Item 5 — How Rowhouses Get Approved Now
Understanding the change from permitted to discretionary use, why it happened, and what both sides say about it
What Happened
Bylaw 21P2024 restructured how rowhouse buildings are classified and approved in the R-CG district. Specifically it:
Deleted the permitted use status for rowhouses entirely
Moved all rowhouses to the discretionary use list
Deleted the design standards that previously separated the two categories
To understand why this matters it helps to understand the difference between a permitted use and a discretionary use in Calgary's planning system.
Permitted Use vs Discretionary Use
What Is a Permitted Use?
Automatically approved if the application meets all the rules in the bylaw
The Development Authority has no discretion to refuse it
No public hearing is required
Neighbours are not notified
The only grounds for refusal are that the application does not comply with written bylaw rules
What Is a Discretionary Use?
Requires a decision by the Development Authority
The Development Authority can approve, approve with conditions, or refuse
Neighbours within a certain distance are notified and can submit written comments
The Development Authority weighs factors including the impact on neighbouring properties
Decisions can be appealed to the Subdivision and Development Appeal Board
What Was the Old System?
The Two-Track Approach
Before Bylaw 21P2024 there was a two-track system for rowhouses in R-CG:
Track 1 — Permitted Use Rowhouses that met all the design standards in subsection 347.3 were permitted uses. They were automatically approved if they complied with those standards. No public hearing. No neighbour notification. No discretion by the Development Authority.
Track 2 — Discretionary Use Rowhouses that did not meet those design standards were discretionary uses. They required a decision by the Development Authority, neighbour notification, and could be refused or approved with conditions.
Why the Two Tracks Existed
The design standards in 347.3 acted as a quality threshold:
Meet the threshold and your rowhouse was automatically approved
Fall short of it and you had to go through a more involved process
Developers had a concrete incentive to design to that standard because it meant a faster and cheaper approval
What Is the New System?
How It Works Now
Under Bylaw 21P2024:
All rowhouses are now discretionary uses regardless of their design
The design standards in subsection 347.3 have been deleted entirely
The Development Authority evaluates all rowhouse applications against the general R-CG rules
What Changed in Practice
There is no longer a design threshold that separates automatically approved rowhouses from those requiring a decision
All rowhouses go through the discretionary process
That process now has fewer specific written standards to apply
Developers no longer have an incentive to meet a specific design threshold to gain automatic approval
Why Did the City Make This Change?
Structural Consistency
The two-track system only made sense when there were design standards creating the threshold between the two tracks. Once the City decided to delete those standards having some rowhouses as permitted and others as discretionary became structurally incoherent. Moving everything to discretionary was the logical result.
Maintaining Some Oversight
By making all rowhouses discretionary rather than permitted the City ensured that every rowhouse application receives at least some level of review by the Development Authority. Supporters argue this actually increases oversight compared to the old system where compliant rowhouses were automatically approved with no Development Authority involvement at all.
Reducing Prescriptive Barriers
The old design standards were detailed and prescriptive. Requiring all rowhouses to meet them added cost and complexity to the development process. Removing them and relying on the Development Authority's discretion instead gives both developers and planners more flexibility to find solutions appropriate to specific sites and contexts.
What Are the Concerns About This Change?
Discretion Without Standards Is Weak Oversight
The central criticism of this change is that moving rowhouses to the discretionary category sounds like stronger oversight but is actually weaker in practice:
The discretionary process gives neighbours the right to comment but not the right to refuse
The Development Authority makes its decision based on the rules in the bylaw
If the bylaw no longer contains specific design standards the Development Authority has limited written grounds to impose design requirements
A developer whose application meets the general R-CG rules has a strong basis for approval even if neighbours object to the design
The Old System Had a Genuine Quality Threshold
Critics argue that the old two-track system created a real incentive for developers to produce better-designed rowhouses:
Meeting the 347.3 standards meant automatic approval, which was faster and cheaper
Developers had a concrete reason to design to that standard
Without that incentive the quality threshold disappears entirely
There is no longer any reward for designing a better rowhouse
Neighbour Notification Is Not the Same as Neighbour Input
The discretionary process notifies neighbours and allows written comments. But those comments are advisory:
The Development Authority is not required to follow them
Notification without meaningful power to influence outcomes gives residents the appearance of participation without its substance
A well-organised neighbourhood objection can still result in approval if the application meets the bylaw rules
Appeal Rights Are Limited
Decisions on discretionary use applications can be appealed to the Subdivision and Development Appeal Board. However:
Appeals are time-consuming and expensive
The appeal board evaluates decisions against the rules in the bylaw
Without specific design standards in the bylaw the grounds for a successful appeal are narrow
Most residents do not have the time, resources, or expertise to mount an effective appeal
The Combination of Changes Is the Problem
Several critics have pointed out that no single change in Bylaw 21P2024 is as concerning in isolation as the combination of changes is together. Moving rowhouses to discretionary use while simultaneously deleting the design standards and broadening the purpose language of R-CG means that:
There are no automatic design requirements rowhouses must meet
The purpose statement gives planners maximum flexibility to approve them
The general R-CG rules provide limited specific grounds for refusal
Neighbour comments are advisory only
Appeals are difficult and expensive
The cumulative effect critics argue is a system that appears to maintain oversight while substantially reducing it in practice.
What Does This Mean in Practical Terms?
For a Homeowner Whose Neighbour's Property Is Being Redeveloped
You will receive a notice that a discretionary use application has been made
You can submit written comments to the Development Authority
The Development Authority will make a decision based on the general R-CG rules
Your comments are advisory and not binding on the Development Authority
If you disagree with the decision you can appeal to the Subdivision and Development Appeal Board
The success of any challenge will depend largely on whether the application complies with the written rules in the bylaw
For a Developer Seeking to Build a Rowhouse
All rowhouse applications now go through the discretionary process
There are no specific design standards that must be met beyond the general R-CG rules
Neighbour comments will be considered but are not binding
A compliant application has a strong basis for approval
There is no longer a faster permitted use pathway available as an incentive for better design
For the Development Authority
Every rowhouse application now requires a decision rather than automatic approval
There is more work involved in processing applications
There are fewer specific written standards to apply when evaluating design quality
More decisions rely on professional judgment rather than written prescriptive rules
Key Facts
What changed: Rowhouses moved from a two-track permitted/discretionary system to a single discretionary track
What was deleted at the same time: The design standards in subsection 347.3 that previously separated permitted from discretionary rowhouses
The City's argument for the change: Structural consistency, maintaining some oversight, and reducing prescriptive barriers to development
Primary concern among critics: Discretionary oversight without specific written design standards provides weaker protection for neighbours than it appears to
Who is notified of a discretionary rowhouse application: Neighbouring property owners within a distance specified in the bylaw
Where decisions can be appealed: The Subdivision and Development Appeal Board
The key practical difference: Neighbours are notified but their comments are advisory only
Read the full bylaw: calgary.ca
See the related proposal: [Link to Item 5 Proposal — insert once created]
Next: Item 6 — Adding Contextual Single Detached Dwelling as a Permitted Use →
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