Sustainable Legacy

The Rental Protection Fund supports the long-term impact of affordable housing by investing in building renewal and sustainable retrofits. Through Renewal Grants, the Fund extends the lifespan of properties while making them more resilient without the need for ongoing operating subsidies.

Affordable rental under threat

Much of today’s naturally occurring affordable rental housing was built during the apartment construction boom of the 1960s and 1970s. Decades later, many of these properties are aging rapidly and suffering from the effects of disinvestment and years of deferred maintenance. Without major capital investment, insufficient cash flow can lead to inadequate maintenance of buildings, often causing these units to deteriorate beyond repair and disappear from the market entirely, making disinvestment a major driver of affordable housing loss.

Renewing and restoring existing housing

Many affordable rental buildings secured through the Fund require critical upgrades to enhance livability and longevity. These projects extend a building’s lifespan, improve safety, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and significantly boost energy efficiency—ensuring affordability for renters at a fraction of the cost of new construction.

Renewal Grants provide essential funding to stabilize rental housing in the critical months following acquisition by a community housing provider. This up-front investment enables long-overdue maintenance and urgent home repairs to be addressed quickly while laying the groundwork for long-term capital planning and preventative maintenance.

Grant amounts are allocated based on the cost of necessary capital projects, maintaining a dual focus on environmental and financial sustainability.

These grants help catalyze priority projects, ensuring buildings remain safe, livable, and resilient for current tenants. Key upgrades include:

  • Building fascia repair
  • Replacing single-pane windows with double-pane windows
  • Balcony railing and floor replacements
  • Mold & asbestos remediation
  • Adding bike racks for tenants
$24M+

total Renewal Grant funding provided to non-profits

$3.3M+

value of capital projects delivered and in progress at properties acquired through the Fund

Up to 80%

reductions in carbon emissions that can be achieved through deep-energy retrofits

Program layering to maximize impact

The Rental Protection Fund leverages additional funding from third-party programs to enable more extensive retrofits and repairs, resulting in significant improvements to building performance, reduced energy consumption, and greenhouse gas emissions.

In addition to Renewal Grants, non-profits may choose to pursue CMHC deep energy retrofit funding through programs like the Canada Greener Affordable Housing program (CGAH) and the Affordable Housing Fund retrofit and renewal program.

This funding, often amounting to millions of dollars per building, delivers unprecedented reductions in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Additionally, it enhances the building’s durability, livability, indoor air quality, climate resilience, and extends its useful economic life.

Connective Kamloops

Building 
Resilience

When Connective Kamloops acquired 139 Tranquille Road, a 25-unit building on Kamloops' north shore, they quickly started upgrading the property, prioritizing resident safety. This included modernizing the fire alarm system and panel, and upgrading it to an actively monitored system - the standard in buildings built today. But Connective went further,  undertaking exterior changes recommended by the FireSmart BC program.

Throughout the past decade the Kamloops Fire Centre has seen a significant fluctuation in fire activity and Kamloops itself has seen an increase in fires where greenspace meets buildings.  

Riverside Gardens is located on the shores of Thompson River, where the trees and shrubs along the riverbank had grown through the property’s fence. Connective worked to clear the weeds and brush, creating a safe zone between the plant life and the property. This reduced the risk that small fires would spread from the riverbank to the building.

Connective also changed the landscaping, planting shrubs and ground cover that were less susceptible to fires. These improvements reduced the water consumption and made Riverside Gardens safer and more resilient.

“The Rental Protection Fund is also a rental resilience fund. Investments [...] not only breathe new life into a building and ensure operational sustainability into the future, but for the residents that call it home, freedom from housing insecurity that allows them new opportunities to thrive and build wealth.”

Katie Maslechko
CEO, Rental Protection Fund