Building Faster, Smarter

2025 Fall

British Columbia is facing one of the most pressing housing affordability challenges in its history. Families across our province are struggling to find homes they can afford, while demand continues to far outpace supply. Is prefabricated and modular construction the answer? It will certainly play a major role and FVREB’s latest report, Building Faster Smarter: Unlocking BC’s Prefabricated Housing Potential, lays out practical and innovative ways the sector can deliver more homes quickly, sustainably, and at prices within reach. Modular BC, a leading non-profit in the industry, has estimated that factory-made housing accounts for approximately 4.5% of new homes being built in the province annually. Their goal is to increase modular and prefabricated builds to 25% in the next five years through stakeholder engagement and training. And it would seem the market is ready: according to the research firm Abacus, six in ten Canadians believe the types of housing prioritized by the Build Canada Plan including modular homes, match what is needed today. Through government interventions and the creation of demand for modular and prefabricated construction, industry can respond appropriately and assess the potential challenges of bringing these structures to the market with greater confidence.

Read the full report here.

Regional Collaboration

FVREB’s Stakeholder & Government Relations Committee (SGRC) continued its municipal outreach program over the past several months, meeting with officials from a number of communities including Delta, Langley, Abbotsford and Mission to discuss ongoing initiatives and opportunities for collaboration on housing issues.

L to R: Sunny Hundal, SGRC Committee; Sukhman Gill, MP for Abbotsford—South Langley; Harman Bhangu, MLA for Langley Abbotsford; Jody Toor, MLA Langley Willowbrook; Neeta Walia, SGRC Committee; Mona Arora, SGRC Committee.

Intelligent City

Members of the FVREB Stakeholder & GR Committee Stakeholder Committee were invited to tour Intelligent City’s North Delta factory in August. A leader in the offsite construction space—Intelligent City shared a news conference with Prime Minister Mark Carney earlier this year, where he pegged the technology as a key strategy in his goal to build five million new housing units by 2035 in an effort to increase affordability.

L to R: Shafiq Jamal, Stakeholder & GR Affairs Facilitator; Mona Arora, SGRC Committee; Sherry Grewal, SGRC Committee; Omar Mohammad, SGRC Committee

Issue 5 | 2025 Fall

Using Every Tool in the Kit

Under pressure to meet ambitious supply goals, BC’s Minister of Housing and Municipal Affairs, Christine Boyle, is counting on her experience as a city councillor to work with stakeholders across the board to help British Columbians.
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National Crisis – Local Challenge

For many in the planning and development community, the buck still goes further in the Fraser Valley.
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Bridging the Supply Gap and Restoring Affordability

CMHC’s new affordability ratios are
counting on aggressive supply targets—just to get us back to 2019 affordability levels by 2035.
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PacificWest 2025

Forging the future of real estate in BC. An overview of Western Canada’s premier real estate gathering.
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BOARD NEWS

A Singular Milestone

The Fraser Valley REALTORS® Charitable Foundation is on track to grant its millionth dollar to a local charity.
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ADVOCACY

Building Faster, Smarter

New FVREB report proposes policy recommendations to fast-track offsite construction to meet supply goals.
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From the CEO

Leading, Learning, and Innovating at PacificWest 2025

NO SHORT DESCRIPTION PROVIDED
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Insight

Living with Uncertainty

Normalizing uncertainty in the wake of tariff threats.
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TRENDING

Housing Health Markers

Investment, unit absorption and permits as barometers for housing market health.
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Last Word

Bridging the Supply Gap

Tough challenges for the BC residential construction sector.
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