
Developers may soon be able to build higher under Charlottetown's new official plan
CBC
Developers in Charlottetown may soon be able to build taller buildings where they haven’t before after the province signed off on the city’s official plan.
The plan received approval from P.E.I. Land and Environment Minister Darlene Compton on March 13. It was last updated in 1999.
The new official plan is aimed, in part, at increasing housing density. It allows buildings of up to 10 storeys along high-traffic streets and intersections.
The next step will be for city council to come up with a new zoning and development bylaw to serve as the framework for what can be built where. The public will have a chance to provide feedback on any new bylaw, city officials said.
"The nodes and the corridors have been identified as the areas where you're close to transit, you're close to amenities," said Deputy Mayor Alanna Jankov, who's chair of Charlottetown's planning and heritage committee.
"Those are the areas where the consultants and the staff work with us on identifying the areas where we could potentially go with the higher density."
The official plan also suggets city residents to build en suites in their homes, and allows for four-unit buildings in certain areas.
Jankov said those areas will be defined in more detail under the new zoning and development bylaw.
"What that really is, is identifying areas within the city where you could have additional units on a residential property," she said. "Not every property will fit four units."
The plan also includes protections for the 500-lot area, a section of the city’s downtown with many heritage homes. Any proposed housing there would have to go through a design review process, and include storm surge protections.
Charlottetown received about 1,500 submissions on the official plan, which council adopted and sent to the province for approval last summer.
In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for the Department of Land and Environment said each official plan for municipalities on the Island is "unique and reflects the specific context, priorities, and needs of the municipality and its residents."
"Our planners review the official plan to ensure that municipalities have gone through the appropriate processes, including public consultation, and that the plan aligns with regulations and provincial interests before it reaches the minister's desk for review and decision," the statement reads, noting that Compton only took on the portfolio after a cabinet shuffle in February.
"[Compton] was interested in learning how the city planned to balance the need for high-density housing with the preservation of downtown's historic value. She ultimately signed off on the plan late last week. She eagerly awaits the associated bylaws related to high-density housing."

B.C. Sports Hall of Fame relocates hundreds of thousands of artifacts to make way for FIFA World Cup
From century-old provincial senior men's baseball jerseys to a keeper Lombardi Trophy won by a Kamloops-born Super Bowl-winning punter, the vast majority of B.C.'s premier sports artifacts won't be on display when the FIFA World Cup comes to town.












