Home Additions in North Vancouver
An addition is the one renovation that makes your home genuinely bigger - new foundation, new framing, new roof, all tied into the house you already own in North Vancouver. We manage additions from the first drawing to occupancy, with a fixed-price quote set before construction starts, not revised during it.
What a home addition involves
Additions come in a few shapes: a ground-level extension off the back or side, a bump-out that enlarges one room, a full second storey, or converting existing space like an attic or garage into living area. What separates an addition from an interior renovation is that most of the square footage is new construction - excavation, foundation, framing, envelope, and a full tie-in to your home's existing electrical, plumbing, and heating systems. That's also why design comes first: additions need engineer-stamped drawings before a permit can be issued, so the design and engineering phase isn't optional overhead - it's the front half of the project.
We manage that whole sequence as your general contractor and project manager. We coordinate the architect or designer and the structural engineer, handle the permit applications in the right order, and get the new structure weather-tight quickly so your existing home stays protected. You work with one point of contact, the owners are on site through the build, and the fixed-price scope is set once the drawings are done - covering the tie-in work and site realities, not just the framing.
Additions suit families who love their lot, their street, and their neighbourhood but have outgrown the house on it. The honest comparison is usually against moving - and once you count transaction costs and what you'd give up, building the space you're missing is often the stronger answer. We'll help you price that comparison plainly.
What's included
Design & engineering
Architect, designer, and structural engineer coordinated to produce the stamped drawings an addition always requires.
Excavation & foundation
Site prep, excavation, and new footings and foundation walls matched to your lot's conditions.
Framing & envelope
Structure, roofing, windows, and exterior finishing - made weather-tight quickly to protect the existing house.
Systems tie-in
Electrical, plumbing, and heating extended from your existing home into the new space, with panel and capacity checks up front.
Structural upgrades
Reinforcing the existing structure where a second storey or opened wall demands it.
Interior finishing
Drywall, flooring, trim, and paint that make the new space read as part of the original home, not an add-on.
Permits & inspections
Building and trade permits sequenced correctly, with inspections scheduled so the build never stalls waiting on an approval.
Zoning decides your addition before the building code does
Before a plans examiner ever opens your drawings, three zoning numbers have already decided what your addition can be: setbacks, height, and floor-space ratio. Setbacks fix how close new construction can sit to your property lines, height limits decide whether a second storey works at all, and floor-space ratio caps the total floor area your lot can carry. Every municipality writes its own numbers - the same addition can be simple on one North Vancouver street and impossible two blocks away.
Additions can also involve two approvals that homeowners blur together. A building permit checks the construction against the BC Building Code; a development permit is about land use - siting, massing, design - and applies when a project pushes past what zoning allows outright, or sits in a designated heritage, environmental, or steep-slope area. Expect a survey early either way: municipalities commonly want a BC land surveyor's certificate proving where the house actually sits, because a fence line is not a property line.
The warranty question almost nobody asks about additions
At what point does an addition stop being a renovation and legally become a new home? BC's Homeowner Protection Act draws that line with the 75 percent rule: if the new construction ends up at least three times the size of the original structure remaining above the foundation - meaning three quarters or more of the finished home is new - the project counts as a substantially reconstructed home. It must then be built by a licensed residential builder carrying 2-5-10 home warranty insurance, exactly like a brand-new house.
A large addition paired with a gut renovation can cross that line without anyone noticing until permit time. And if the project creates a new self-contained unit - turning a house into a duplex, say - the new unit needs new-home registration regardless of percentages. As of mid-2026 these rules sit with BC Housing, and for borderline projects we confirm the answer before drawings are commissioned, not after.
Trees, slopes, and soil get a vote on your footprint
Most municipalities in the region protect trees on private property above a size threshold, and that protection follows the tree, not your plans. Removing a protected tree needs a permit, an arborist's report is often part of the application, and retained trees - including a neighbour's near the property line - get protection zones during construction. A healthy protected tree in the wrong spot can genuinely shift where an addition can go.
Slopes and soil can add a requirement of their own. Building officials in BC can require a geotechnical report from a qualified engineer wherever land may be subject to slipping, erosion, or flooding - and that explicitly includes additions to existing homes. If your lot in North Vancouver backs onto a ravine, sits on fill, or slopes noticeably, expect a geotechnical assessment to shape how close to the slope you can build.
Where brand-new construction meets a decades-old house
The new space has to meet today's energy standards, not the ones your house was built to. Under the BC Energy Step Code, newly built floor area is generally expected to meet current insulation and window performance requirements even when the existing house predates them by decades - though how municipalities apply this to additions varies, and the rules are still evolving as of mid-2026. Specified early, it is a materials decision rather than a redesign.
Then there is the marriage of old and new. A fresh foundation settles differently than one that has carried a house for sixty years, floor levels rarely align as neatly as drawings suggest, and a second storey depends on what the original walls and footings can actually carry. That is why the tie-in deserves as much engineering attention as the new structure - and why we price it into the scope rather than hoping.
