Canadian residential construction investment totaled C$32.7 billion (US$24.6 billion) in the third quarter, up 2.8 percent from the same quarter in 2015, according to Statistics Canada. This was the 11th consecutive year-over-year quarterly increase.
Higher spending on single-family dwellings, up 6.2 percent to C$7.5 billion (US$5.6 billion), and apartment buildings, up 6.7 percent to C$5 billion (US$3.8 billion), accounted for most of the growth at the national level. Investment in renovation work, spending on row house construction and acquisition costs also contributed to the quarterly advance.
Investment in residential construction increased in five provinces in the third quarter, led by Ontario and British Columbia, with Quebec a distant third.
In Ontario, year-over-year spending increased for the 10th consecutive quarter, up 10.1 percent to C$13.2 billion (US$9.9 billion) in the third quarter. The gain was mainly attributable to higher investment in single-family dwellings and apartment building construction.
In British Columbia, residential construction investment grew 18.3 percent compared with the third quarter of 2015 to C$5.4 billion (US$4.1 billion) in the third quarter, surpassing the C$5-billion (US$3.8 billion) mark for the first time. The advance was largely the result of increased spending on apartment buildings and single-family dwellings.
In Quebec, investment totaled C$6.5 billion (US$4.9 billion) in the third quarter, up 2.7 percent from the same quarter of the previous year. This was the third consecutive year-over-year quarterly gain. The increase came mainly from higher spending on renovation work and, to a lesser degree, acquisition costs and the construction of row houses and single-family dwellings.
In contrast, the largest decline was reported in Alberta, followed distantly by Nova Scotia.
In Alberta, spending on residential construction decreased year over year for the fifth consecutive quarter, down 22.4 percent to C$4 billion (US$3 billion) in the third quarter. The decline was largely attributable to lower investment in single-family dwellings, apartment buildings, renovations and acquisition costs.
Total investment in Nova Scotia declined 18 percent from the third quarter of the previous year to C$534 million (US$401.7 million) in the third quarter. This marked the second consecutive quarterly drop. The decrease was mainly the result of lower spending on renovation work and apartment buildings.