia, which more than offset increases in five provinces and the three territories.

Quebec registered the largest gain and a third increase in four months in the value of single-family dwellings.

The overall number of residential units approved fell for a second consecutive month. Municipalities approved 16,134 new dwellings in September, down 3.5% from August.

The number of multi-family dwelling units approved declined 4.7% to 8,448. The number of single-family dwelling units fell 2.1% to 7,686, a third consecutive decrease.

Published Friday, November 07, 2008 6:18 AM by Sam Kamoutsis

Attachment(s): building-permits-increase.jpg

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