This site is in beta — data may be incomplete and features are still being added.
Council Meeting/Documents/TOWN OF VIEW ROYAL BYLAW NO. 1156
Bylaw

TOWN OF VIEW ROYAL BYLAW NO. 1156

December 2, 2025Pages 86–923 sections

A bylaw to amend the Official Community Plan to align with provincial housing statutes (Bill 44 and Bill 47).

Bylaw No. 11565-year housing need: 842 units20-year housing need: 2,889 unitsSmall-Scale, Multi-Unit Housing (SSMUH)

TOWN OF VIEW ROYAL

Page 86–92

BYLAW NO. 1156

A BYLAW TO AMEND OFFICIAL COMMUNITY PLAN NO. 811, 2011 TO INTRODUCE NEW LAND USE DESIGNATIONS FOR THE SMALL-SCALE, MULTI-UNIT HOUSING (SSMUH) AND HOSPITAL TRANSIT-ORIENTED AREA, AND NEW HOUSING POLICIES TO ALIGN THE OFFICIAL COMMUNITY PLAN WITH THE 5 AND 20-YEAR HOUSING NEED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVINCE OF BC’S BILL 44 – HOUSING STATUTES (RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT) AMENDMENT ACT, 2023 AND BILL 47 – HOUSING STATUTES (TRANSIT-ORIENTED AREAS) AMENDMENT ACT, 2023

The Council of the Town of View Royal, in open meeting assembled, enacts as follows:

  1. This Bylaw may be cited as “Official Community Plan Bylaw, No. 811, 2011, Amendment Bylaw No. 1156, 2025”.

  2. Official Community Plan Bylaw, No. 811, 2011, is amended as follows:

(a) By deleting the map titled “Schedule L Land Use Designations” in its entirety and replacing it with the map in Schedule 1 of this Bylaw.

(b) By deleting the two tables titled “Policy LU1.5 Land Use Designations” in their entirety and replacing them with the following, as Policy LU1.5 Land Use Designations:

Policy LU1.5 Land Use Designations

The OCP establishes the following land use designations, as mapped on Schedule L and listed in the following table.

Land Use, Form & Character* Examples
Small-Scale, Multi-Unit Residential
• Uses include Detached and Attached Dwellings, such as Detached Residential, Duplex, Secondary Suite, Garden Suite, Rowhouse, Townhouse, House-plex, and Apartments.
• Up to 3 storeys
• Up to a maximum of 6 dwelling units
Collage of small-scale multi-unit residential building examples
Collage of small-scale multi-unit residential building examples
Mixed Residential
• Small Lot Detached Houses, Townhouses and Low-Rise Apartments
• Up to 3 Storeys/1.25 FSR Permitted
• 4 Storeys/1.6 FSR Permitted for Apartment Dwellings
Collage of mixed residential building examples including townhouses and low-rise apartments
Collage of mixed residential building examples including townhouses and low-rise apartments
Neighbourhood Mixed Use
• Commercial with Townhouses and Low-Rise Apartments
• Up to 3 Storeys
• 1.5 FSR Permitted
Collage of neighbourhood mixed use buildings featuring commercial ground floors and upper-level residential units
Collage of neighbourhood mixed use buildings featuring commercial ground floors and upper-level residential units
Neighbourhood Centre
• Commercial with Apartments
• Up to 6 storeys
• 3.0 FSR Permitted
Collage of neighbourhood centre buildings with integrated commercial and residential space
Collage of neighbourhood centre buildings with integrated commercial and residential space
Intensive Mixed Use
• Commercial with Townhouses and Low-Rise Apartments
• Up to 4 Storeys
• 2.5 FSR Permitted
Collage of intensive mixed use developments including photos and an architectural sketch
Collage of intensive mixed use developments including photos and an architectural sketch
Commercial
• Retail, Office, Technology and Service Commercial
• Up to 4 Storeys
• 2.5 FSR Permitted
Collage of various commercial building examples
Collage of various commercial building examples
Hospital Transit-Oriented Area
• Uses include Mixed-use with Apartments, Visitor Accommodations, Restaurants, Retail, Office, Institutional (i.e. Hospital), and Civic Use (e.g. daycares, libraries, public gathering and amenity spaces).
• Up to 10 Storeys
• Up to 3.5 FSR permitted
Photo of a modern high-rise residential building
Photo of a modern high-rise residential building

Photo of a multi-story apartment building
Photo of a multi-story apartment building

