Rain-screen retrofit in West End
West End is City of Vancouver's 1960s-1980s rental concrete towers submarket. The West End has the highest density of pre-1990 strata buildings in the city, which means asbestos testing is effectively non-skippable on any drywall demolition — VBBL inspectors flag any pre-1990 ceiling popcorn or pipe insulation as automatic test-required, and the inspection-plus-abatement scope can run $4K-$12K on a one-bedroom kitchen alone.
What a rain-screen retrofit project looks like here
The West End has the highest density of pre-1990 strata buildings in the city, which means asbestos testing is effectively non-skippable on any drywall demolition — VBBL inspectors flag any pre-1990 ceiling popcorn or pipe insulation as automatic test-required, and the inspection-plus-abatement scope can run $4K-$12K on a one-bedroom kitchen alone.
West End strata corporations frequently have 5-year capital expenditure plans that govern when the building's rain-screen, balcony, or roof assemblies will be opened up, and a kitchen renovation that's well-timed against the strata plan can save $20K-$60K by sharing scaffolding and envelope-opening costs with the corporation's planned work.
VBBL 9.27.2.2 + Barrett Commission post-1996 rain-screen wall assembly — leaky-condo era stock (1985-1999) typically requires full envelope rectification. In West End specifically, 1960s-1980s rental concrete towers stock means rain-screen retrofit scope is shaped by the neighborhood's dominant construction typology. Baily's Vancouver scoping flow factors 1960s-70s rental towers and strata spa §71 vote on common property; many west end strata operate on 5-year capital plans that interact with timing into the estimate before a contractor is involved.
Start your West End scope — Baily asks the right questions.
Pre-seeded for rain-screen retrofit in West End. Mention your 450-900 sqft 1-bed strata, your timeline, and any known constraints — Baily factors the city of vancouver — vbbl + strata council §71 review queue into the scope.
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Who is Baily?
Baily is named after Francis Baily — an English stockbroker who retired at 51, became an astronomer, and in 1836 described something on the edge of a solar eclipse that nobody had properly articulated before: a string of bright beads of sunlight breaking through the valleys along the moon’s rim.
He wasn’t the first to see them. Edmond Halley saw them in 1715 and barely noticed. Baily’s contribution was clarity — describing exactly what was happening, in plain language, so vividly that the whole field of astronomy paid attention. The phenomenon is still called Baily’s beads.
That’s what we wanted our AI to do. Every inbound call and text has signal in it — a homeowner’s real question, a timeline, a budget, a hesitation that means “yes but.” Baily listens to every one, 24/7, and finds the beads of light.
Baily was a businessman before he was a scientist. That’s our vibe too.
Questions LA homeowners actually ask
West End rain-screen retrofit projects typically run $145K–$985K. West End's 1960s-1980s rental concrete towers stock, combined with 1960s-70s rental towers — most converted to strata 1990-2010, many with deferred rain-screen capital plans, puts most mid-complexity projects in the $565K range. Baily scopes the exact band once you describe the work.
Nearest neighborhoods
Same service, adjacent Vancouver submarkets.