cember, up 2.4% from November and 32.6% higher than in December 2008.
The increase in the value of permits in December was entirely due to
the non-residential sector. Conversely, the upward trend in the total
value of construction intentions in 2009 was largely due to the
residential sector.
In the non-residential sector, municipalities issued permits
worth $2.3 billion, 6.8% more than in November and 13.3% more than in
December 2008. The December 2009 increase stems primarily from an
increase in the commercial components in Alberta and Ontario.
In the residential sector, the value of permits remained steady
at $3.9 billion. Declines in Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba were offset
by a gain in British Columbia. In recent months, the value of permits
has started to approach the peak reached before the economic slowdown.
In December, the total value of construction intentions rose in seven provinces, led by Alberta and British Columbia.
Non-residential sector: The commercial component is up
The value of commercial building permits increased for the third
straight month, advancing 29.2% to $1.5 billion in December. The
consecutive gains raised the level of construction intentions for
commercial buildings to their highest point in 2009. The December
increase was largely due to construction intentions for office
buildings in Ontario and Alberta.
In the institutional component, municipalities issued permits
worth $514 million in December, down 21.9%. It was the second
consecutive decline. Alberta and Ontario posted decreases as a result
of a decline in the value of building permits for educational
institutions.
After reaching their peak for the year in October 2009, construction
intentions in the industrial component were down in December for the
second straight month. Intentions declined 19.0% to $240 million, after
falling 57.7% in November. Ontario led the seven provinces that posted
lower construction intentions.
Residential sector: Lower intentions for single-family permits
After nine consecutive monthly increases, the value of building
permits for single-family dwellings declined 1.3% to $2.5 billion. The
declines in Alberta, Ontario and Saskatchewan more than offset the
gains recorded in the other seven provinces. British Columbia and Nova
Scotia posted the largest advances in single-family construction
intentions.
Municipalities issued $1.3 billion worth of permits for multi-family
dwellings in December, up 2.1% from November. The increase resulted
from higher construction intentions in four provinces, including
British Columbia and Alberta.
At the national level, municipalities approved the construction
of 18,321 new dwellings in December, up 2.4%. The gain was attributable
to multi-family dwellings, which rose 5.5% to 9,406 units. The number
of single-family dwellings approved declined 0.6% to 8,915 units.
Alberta and British Columbia post the largest gains
The value of building permits was up in seven provinces.
The most significant increases were in Alberta and British Columbia.
In Alberta, the advance in the value of permits was attributable to the
commercial component and to multi-family dwellings. British Columbia's
gain was due to the residential sector.
Manitoba posted the largest drop in December, as a result of
declines in both the non-residential and residential sectors. Nova
Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador posted declines resulting from
their non-residential sectors.
Value of permits down in more than half of all metropolitan areas
The total value of permits fell in 19 of the 34 census metropolitan areas.
The largest declines were in Edmonton and Ottawa. In Edmonton, the
increase in multi-family dwellings did not offset declines in all other
components. Similarly, Ottawa recorded a decline in every component
except permits for commercial buildings.
In contrast, the largest gains were in Calgary, Toronto, Greater
Sudbury and Vancouver. In Calgary and Toronto, the increase was due to
non-residential building permits and multi-family dwellings. In Greater
Sudbury, it was driven by fee increases taking effect in 2010, which
raised the number and the value of permits for both the residential and
non-residential sectors. In Vancouver, the increase came from the
residential sector.
Note to readers
Unless otherwise stated, this release presents seasonally adjusted
data, which eases comparisons by removing the effects of seasonal
variations.
Preliminary data are provided for the current reference month.
Revised data, based on late responses, are updated for the previous
month.
The Building Permits Survey covers 2,400 municipalities
representing 95% of the population. It provides an early indication of
building activity.
The communities representing the other 5% of the population are very
small, and their levels of building activity have little impact on the
total.
The value of planned construction activities shown in this release
excludes engineering projects (e.g., waterworks, sewers or culverts)
and land.
For the purpose of this release, the census metropolitan area of
Ottawa–Gatineau (Ontario/Quebec) is divided into two areas: Gatineau
part and Ottawa part.