Carriage houses proving popular in West Kelowna

FIRST CARRIAGE HOUSES COULD BE COMPLETE BY EARLY 2017

WEST KELOWNA – The City of West Kelowna has received numerous inquiries about what it takes to build a carriage house since making them legal last fall.

Development services manager Nancy Henderson says the city has received about 20 inquiries specific to a particular West Kelowna property with about five of those in what she terms the “pre-application” phase.

Henderson says the city issued a development permit in February for the construction of a carriage house and has one permit in the plan-checking phase from last month.

Council earlier this week approved a development variance allowing the coversion of a studio above a garage into a carriage house.

Kelowna has allowed carriage houses since the early 2000s and will consider a move next week to allow duplex ownership of houses and carriage houses constructed on oversized lots.

Henderson says West Kelowna will consider traditional stick-framed houses and modular homes as possible carriage houses but will not allow shipping container homes or mobile homes.

Find past stories on carriage houses here.


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John McDonald

John began life as a journalist through the Other Press, the independent student newspaper for Douglas College in New Westminster. The fluid nature of student journalism meant he was soon running the place, learning on the fly how to publish a newspaper.

It wasn’t until he moved to Kelowna he broke into the mainstream media, working for Okanagan Sunday, then the Kelowna Daily Courier and Okanagan Saturday doing news graphics and page layout. He carried on with the Kelowna Capital News, covering health and education while also working on special projects, including the design and launch of a mass market daily newspaper. After 12 years there, John rejoined the Kelowna Daily Courier as editor of the Westside Weekly, directing news coverage as the Westside became West Kelowna.

But digital media beckoned and John joined Kelowna.com as assistant editor and reporter, riding the start-up as it at first soared then went down in flames. Now John is turning dirt as city hall reporter for iNFOnews.ca where he brings his long experience to bear on the civic issues of the day.

If you have a story you think people should know about, email John at jmcdonald@infonews.ca