Permits & approvals in North Vancouver
An addition always requires a building permit and engineer-stamped structural drawings, and depending on your lot's zoning and setbacks in North Vancouver, development review may apply before the building permit can be issued. Plumbing and electrical permits cover the new services, with inspections staged through the build. Because additions move through a fuller review than interior renovations, we start the permit process early and in the correct sequence - it's the part of the timeline most homeowners underestimate.
Permits come from either the City of North Vancouver or the District of North Vancouver depending on your address — two separate authorities with separate applications, and it's easy to look up the wrong one. District properties near creeks or on steeper ground can trigger environmental or geotechnical review before a building permit is issued, which is worth knowing before you set a start date. We confirm the jurisdiction, assemble the right package for it, and sequence the approvals so review time overlaps with design and ordering rather than delaying them.
- Creek and watercourse setbacks are common on District lots — Lynn Creek, Mosquito Creek, and their tributaries thread through many neighbourhoods
- Sloped driveways and tight hillside access affect deliveries, bins, and concrete work — we plan the logistics during the estimate, not mid-project
- 1970s–80s wood-frame condos around Lonsdale may have envelope or remediation history worth reviewing before interior investment
- Homes from the 60s and 70s often carry aluminum branch wiring or original panels that get addressed during any major renovation
Two city halls, two rulebooks: how North Vancouver permits really run
Once you know whether your address falls under the City of North Vancouver or the District of North Vancouver, the next question is how each office actually works. Both now take building permit applications electronically only; the City moved to digital-only submissions back in 2021, and as of mid-2026 it is also one of the early municipalities accepting certain applications through the Province's new Building Permit Hub. The District runs its own online system, and its public permit records reach back to 1992, which lets you check what was ever legally done to a house before you buy or budget around it.
The review path itself is conventional in both jurisdictions: plan review, then staged inspections, with structural work requiring engineer-sealed drawings. What is distinct here is what gets added on top. District properties near creeks or on steeper ground can need environmental or geotechnical studies before a permit is issued, and homes built before 1990 need a hazardous-materials survey lined up for any demolition-stage work. The practical move is to identify every added study during design, so review time runs in parallel with planning instead of after it.
One Fixed Price
What we quote is what you pay. Our proposals are complete and itemized, so the number you sign is the number you settle on.
Communication First
Same-day answers, weekly updates, and one point of contact from the first call to the final walkthrough. You always know where your project stands.
Owner-Operated
The people you meet are the people who plan, manage, and stand behind the work. Full-scope general contracting — not a handyman service.
How your home addition runs, start to finish
- 01
Initial Consultation
We meet to discuss your project, review your plans, and give you an honest assessment of scope, timeline, and budget.
- 02
Detailed Estimate
A complimentary site visit followed by complete, transparent pricing. No guesswork, no surprises.
- 03
Design Coordination
Already have plans? We review them. Need design support? We connect you with the right people and manage the process.
- 04
Pre-Construction
We handle permits, finalize schedules, and coordinate trades before a single tool hits the site.
- 05
Build & Execution
Our team performs the work directly. Weekly updates, same-day communication, and daily quality control throughout.
- 06
Handover
Final walkthrough, warranty information, and post-completion support. Built to last, documented clearly.
Home Additions in North Vancouver: FAQs
How much does a home addition cost in North Vancouver?
Ground-level additions in North Vancouver typically run $170 – $280 per square foot, with second-storey and design-build additions at $280 per square foot and up. Converting existing space like an attic or garage costs less - roughly $90 – $170 per square foot - because the structure already exists. Your real number comes from a fixed-price quote built on your drawings, which is exactly the process we run.
How long does a home addition take?
Plan on 3 to 6 months of construction, plus several months before that for design, engineering, and permit review - additions move through a fuller review process than interior renovations. Starting the planning 6 to 12 months ahead of your ideal break-ground date is realistic, not cautious.
Do I need an architect for an addition?
You need stamped drawings - additions change your home's structure, so a licensed structural engineer is always involved, and larger projects need a registered architect or building designer as well. We coordinate that team for you, and we'd rather you spend on design once than on mid-build corrections repeatedly.
Can we live at home while the addition is built?
Usually, yes - and more comfortably than during an interior renovation. Most of the work happens outside your existing walls until the tie-in stage, so daily life carries on. We plan the few genuinely disruptive windows - the wall opening, the systems connections - in advance and tell you exactly when they're coming.
Wouldn't it be cheaper to just move to a bigger house?
Sometimes - and it's worth running both numbers honestly before deciding, which we're glad to help with. Selling and buying carries property transfer tax, realtor fees, and moving costs, and you give up the lot, street, and school catchment you chose in the first place. An addition costs real money too; the point is to compare two complete numbers, not a guess against a hope.
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