Condo Renovation in West Vancouver
Renovating a condo isn't a smaller house renovation - it's a different rulebook, where your strata, your building's concrete, and its logistics all get a say before the first trade shows up. We manage condo renovations across West Vancouver end to end on one fixed-price quote, with the strata paperwork handled for you.
What a condo renovation involves
Three things make condo work its own discipline. First, approvals: before any work starts, your strata typically requires an alteration agreement - a written scope, proof of insurance, a WorkSafeBC clearance letter, and sign-off on flooring that meets the building's sound-rating bylaws. Second, the building itself: interior partitions can often move, but the concrete slab, columns, and shear walls cannot, and your plumbing ties into risers shared with the units above and below you. Third, logistics: elevator bookings, protected hallways, restricted work hours, and debris that leaves in bags rather than a driveway dumpster.
We act as your strata liaison as much as your contractor. We assemble the alteration application, carry the insurance and documentation stratas ask for, design your renovation around what your plumbing stack and slab realistically allow, and book the elevators and haul-outs so your neighbours stay onside. The owners stay personally involved from the application to the final walkthrough, and you get one fixed-price number that already includes the acoustic underlay, the logistics, and - in older buildings - the asbestos testing that a thin quote leaves out.
This service is for condo and townhouse owners across West Vancouver, and for anyone who's been told 'you can't do that in a condo' and wants a straight answer about what's actually possible in their building.
What's included
Strata liaison
Alteration agreement applications, insurance certificates, WorkSafeBC clearance, and bylaw compliance - prepared and submitted for you.
Kitchen & bathroom renovation
The two rooms that decide a condo budget, designed around your unit's plumbing stack.
Acoustic flooring systems
Hard flooring with underlay that meets your strata's impact sound-rating bylaws, submitted for approval before installation.
Electrical & lighting
New circuits, pot lights, and panel work within the constraints of the building's shared systems.
Plumbing within your stack
Fixture upgrades and relocations planned around shared risers - honest advice about what's worth moving and what isn't.
Millwork & storage
Built-ins and custom storage that earn their keep in a compact footprint.
Building logistics
Elevator and loading-dock bookings, hallway protection, bagged debris removal, and work scheduled to the building's hours.
Asbestos testing
Standard-practice testing before disturbing ceilings, tile adhesive, or drywall compound in pre-1990 buildings.
What you are really signing in a strata alteration agreement
Most stratas approve a renovation on one condition: an alteration and indemnity agreement - and it does far more than grant permission. In the typical form, you accept responsibility for the alteration for as long as it exists: its repair, its maintenance, and any expense it ever causes. You also agree to indemnify the strata for damage or claims that flow from the work. Many versions bind the future too - when you sell, you disclose the agreement and the buyer takes over its obligations.
The financial stake behind that paperwork is insurance-shaped. Strata corporations carry substantial deductibles for water damage, and BC's Strata Property Act lets a strata charge its deductible to an owner when a loss originates in their unit and they are found responsible - a renovation gone wrong is precisely that scenario. A call to your own insurer about deductible coverage before work starts is cheap protection.
The document package your building will ask for
Before council says yes, expect to submit a written scope with drawings, your contractor's commercial general liability insurance certificate - frequently with the strata named as an additional insured - and a WorkSafeBC clearance letter confirming its coverage is in good standing. Many buildings add a business licence, a refundable damage deposit, and, for any hard flooring, product data sheets for the floor and its acoustic underlay.
Flooring earns that extra scrutiny because it is the most regulated finish in strata bylaws. Hard surfaces over a concrete slab usually need an underlay that meets your building's minimum impact-sound rating, approved before installation rather than argued about after. The thresholds differ from building to building, so the bylaws get read before the flooring gets ordered.
Elevators, work hours, and the day the water goes off
Your municipality's noise bylaw sets the outer limits for construction hours, but your strata's bylaws usually sit inside them - later starts, protected weekends - and the tighter rule is the one that governs. That narrower window is one honest reason the same renovation takes longer in a condo than in a house - good schedules are built around it.
Materials and debris move on the building's terms: a booked and padded service elevator, protected hallways, and demolition waste leaving in sealed bags on a schedule instead of sitting in a driveway bin. Many buildings hold a deposit against damage to common areas - one more reason careful protection pays for itself.
Water is the logistics item owners underestimate most. Your unit's plumbing ties into risers shared with the units above and below, and many buildings - older ones especially - have no valve that isolates a single suite. Shutting water for a plumbing change can mean shutting down a whole stack, on a date the building manager sets, with notice posted to your neighbours. The efficient approach groups every plumbing task into as few shut-off windows as possible.
Two approvals, two clocks
Strata approval and municipal permits are separate processes that do not wait for each other, so the efficient path files both early and runs them in parallel. Council-level approval for an in-suite renovation in West Vancouver is commonly a matter of weeks, and the calendar is set by your building's meeting cycle - many councils meet monthly, so an application that lands a week late can wait almost a month on timing alone. Anything touching common property - windows, balconies - can need a general-meeting vote, measured in months.
The Act says approval cannot be unreasonably withheld, but conditions are the normal price of a yes. Some buildings also want their own look at flooring underlay or plumbing before the walls close, separate from any municipal inspection. Knowing the full sign-off list before drywall day keeps the last week of a condo renovation boring - exactly as it should be.
