Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

City of Vancouver starts accepting commercial patio applications for 2021

Permits would be valid between April 1 and Oct. 31
patioonontario
A restaurant patio encroached onto Ontario Street last year.

Restaurant, pub and brewery owners may now apply for temporary patio licences, which would allow their businesses to create patios on public property and service those patios between April 1 and Oct. 31, the City of Vancouver announced March 1.

The program includes patios on sidewalks, and in curb lanes next to restaurants and bars. Owners seeking new temporary patios on public or private property for their businesses can apply online. 

Businesses with existing temporary patio permits on private property are not required to renew for the spring and summer patio seasons.

Those aiming to renew their temporary patio licences for existing patios must be compliant with the city's temporary expedited patio program safety and structural standards.

Some key elements of that program are that patios may not:

  • restrict accessibility or reduce space for physical distancing on sidewalks;
  • encroach too far onto streets so as not to negatively impact other road users, or interrupt the city's street cleaning, utility or construction work;
  • reduce the open-air aspect of the patios with additional structures or enclosures so as not to heighten the risk of COVID-19 transmission; or
  • block access to critical utilities, such as fire department connections. 

The city launched its temporary expedited patio program last year, and issued more than 400 patio permits, after industry's calls for help to be able to safely welcome customers while maintaining physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Getting permission for a licensed patio is a two-step process. First, business owners need to go through the city's process and get land-use permission, then they applly to the B.C. Ministry of the Attorney General to get approval to sell alcohol. 

Last year, the B.C. government agreed to what it called an "expedited approval process for faster processing times" for licensed patios. Essentially, that meant that applications for licensed patios endured less scrutiny and resulting delays.

gkorstrom@biv.com

twitter.com/GlenKorstrom