Engage a civil-engineering firm before you even understand what you can build—they walk you through land-use bylaws, servicing feasibility, and what housing types are permissible before you commit capital.
“a lot of times we’ll have a client come in that just owns a piece of land… we can kind of walk them through those”
For land development, a full-service local engineering firm can take a project from raw survey through civil infrastructure, cost estimating, and contract admin—reducing the developer’s coordination burden and acting as an impartial third party.
“we do a lot of contract admin between the owner and the contractors… sort of that impartial third party”
Passive house is lifecycle-economic, not luxury: it was founded on finding the most economically efficient construction methodology, and government rebates (up to $9,000) can cover design fees and incremental costs.
“passive house was founded on economic principles… the most economically beneficial house to live in”
Atlantic Canadians spend roughly double the national average on home heating and cooling—a structural problem rooted in old housing stock and building methods, not just climate.
“we spend almost double the national average for heating and cooling costs… it’s a function of our housing stock”
A passive house is not inherently more expensive in materials—it’s about better planning before construction begins; the premium comes from the niche market of custom high-end buyers, not the method itself.
“there’s nothing different about building a passive house… it’s just having a better plan before you put your construction into action”
Wind farm civil engineering is dictated by turbine blade length (150 feet): roads must have gentle radii and minimal vertical grade change to deliver components—the dominant challenge is logistics access, not structure.
“the blades on some of these turbines are 150 feet long… so the roads need to have a gentle radius”
Nova Scotia’s single-turbine power purchase agreement program has ended, effectively killing private small-scale wind development; solar is now the accessible renewable play for the region.
“that program has since ceased to exist so that’s really curbed the development”
Multi-stakeholder approval processes—HRM, NS Transportation, NS Environment, utilities, DFO—consume more engineering time than project design itself; sequencing permit applications strategically is a critical delivery skill.
“we seem to spend more time talking about that than… how can we deliver a better end product”
Private-sector stakeholders are generally faster to respond than government agencies during high-volume development periods; the sheer number of concurrent projects compounds bureaucratic delay.
“the private companies are usually a lot easier to deal with… there’s just the volume of work that’s happening”
The NSCC engineering technology program is graduating fewer than 10 new students, creating a structural labour gap on the technical side of construction that will constrain engineering capacity before it constrains trades.
“we’ve heard that there’s fewer than 10 new students in the NSCC engineering tech program lately”
Growing locally-owned firm culture around senior-led mentorship and open-door access helps retain junior engineers—in a tight labour market, culture is a competitive recruiting advantage over larger firms.
“we’ve got good senior staff who really understand things and are really helpful in mentoring our junior staff”
New stormwater regulations now require on-site treatment before discharge to municipal systems; bioswales and naturalized channel rehabilitation are emerging civil specialties for Atlantic Canada developers.
“we’re looking at new technologies trying to manage our storm water on site and treat it before it gets discharged”
Historical buried infrastructure in Halifax (gas lines for street lights, tram rails) is routinely discovered on excavation; utility locate and survey must be the first step on any downtown project before design begins.
“there’s old gas lines buried in some of the streets… you never know what you’re going to run into”
Locally-owned engineering boutiques exiting large national firms can scale rapidly (3 to 50 staff in 7 years) by leveraging local soil and regulatory knowledge that national firms lack at the regional level.
“the three founders just wanted to get back to their roots of that locally owned organization”