Rendering of a high-rise tower building
Rendering of a high-rise tower building
Neighbourhood Village
• Uses include Small-scale, Mixed-use buildings, such as Multi-unit Housing and community serving Commercial and Civic uses (schools, offices, restaurants, retail, small grocery store, and community spaces).
• Up to 6 storeys
• Up to 2.5 FSR permitted
Rendering of a multi-story mixed-use building in a village setting
Rendering of a multi-story mixed-use building in a village setting
Park, Open Space, Recreation
• Local and Regional Parks and Trails
• Protected Natural Areas and Open Space
Collage of park and recreation examples including a playground, a beach, and a forested trail
Collage of park and recreation examples including a playground, a beach, and a forested trail
Community Facility
• Government Buildings & Publicly Owned Facilities, including Schools
• Community Centres
Collage of community facility buildings including a community hall and a school building
Collage of community facility buildings including a community hall and a school building
Rural
• Agricultural, Recreation and Large Lot Residential
• Up to 2 Storeys
• 1 unit per 10 hectares
Collage of rural land use examples including a trail sign, a country road, and horses in a field
Collage of rural land use examples including a trail sign, a country road, and horses in a field
Comprehensive Development Areas (CDAs)
Areas with unique Comprehensive Development designations.

* Allowable density is expressed as a Floor Space Ratio (FSR) for mixed use and commercial land uses. Density for all land uses will be specified in the Zoning Bylaw. Additional density may be determined for development applications with increased community amenities such as affordable housing, public art, child care facilities and park dedication.

(c) By adding a new policy, “LU4.14 Mixed Commercial Development” to Section 1: Land Use and Urban Design, as follows:

Policy LU4.14 Mixed Commercial Development Development four-storeys or greater should incorporate commercial or public use space.

(d) By adding the sub-section “Housing Need Requirements” under Section 3: Housing, with the following, to be inserted immediately after “View Royal Today”:

Housing Need Requirements

In 2023, the Local Government Act was amended to require municipalities to prepare an Interim Housing Needs Report (IHNR) by January 1, 2025, and to use the Housing Need Requirement Method to identify 5- and 20-year housing need in their community. Furthermore, municipalities are required to update their Official Community Plan by December 31, 2025, to ensure that the housing requirement identified in the IHNR is viable and permitted in the land use designations of the OCP over the next 20 years.

Housing needs reports help communities better understand their current and future housing needs and identify gaps in housing supply by collecting and analyzing quantitative and qualitative data about local demographics, household incomes, housing supply, as well as other local and regional factors.

The Town’s 5-year housing need is 842 units, and the Town’s 20-year housing need is 2,889 units, to meet housing needs related to extreme core housing need, persons experiencing homelessness, suppressed household formation, anticipated growth, rental vacancy adjustment, and local demand in View Royal.

The form and tenure of housing that the Town chooses to enable and encourage will influence who can and will choose to live in the Town. Supporting more age-friendly, family-friendly, housing may support a more inclusive community and support more families and seniors, while a focus on rental housing may support lower income earners, and provide housing for a diversity of jobs and incomes.

Housing Needs

Housing Need By Type 5-year Housing Need 20-year Housing Need
Extreme Core Housing Need 43.59 174.36
Persons Experiencing Homelessness 28.32 56.65
Suppressed Household Formation 35.56 142.24
Anticipated Growth 621.66 2064.76
Rental Vacancy Rate Adjustment 11.57 46.28
Additional Local Demand 101.11 404.44
TOTAL 842 2889

(e) By deleting the policy “Policy HS1.9 Innovative Approaches” from Section 3: Housing in its entirety, and replacing the policy as follows:

Policy HS1.9 Innovative Approaches Support innovative approaches to creating affordable housing including market rental, cooperatives, shelters for persons experiencing homelessness and housing for those at risk of homelessness, co-housing and other forms of shared ownership, mixed market and non-market projects, and public-private partnerships.

(f) By adding a new policy “HS1.12 Non-Market Units” to Section 3 Housing, as follows:

Page 86–92

Policy HS1.12 Non-Market Units Support the development of non-market housing to serve lower-income populations through collaborative efforts with agencies and non-profits, housing providers, developers, local and regional governments, and Songhees and Esquimalt Nations.

Where possible, development incentives may be negotiated to improve development viability.

READ A FIRST TIME THIS 7^th DAY OF OCTOBER, 2025

READ A SECOND TIME THIS 7^th DAY OF OCTOBER, 2025

PUBLIC HEARING HELD THIS 4^th DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2025

SECOND READING RESCINDED THIS 18^th DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2025

READ A SECOND TIME AS AMENDED THIS 18^th DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2025

PUBLIC HEARING HELD THIS ___ DAY OF ___________, 2025

READ A THIRD TIME THIS ___ DAY OF ___________, 2025

ADOPTED BY COUNCIL, SIGNED BY THE MAYOR AND THE CORPORATE OFFICER AND SEALED WITH THE SEAL OF THE TOWN OF VIEW ROYAL THIS ___ DAY OF ___________, 2025.


MAYOR


CORPORATE OFFICER

SCHEDULE 1

Town of View Royal OCP Land Use Designation Map showing various land use zones and transit-oriented areas
Town of View Royal OCP Land Use Designation Map showing various land use zones and transit-oriented areas
Page 86–92
Extracted from: 2025 12 02 Council Agenda - Agenda - Pdf