The math

Reading what your lot can actually hold

Lot size, transit distance, slope, and servicing: the real inputs that decide whether your Port Moody lot supports three, four, or six homes.

The SSMUH rules give you a ceiling based on two numbers. Whether you can reach that ceiling, and whether you should, comes down to a handful of physical realities. Here is how to read your own lot.

Start with the two numbers that set the ceiling

Lot size and transit distance decide your maximum. Under 280 m², the cap is three units. From 280 m² to 4,050 m², it is four. Within 400 m of frequent transit and over 280 m², it rises to six. You can find your lot's area on your property assessment or the City's zoning map, and measure transit distance to the nearest frequent bus stop.

Key fact

Most Port Moody lots, roughly 3,709 of them, land in the four-unit band. Only 515 are close enough to frequent transit for six. If you are not near a frequent route, four is very likely your real ceiling.

Then subtract for reality

The ceiling is where the easy part ends. Four things pull the achievable number down:

The flat-lot advantage

This is why the flat, regular grids of Glenayre and College Park come up so often. A level, rectangular lot wastes less area to grade and access, is cheaper to build on, and gets closer to its theoretical ceiling. The same 400 m² lot can support a very different project depending on whether it is flat or falls away toward a view.

Two identical lot sizes on two different streets are not the same opportunity. The map tells you the ceiling. The ground tells you the truth.

What a real read looks like

A proper feasibility read puts all of this together: the ceiling from the rules, minus the losses from slope, trees, servicing, and setbacks, against the rough cost and value of the likely forms. The output is not a fantasy maximum. It is the honest range of what your lot supports, and whether any of it pencils out.

You can do the first pass yourself with your lot size and a transit map. For the rest, a free feasibility study is the fastest way to a real answer, or read the full rules first.

Sources

All articles

Your lot

Curious what yours can hold?