Municipalities issued building permits worth $6.0 billion in May,
a 10.8% decline from April. The decline follows two consecutive monthly
increases. The value of permits in May was 13.9% higher than the level
in May 2009.
Decreases occurred in both the residential and non-residential
sectors. The value of residential permits fell 5.3% to $3.7 billion due
to a decline in the single-family component.
After three months of increases, the value of non-residential permits
fell 18.3% to $2.3 billion. The value of commercial and institutional
permits decreased, while the value of industrial permits rose to its
highest level since September 2008.
The value of permits increased in three provinces: British Columbia,
Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island.
Non-residential sector: Declines in the commercial and institutional
components
In the commercial component, the value of permits fell 35.2%
to $988 million in May following a 30.7% increase in April. Lower
construction intentions were spread across a wide variety of buildings,
such as office buildings, recreational, hotels and warehouses.
Commercial building intentions fell in eight provinces.
The value of permits in the institutional component fell 21.6%
to $690 million, halting three consecutive monthly increases. Lower
construction intentions in educational, medical buildings and welfare
homes contributed to this decline.
In the industrial component, the value of permits rose 47.1%
to $644 million, the fifth monthly increase in a row. The gains came
mostly from utility buildings in Ontario and manufacturing buildings in
Quebec. Industrial construction intentions rose in eight provinces.
Residential sector: Intentions down for single-family permits
A marked decline in the value of permits for single dwellings brought
down intentions in the residential sector in May.
Municipalities issued $2.3 billion worth of permits for single-family
dwellings in May, down 9.2% from April. This was the second consecutive
monthly decline following gains in the first three months of 2010.
May's decrease was due to lower construction intentions in seven
provinces.
Following an 11.4% decline in April, the value of permits for
multi-family dwellings increased 2.5% to $1.3 billion in May. This
increase was mainly the result of higher construction intentions in
Quebec, British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
Nationally, municipalities approved 17,124 new dwellings in May,
down 4.4% from April. The decline was largely attribuable to
single-family dwellings, which fell 6.5% to 8,168 units. The number of
multi-family units approved declined 2.4% to 8,956.
Largest declines in Alberta, Ontario and Nova Scotia
The value of building permits fell in seven provinces in May.
The largest decreases occurred in Alberta, Ontario and Nova Scotia.
In all three provinces, the decline was the result of lower intentions
in the non-residential sector, which had posted strong gains in April.
British Columbia and Saskatchewan posted the largest gains in May,
mainly the result of increases in institutional and multi-family
permits. In Prince Edward Island, the increase came from the residential
sector and the institutional component in the non-residential sector.
Value of permits down in more than half of the census metropolitan
areas
The total value of permits fell in 18 of the 34 census metropolitan
areas in May.
The largest declines were in Edmonton, Calgary and Windsor. In
Edmonton, the decrease came mainly from the commercial component
following a large increase in April. Calgary posted a decrease mainly in
the single-family and the commercial component. In Windsor, the decline
was attributable to all components in the non-residential sector.
The largest gains occurred in Montréal, Vancouver and St.
Catharines–Niagara. In Montréal, the increase came mostly from
multi-family and industrial permits. In Vancouver and St.
Catharines–Niagara, the increase was due mainly to higher construction
intentions in the non-residential institutional component.
Available on CANSIM: tables