Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)

The use of Development Cost Levies is a relatively new mechanism by which municipalities may charge development a share of costly new infrastructure. Their use is an improvement upon the previous ad-hoc system of land use contracts. The equity of Development Cost Levies is widely disputed, but th...

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Main Author: Tully, Barbara
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4500
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-45002018-01-05T17:32:03Z Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver) Tully, Barbara Parks -- Taxation -- British Columbia -- Vancouver The use of Development Cost Levies is a relatively new mechanism by which municipalities may charge development a share of costly new infrastructure. Their use is an improvement upon the previous ad-hoc system of land use contracts. The equity of Development Cost Levies is widely disputed, but this thesis finds that their use is fair and justifiable when judged in the context of the unprecedented growth of the Lower Mainland. The paper finds that Development Cost Levies are generally passed back to the landowners, unless the market is inelastic, in which case they are passed forward to the purchaser. The thesis specifically examines Development Cost Levies for parkland acquisition in mixed-use neighbourhoods. Park acquisition levies in mixed-use neighbourhoods are currently charged only to residential development in B.C. municipalities. This thesis examines whether the usage of parks by employees warrants commercial development paying a share of the parkland acquisition levies in mixed use neighbourhoods. In order to determine if commercial development should pay a portion of the cost of park acquisition, a park survey was conducted in an existing mixed-use area to determine employee usage of parkspace. A literature search revealed no other park surveys which examined employee and resident usage of parkspace in mixed-use neighbourhoods. The survey found that employees generated 83% of the usage of parkspace in two mixed-use area neighbourhood parks. The findings of the survey indicate that commercial development should be paying a proportional share of development cost charges for parkland acquisition in mixed-use neighbourhoods. This information was then applied to a recently upzoned area of the City of Vancouver to illustrate a sample calculation of Development Cost Levies. Applied Science, Faculty of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of Graduate 2009-02-12 2009-02-12 1996 1996-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4500 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 5250389 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Parks -- Taxation -- British Columbia -- Vancouver
spellingShingle Parks -- Taxation -- British Columbia -- Vancouver
Tully, Barbara
Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
description The use of Development Cost Levies is a relatively new mechanism by which municipalities may charge development a share of costly new infrastructure. Their use is an improvement upon the previous ad-hoc system of land use contracts. The equity of Development Cost Levies is widely disputed, but this thesis finds that their use is fair and justifiable when judged in the context of the unprecedented growth of the Lower Mainland. The paper finds that Development Cost Levies are generally passed back to the landowners, unless the market is inelastic, in which case they are passed forward to the purchaser. The thesis specifically examines Development Cost Levies for parkland acquisition in mixed-use neighbourhoods. Park acquisition levies in mixed-use neighbourhoods are currently charged only to residential development in B.C. municipalities. This thesis examines whether the usage of parks by employees warrants commercial development paying a share of the parkland acquisition levies in mixed use neighbourhoods. In order to determine if commercial development should pay a portion of the cost of park acquisition, a park survey was conducted in an existing mixed-use area to determine employee usage of parkspace. A literature search revealed no other park surveys which examined employee and resident usage of parkspace in mixed-use neighbourhoods. The survey found that employees generated 83% of the usage of parkspace in two mixed-use area neighbourhood parks. The findings of the survey indicate that commercial development should be paying a proportional share of development cost charges for parkland acquisition in mixed-use neighbourhoods. This information was then applied to a recently upzoned area of the City of Vancouver to illustrate a sample calculation of Development Cost Levies. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate
author Tully, Barbara
author_facet Tully, Barbara
author_sort Tully, Barbara
title Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
title_short Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
title_full Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
title_fullStr Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
title_full_unstemmed Development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of Vancouver)
title_sort development cost levies : an analysis of park levies on commercial floorspace (in the city of vancouver)
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4500
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