The Future of Vancouver’s Laneway Housing
Vancouver Laneway Housing: We wanted it and now we have it. So now what? What’s it like living in an alley? Better yet, what’s it like claiming the alley?
I live in an alley. It’s a townhouse where our “backyard” is at alley level as are about 16 of our 40+ units. My design and lobby has been to rid the fences we have between us and the alley and claim the alley as our street. The rest of the building has decided it’s better to maintain large high fences to separate us from the undesirables. So we have a large high fence.
I have some hopes for future occupants of Vancouver’s new laneway houses. I see in the specifications there must be room for greening and “yard space”. The specifications also require most windows face the alley. The alley is the unit’s view. So it seems inevitable that alleys will have to become more palatable.
If your thinking of building a laneway house, here’s a quick rundown:
- In RS-1 and RS-5 single family areas
- On lots 33’ wide and wider, with an open lane, on a double fronting street, or on a corner with a lane dedication
- Generally located in the space where a garage would be permitted, i.e. in the rear 26’ of the lot (and a minimum of 16’ separation between the laneway house and the main house)
- Rental or family only / no strata-titling
- Minimum of one on-site parking space
- Unit size based on lot size to a maximum of 750 sq.ft. (approx. a 500 sq.ft. unit on a 33’ X 122’ lot)
- 1 and 1 ½ storey configurations, with guidelines to address upper storey massing, privacy, and shadowing
- Enabling homeowners to add a laneway house while retaining their existing main house; with or without a secondary suite in the main house (a laneway house could also be built with a new house)


Since the approval, I heard there are still issues to do with BC Hydro access/capacity and/or fire department access. Do you have news if that has been solved?