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Blanket Rezoning: What Actually Changed

Building permit data from established neighborhoods, before and after. The baseline ahead of the March 23 public hearing.

What Happened in May 2024

Most residential lots in Calgary were zoned R-C1 — single-family only. If you wanted to add a basement suite, build a laneway home, or convert to a duplex, you needed a rezoning application. That meant a public hearing, neighbor notification, and months of process through Council or the Planning Commission.

On May 14, 2024, Council passed a city-wide Land Use Bylaw change. Every R-C1 lot became R-CG, which allows secondary suites, laneway homes, duplexes, rowhouses, and townhouses as-of-right. No more individual rezoning applications. Just pull a building permit.

On March 23, 2026, Council holds a public hearing on whether to repeal that change. Before that debate, here's what the building permit data actually shows.

The Big Picture

I pulled every new construction permit from the City of Calgary's open data, split into two equal 18-month periods: before (November 2022 through April 2024) and after (May 2024 through October 2025).

Secondary suites went from 39.2 to 72.1 per month (+84%). ADUs from 7.9 to 15.3 per month (+94%). Single family essentially flat.

Monthly Average New Permits by Dwelling Type

Monthly average new permits. 18 months in each period.

Nobody stopped building single-family homes. Apartment permits are down, but that's project timing — a single tower permit can swing a whole month.

The Signal: Established Neighborhoods

The city-wide numbers mix two very different things: established neighborhoods where blanket rezoning actually changed what you could build, and new suburbs where developers had already planned density regardless of the policy.

Strip out the new developments and look only at pre-2000 and inner-city neighborhoods. This is where R-C1 lots became R-CG — where the policy friction was actually removed. The chart below tracks density permits — secondary suites, laneway homes (ADUs), duplexes, and townhouses — the housing types that blanket rezoning made easier to build.

Density Permits in Established Neighborhoods

Density permits (suites, ADUs, duplexes, townhouses) in pre-2000 and inner-city neighborhoods. Dashed lines show period averages.

Density permits in established neighborhoods went from roughly 50 per month to around 85–90 — the dashed lines show the period averages. The trend is gradual, not a cliff, but the level shift after May 2024 is clear.

The Context: Total Construction

Now zoom out to all density construction across the city — established neighborhoods and new suburbs combined. The indigo band appearing after May 2024 is the estimated blanket rezoning effect: established neighborhood permits above their pre-rezoning baseline.

Blanket Rezoning Effect vs. Total Density Construction

Total density permits across all areas. The indigo band shows established neighborhood permits above the pre-rezoning baseline (52/month).

The established-neighborhood increase is real, but look at the proportion. Most density construction happens in developing areas regardless of zoning policy — driven by developer project timelines, not Council votes. That April 2024 spike? A developer batch-filing duplex permits in Wolf Willow.

The honest read: blanket rezoning added roughly 35 extra density permits per month in established neighborhoods — about 13% of total density construction. That's roughly 630 additional housing units over 18 months. Whether that's worth the political fight is the question Council will take up on March 23.

Where It's Happening

The map below shows established neighborhoods colored by how many density permits they gained after blanket rezoning. Darker red means more new permits. Developing areas and communities with no increase are shown in gray. Hover for details, or see full community profiles.

Density Permit Changes by Community

Community Detail

CommunityPre (permits)Post (permits)Change
Bowness71123+73%
Mount Pleasant3173+135%
Glenbrook1444+214%
Albert Park/Radisson Heights635+483%
Richmond1842+133%
Forest Lawn932+256%
Banff Trail3052+73%
Parkdale1332+146%
Glendale926+189%
Renfrew2945+55%
Montgomery4152+27%
West Hillhurst2232+45%
Rundle515+200%
North Glenmore Park1019+90%
Inglewood1018+80%
Whitehorn612+100%
Huntington Hills713+86%
Glamorgan611+83%
Bridgeland/Riverside1621+31%
Capitol Hill4651+11%
Brentwood611+83%
Ogden1015+50%
South Calgary2226+18%
Greenwood/Greenbriar1822+22%
Thorncliffe912+33%
Spruce Cliff912+33%
Hillhurst1214+17%
Tuxedo Park2830+7%
Mayland Heights57+40%
Martindale911+22%
Beddington Heights810+25%
Windsor Park770%
Silver Springs550%
Pineridge98-11%
Winston Heights/Mountview2625-4%
Ramsay85-38%
Parkhill52-60%
Crescent Heights1310-23%
Killarney/Glengarry7875-4%
Altadore3026-13%
Highland Park3026-13%
Rosscarrock2115-29%
Rutland Park70-100%
Shaganappi3427-21%

Density permits totaled over 18-month periods (Nov 2022–Apr 2024 vs May 2024–Oct 2025). Established neighborhoods only. Communities with fewer than 5 pre-period permits excluded.

What Comes Next

March 23, 2026: public hearing on blanket rezoning repeal. Separately, $129 million in federal Housing Accelerator Fund installments are paused pending rezoning clarity, with the ~$64 million third installment due by March 31. CMHC has warned that repealing blanket rezoning without an alternative strategy could jeopardize the remaining funds.

Meanwhile, 20,859 people moved to Calgary from other provinces in 2024 alone. The baseline is now set. Whatever Council decides, we'll track what happens to these numbers after the vote.

About this data

Source: City of Calgary building permits data via Open Data Portal. New construction permits only, not improvements or demolitions.

Periods: Pre (November 2022 – April 2024) and Post (May 2024 – October 2025), 18 months each. September 2022 is missing from the database. November–December 2025 use a different property type naming format, so we cut at October 2025. The pre-period was already trending up for some categories — blanket rezoning isn't the only factor (population growth, housing crisis awareness, interest rates all play a role).

"Established neighborhoods" = communities the City of Calgary classifies as 1950s, 1960s/70s, 1980s/90s, Inner City, or Centre City. "Developing areas" = 2000s, 2010s, 2020s, and Building Out. This classification comes from the City's community boundaries dataset.

"Additional Dwelling" in the city data maps to laneway homes and garage suites (ADUs). "Two Family" maps to duplexes. Community table shows only density types and excludes communities with fewer than 5 pre-period permits.