Significant residential growth in Welland has been projected for the past five years, but one factor in the city having its “best year ever” in 2020 could be tied to people wanting to escape the Greater Toronto Area during the pandemic.
Three years in a row, Welland has broken its record set the previous year for new home construction.
The record-breaking pace of development last year comes “despite difficult economic circumstances across Ontario that have predominated for much of the year because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic,” said a news release from communications firm Enterprise Canada on behalf of the municipality.
In an interview Tuesday, Grant Munday, the city’s interim director of development and building services, said the pandemic “seems maybe to have intensified the growth in terms of demand.”
By the end of 2020, Welland had hit a new residential development record of 519 units for the year, following previous single-year records of 474 units in 2019 and 401 units built in 2018.
We’re well above where we thought we’d be in 2021,” said Munday.
The city added a record of more than $200 million in building permit construction value for the year.
Over the next two decades, the city’s population of about 54,000 is expected to climb nearly a third, adding 18,640 residents, according to projections from city hall.
This would put the total number of people living in Welland to about 72,000.
In a five-year forecast initiated in 2016, it was anticipated 1,454 new homes would be erected by the end of 2021 since then — but a figure of 1,724 was reached by the time 2020 concluded, said Munday.
He said there appears to be an “out-migration of sorts” from the big city.
It will be a “similar year or better” in 2021, said Munday.
Major developments that contributed to 2020’s success are the Sparrow Meadows subdivision and Central Village, the latter which is part of the Hunters Pointe subdivision.
Large clusters of homes being built between McCabe and Sauer avenues by Centennial Homes are major projects as well.
Two subdivisions in Dain City — one on the former John Deere lands and another to the east — are awaiting approval and could result in about 1,500 homes being built in the next few years.
Of the 519 units built in 2020, 241 of them are single-detached dwellings, 133 are apartments and 40 are townhouses.
In September, ground was broken on a $20-million, 98-unit apartment complex on Lancaster Drive near Seaway Mall.
There were 51 accessory dwelling units, and 51 long-term-care beds also factored into the year’s data.
A positive that comes from the rapid growth is the impact it will have on the restaurant and retail industry as it recovers from the pandemic, said Munday.
“There’s more potential customers being added to the city.”
Welland has invested heavily in capital infrastructure projects to accommodate growth, spending more than $170 million since 2014 on improvements to roads, water, wastewater, sewers and sidewalks.
Munday said the new homes are “really spread out” at and between “all four corners of the city.”
A presentation will be made to city council in the near future about which wards have seen the most growth, he said.