Why now
Why Vancouver stratas need this report now
Under the Strata Property Act, every strata corporation in Vancouver with five or more lots must have a current Depreciation Report. Stratas in the Metro Vancouver Regional District faced a deadline of July 1, 2026 if they had never commissioned one or if the most recent report was issued before December 31, 2020 — and that deadline has now passed. The duty does not lapse when the date does: a strata without a current report should commission one promptly, because the report's absence is disclosed to buyers and lenders until it is on file. The report runs on a five-year renewal cycle thereafter.
The Depreciation Report's job is to project the cost of repairing and replacing common property and assets over a 30-year horizon — the foundation of contingency reserve fund planning. A report that under-estimates costs leaves councils exposed to surprise special levies. A report that over-estimates wastes owners' contributions. Either way, Vancouver stratas need a report grounded in real component condition and accurate replacement cost data — not a desktop spreadsheet.
What you receive
What CF Electrical Services delivers in Vancouver
Our Depreciation Reports cover the full content set required by BC strata law: an inventory of common property components, condition assessment, useful-life projections, replacement cost estimates over a 30-year horizon, and three statutory funding scenarios — fully funded, baseline, and threshold. Vancouver councils receive a working document, not just a deliverable: clear funding recommendations, owner-friendly summary tables, and a presentation walk-through before adoption.
Every BC strata building type is covered under BC strata law — concrete highrises and mid-rises through wood-frame walk-ups and townhouse complexes. The Depreciation Report is signed and sealed by the credential the regulation calls for: a Professional Engineer (P.Eng), Professional Licensee Engineering (P.L.Eng.), Applied Science Technologist (AScT), or Certified Technician, whether the building is Part 3 (complex) or Part 9 (simple). Vancouver stratas don't need to worry about whether their building type is in scope. It is.
Local building stock
About strata buildings in Vancouver
1960s–1980s concrete highrises through the West End — one of Canada's densest residential neighbourhoods — and Coal Harbour, 1990s–2010s mixed-use podium towers in the downtown core, 1970s–1980s low-rise wood-frame walk-ups across East Vancouver and Kitsilano, plus recent mass-timber and concrete builds in Olympic Village and Mount Pleasant. One wrinkle unique to this city: electrical work inside Vancouver is permitted and inspected by the City under its own Electrical By-law rather than by Technical Safety BC, so upgrade recommendations here must account for the City's own permit process.
What that means for Depreciation Reports in Vancouver: Older concrete buildings carry component-replacement risk that doesn't show up until later — building envelope, mechanical rooms, original elevators, and electrical service upgrades that get triggered by EPR findings. Realistic cost projections matter. 1980s wood-frame stratas tend to face replacement-cost surprises around roofing, exterior cladding, balcony membranes, and electrical service upgrades. The Depreciation Report is the financial backstop.