Permits & approvals in West Vancouver
A condo renovation needs two separate sign-offs: your strata's alteration agreement and, for structural, electrical, or plumbing changes, the usual municipal permits on top. Stratas commonly ask for proof of $2 million or more in liability insurance, a WorkSafeBC clearance letter, and approval of any hard-flooring system before installation - and windows and balconies are frequently common property, so changing them is a building decision, not a personal one. In West Vancouver we prepare the strata package and pull the municipal permits as one coordinated process, because work done without approval can be ordered undone at the owner's expense.
Permits run through the District of West Vancouver, and the hillside shows up in the process: steeper lots can require geotechnical input, tree protection is taken seriously, and creek setbacks apply in several neighbourhoods. Renovations that touch the exterior or the site tend to draw more review attention here than a like-for-like interior project. We map out which studies and drawings the District will want before we finalize the scope, so review time is a scheduled phase rather than a stall.
- Steep driveways and limited street parking make material staging and bin placement a real planning item on many lots
- Mid-century flat and low-slope roofs often need drainage and membrane attention when the interior below them is being renovated
- Post-and-beam construction exposes the structure — beautiful, but it limits where wiring and plumbing can hide, which shapes the design
- Rock and slope mean lower-level work or excavation carries geotechnical questions worth answering during design, not construction
What to expect from West Vancouver's permit counter
The District of West Vancouver takes building permit applications digitally only, through its document upload system rather than email, and it is particular about the package: PDFs drawn to scale, and any architect- or engineer-sealed drawings carrying proper digital seals rather than scanned signatures. A portion of the permit fee is payable up front when you apply and is not refunded, so it pays to submit a complete, correct package the first time. Expect West Vancouver to require permits for some work that other municipalities treat as minor; assuming a scope is exempt without confirming is the most common way projects here start on the wrong foot.
Sequencing is the other thing to understand. On many West Vancouver lots a development permit must be approved before the building permit can even be submitted, because creek corridors, hillside conditions, and coach house design guidelines all operate as development permit areas. Homes built before 1990 also need a hazardous-materials survey completed early, with the clearance report kept on site before inspections happen. The upside once you are permitted: as of mid-2026 the District can often complete an inspection the same day if it is requested by 8 a.m., faster than most neighbouring municipalities.
One Fixed Price
What we quote is what you pay. Our proposals are complete and itemized, so the number you sign is the number you settle on.
Communication First
Same-day answers, weekly updates, and one point of contact from the first call to the final walkthrough. You always know where your project stands.
Owner-Operated
The people you meet are the people who plan, manage, and stand behind the work. Full-scope general contracting — not a handyman service.
How your condo renovation runs, start to finish
- 01
Initial Consultation
We meet to discuss your project, review your plans, and give you an honest assessment of scope, timeline, and budget.
- 02
Detailed Estimate
A complimentary site visit followed by complete, transparent pricing. No guesswork, no surprises.
- 03
Design Coordination
Already have plans? We review them. Need design support? We connect you with the right people and manage the process.
- 04
Pre-Construction
We handle permits, finalize schedules, and coordinate trades before a single tool hits the site.
- 05
Build & Execution
Our team performs the work directly. Weekly updates, same-day communication, and daily quality control throughout.
- 06
Handover
Final walkthrough, warranty information, and post-completion support. Built to last, documented clearly.
Condo Renovation in West Vancouver: FAQs
How much does a condo renovation cost in West Vancouver?
Most full condo renovations in West Vancouver cost $70,000 – $120,000, covering a new kitchen, a renovated bathroom, flooring with proper acoustic underlay, and updated electrical. Cosmetic refreshes run $30,000 – $55,000, and high-end projects run $120,000 – $200,000 or more. Per square foot, condos often cost more than houses at the same finish level - the kitchen and bathroom don't shrink just because the unit around them does.
Do I need strata approval to renovate my condo?
Almost always, yes - most stratas require an alteration agreement before work starts, backed by your contractor's insurance, a WorkSafeBC clearance letter, and details of anything touching flooring, plumbing, or walls. Plan for 4 to 6 weeks minimum for a straightforward approval, and 2 to 4 months if your building requires a vote at a general meeting. We prepare and submit the whole package as part of the job.
How long does a condo renovation take?
Most full condo renovations run 8 to 12 weeks on site. Strata approval typically takes 4 to 6 weeks, but we run it in parallel with design and material ordering so it rarely adds to the overall timeline - as long as the application goes in early and complete.
Can I move my kitchen or bathroom in a condo?
Sometimes, but it's more restricted and more expensive than in a house. Your plumbing ties into shared risers, so moving fixtures far from their stack means cutting into or routing around a concrete slab - costly, and sometimes structurally off the table. Keeping fixtures near their existing locations keeps both your budget and your strata approval much simpler, and we'll tell you honestly which moves are worth it.
Another contractor said we can skip the strata paperwork. Why won't you?
Because you'd carry the risk, not them. Under BC's Strata Property Act, work done without approval can end up before the Civil Resolution Tribunal, and your strata can seek to have it undone at your expense. The approval takes a few weeks; unwinding an unauthorized renovation takes far longer and costs far more. We handle the paperwork so it's never a corner worth cutting.
Can we live in the condo during the renovation?
For a cosmetic refresh, usually yes. For a full renovation in a compact unit - kitchen and bathroom both out of service, materials staged in the living space - most owners choose to stay elsewhere for at least part of the build. We'll give you an honest schedule up front so you can decide with real dates, not guesses.
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