Why now
Why North Vancouver stratas need this report now
North Vancouver sits inside the Metro Vancouver Regional District, which means the deadline for Electrical Planning Reports under the Strata Property Act is December 31, 2026 — the earliest of the two BC deadlines (see the Province's official EPR overview). Every strata corporation in North Vancouver with five or more lots is required to have a current EPR on file by that date. The report is referenced on the strata permanent record disclosed to buyers, lenders, and insurers.
The EPR isn't optional and it isn't a quick desktop exercise. BC strata law lays out specific content: an inspection of electrical and mechanical infrastructure, BC Hydro consumption data analysis, peak-demand and spare-capacity calculations under electrical-code standards, future-electrification scenarios, and capacity-freeing recommendations. A complete report gives North Vancouver councils a clear roadmap for budgeting and sequencing the work ahead.
What you receive
What CF Electrical Services delivers in North Vancouver
What North Vancouver councils receive is a complete EPR built to satisfy every requirement in BC strata law: a physical inspection of every electrical room, switchgear, transformer, and panel; a 12-month BC Hydro consumption data analysis; peak demand, spare capacity, and load diversity calculations under electrical-code standards; modelled future-electrification scenarios for EV adoption, heat pumps, and gas-to-electric conversion; and recommendations with the estimated capacity each upgrade would free.
We work with most strata building types — often wood-frame walk-ups and townhouse complexes, and larger buildings too — so North Vancouver stratas with mixed building types can handle everything in one engagement.
Local building stock
About strata buildings in North Vancouver
1960s–1970s three-storey walk-ups and low-rise concrete buildings through Central and Lower Lonsdale — some of the North Shore's older multi-family stock, much of it still on original service — plus new tower clusters in Lower Lonsdale and the emerging Lynn Creek town centre around Seylynn, and townhouse stock through Lynn Valley. North Vancouver spans two strata-heavy municipalities, the City and the District, and buildings in both sit inside the same Metro Vancouver deadline tier.
What North Vancouver councils tend to run into: 1980s wood-frame walk-ups carry their own pattern: aluminum branch wiring in some buildings, undersized panel boards almost universally, and original 100A or 200A services that don't leave room for meaningful EV adoption without an upgrade. Townhouse complexes pose a different challenge — individual unit metering, shared outdoor parking, and questions about whether upgrades happen at the unit panel, the cluster transformer, or the BC Hydro service.
Compliance
What North Vancouver's Electrical Planning Report must include
An Electrical Planning Report is a prescribed document — BC strata law sets out the minimum content every North Vancouver EPR must contain, wherever in the province the strata sits. The report must document the current capacity of the strata's electrical system, list the existing demands on it, estimate peak demand and spare capacity, estimate the capacity needed for anticipated future demands — EV charging, heat pumps, and other electrification — and recommend practicable steps to manage or reduce demand. A document missing any of these does not meet the regulation's content requirements.
The Province also publishes preparation guidance (updated May 2026, developed with BC Hydro, CHOA, and VISOA) that North Vancouver councils can use to hold any provider to a consistent standard: an on-site inspection rather than a desktop review, analysis of the building's BC Hydro consumption data, and electrification scenarios modelled on the building as it actually is. CF Electrical Services prepares every North Vancouver Electrical Planning Report to that guidance, with the December 31, 2026 deadline in view. See our guidance-compliance checklist for councils, or how Electrical Planning Reports work from intake to delivery.