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  • Community Heritage Register: A Resource Guide

Community Heritage Register: Real Property

According to the Local Government Act (LGA), a Community Heritage Register identifies “real property” that possesses heritage value and character. The term “real property” is not easily understood and this sometimes results in a restricted interpretation or a narrow implementation of a Community Heritage Register. The following examples illustrate that there is more breadth to the definition of “real property” than is sometimes understood.

The LGA includes a definition that reads: “real property includes buildings, structures and other improvements affixed to the land.”

The Community Charter offers this definition: “real property means land, with or without improvements so affixed to the land as to make them in fact and law a part of it.”

Real property is a subset of Canadian property law, which also includes personal property. The Canadian Encyclopedia addresses both types, “Real property (or realty) is land, any buildings on that land, any mineral rights under the land, and anything that is attached to the land or buildings that can be considered permanent. Personal property (sometimes known as chattels) includes any property that is not real property.” (source)

A University of Toronto resource guide says real property “refers to real estate or realty law, [and] deals with immovable property in the form of land, buildings, fixtures, etc.” (source)

The Province of British Columbia describes real property in a tax bulletin (source): “Real property is land and anything that is attached to the land so it becomes part of real property after installation (i.e. ceases to be personal property at common law). This would normally include buildings, structures, and things, such as machinery or equipment, that are attached to the land (or to buildings or structures) by some means other than their own weight.”

This bulletin also offers examples:

  • Buildings and integral components of buildings or land, such as windows, doors, plumbing, electrical and heating systems
  • Structures affixed to land, including concrete driveways and sidewalks
  • Topsoil, sod, gravel and other materials that have been installed (e.g. spread) on real property
  • Certain very large machinery or equipment that is constructed on site, such as machinery used in sawmills, pulp mills or other industrial locations, that is specifically excluded from the definition of affixed machinery.

While the bulletin was prepared for a specific purpose (provincial tax application by real property contractors), it nevertheless helps to provide further clarity.

Finally, the example of watercraft can provide further clarity. Based on the preceding information, a vessel cannot be considered real property if it is still in the water, as it is not fixed to the land and it is moveable. However, if the vessel is permanently dry-docked, and therefore immovable, it can be considered real property. Assuming the vessel meets other criteria, it is now eligible for heritage consideration according to the LGA.

This is, in fact, the case for the S.S. Moyie, which is on display on the shore of the Kootenay Lake and is included on the provincial and national registers.

In addition to many man-made structures, the BC Register of Historic Places includes other types of heritage resources, such as parks, watercraft, rivers, and trees. (The map of the BC Register of Historic Places can be found here.) Examples of recognized heritage assets that have met LGA requirements are:

Parks

  • Piper Park, Nanaimo
  • Dewdney Trail, Manning Park
  • Sinclair Park, New Westminster

Vessels

  • S. Naramata
  • S. Sicamous
  • S. Moyie

Natural Environment

  • Tsolum River Garry Oak Ecosystem, an area that features over a hundred Garry oak trees as well as numerous species of mature trees and vegetation.
  • Rock Tree, a native mature Western Red Cedar located in Surrey and growing out of a split glacial erratic boulder that is approximately two metres by three metres in size.
  • Catalpa tree, estimated to be about 100 years old and included on Nanaimo’s list of heritage trees

Industrial Features

  • The Ditch, a concrete canal in the southern Okanagan.
  • Courtenay Riverway, which forms from its source at the confluence of the Puntledge and Tsolum Rivers and flows through the City of Courtenay before draining into Comox Bay

Please note, Heritage BC is not proposing a legal definition of the term “real property” or providing advice. Our aim is to support local governments in developing Community Heritage Registers and understanding the breadth of implementation. Local governments should seek legal advice as required.

 


Did you find the answer to your question? If not, let us know and we will help you find the information you need.
This guide provides an overview of the Community Heritage Register through research and commentary. Application of this heritage conservation tool is not prescriptive, as it can be adapted to each situation. Local governments and regional districts wanting to implement the heritage conservation tools should seek legal counsel as required.
SPECIAL NOTE: It is intended this guide will develop through community input. If you have best practices and case studies that would benefit this guide, please contact Heritage BC.
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As an organization of provincial scope, Heritage BC recognizes that its members, and the local history and heritage they seek to preserve, occupy the lands and territories of B.C.’s Indigenous peoples. Heritage BC asks its members and everyone working in the heritage sector to reflect on the places where they reside and work, and to respect the diversity of cultures and experiences that form the richness of our provincial heritage.