Most building owners and strata councils don't know what to expect when budgeting for Bacnet building automation or a commercial HVAC upgrade. This guide covers real cost ranges for Metro Vancouver and BC-based projects — based on nearly 40 years of Webir projects across commercial, strata, and institutional buildings.
These are not generic national averages. These are the ranges Webir sees on actual projects in Coquitlam, Vancouver, Burnaby, Surrey, North Vancouver, and across the Lower Mainland. Every project is different — building size, existing infrastructure, number of controlled points, and scope all affect the final cost. This guide gives you the framework to budget accurately and ask the right questions before you call a contractor.
What Drives the Cost of Building Automation & Controls?
Before looking at price ranges, you need to understand what makes one project cost $15,000 and another cost $150,000. There are five primary cost drivers for any Bacnet DDC controls or HVAC project in Metro Vancouver:
- Building size and complexity — More square footage and more floors means more controllers, more wiring runs, and more commissioning time. A 5,000 sq ft single-tenant office and a 12-storey strata tower are completely different scopes.
- Number of controlled points — In building automation, a "point" is any input or output the system monitors or controls — a temperature sensor, a damper actuator, a fan status signal. More points = more hardware, wiring, and programming time.
- New construction vs retrofit — New construction allows controls wiring to be roughed in during the build, dramatically reducing labour. Retrofitting an existing building requires working around existing systems, tight access, and legacy wiring.
- Existing infrastructure condition — Buildings with pneumatic controls or older DDC systems require more work to upgrade than buildings that already have partial Bacnet infrastructure. Some legacy systems can be partially integrated; others need full replacement.
- Remote monitoring and hosting requirements — Buildings that need web-based remote access, real-time alarm monitoring, and ongoing Webir hosting, monitoring, and support have higher ongoing costs but also greater operational value.
2026 Cost Ranges — Metro Vancouver & BC
The following ranges reflect current market pricing for Metro Vancouver, BC. They include labour, materials, and commissioning but do not include GST or permit fees where applicable. Always request a site-specific quote — these ranges are for budgeting and planning purposes only.
| Service / Scope | Typical Range (CAD) |
|---|---|
|
Single-zone Bacnet DDC controller installation
One AHU or small mechanical room — includes controller, wiring, and commissioning
|
$8,000 – $20,000 |
|
Full building automation — small commercial (under 10,000 sq ft)
Multiple zones, web interface, remote access — new construction or simple retrofit
|
$20,000 – $55,000 |
|
Full building automation — mid-size commercial (10,000–50,000 sq ft)
Multi-floor, multiple AHUs or RTUs, full Bacnet network — retrofit project
|
$45,000 – $150,000+ |
|
Pneumatic-to-Bacnet controls conversion
Replacing existing pneumatic control system with modern Bacnet DDC — highly variable by scope
|
$30,000 – $120,000 |
|
Commercial HVAC system replacement (single RTU or AHU)
Equipment supply and installation — excludes controls integration
|
$15,000 – $60,000 |
|
Commercial boiler replacement
High-efficiency hot water boiler — commercial building or strata application
|
$18,000 – $65,000 |
|
Full HVAC retrofit with controls integration
New HVAC equipment + Bacnet DDC controls — mid-size commercial building
|
$60,000 – $200,000+ |
|
Remote hosting, monitoring, and support (annual)
Web-based access, alarm monitoring, trend logging, and Webir support
|
$2,400 – $8,400/yr |
|
Quarterly preventive maintenance contract (annual)
HVAC and mechanical — four visits per year with written reports
|
$4,000 – $15,000/yr |
Important Note on These Ranges
These are budgeting ranges only. The actual cost for your building depends on a site assessment — building size, existing systems, access conditions, scope of work, and equipment selection all affect the final number. Webir provides detailed, itemized quotes after a site visit. All trades are coordinated by Webir — no surprise third-party costs.
Get a Site-Specific Quote
Every project is different. We'll give you a real number after a site assessment.
New Construction vs Retrofit — Which Costs More?
New construction is significantly less expensive per controlled point than a retrofit. When a building is under construction, controls wiring can be roughed in during the framing and mechanical rough-in phase — reducing labour time dramatically compared to fishing wires through finished walls and ceilings.
A retrofit project in a functioning building also has constraints that drive cost: limited access, working around active systems, integration with legacy equipment, and the need to minimize disruption to building occupants or tenants. These factors can add 30–60% to the cost of the same scope done in new construction.
For retrofit projects, the age and condition of existing infrastructure matters enormously. A building with intact pneumatic controls that can be partially reused is different from a building where the entire mechanical control system needs to be gutted and replaced. Webir's site assessment process identifies which components can be retained and what needs replacement before any quote is issued.
Is a Commercial HVAC Retrofit Worth the Cost?
For most commercial buildings in Metro Vancouver with HVAC equipment over 15 years old — yes, a retrofit is financially justified. Here is why:
- Modern commercial HVAC equipment runs 20–40% more efficiently than equipment manufactured before 2010. On a building spending $30,000/year in heating and cooling costs, a 25% efficiency gain represents $7,500 in annual savings.
- Pairing a retrofit with Bacnet building automation adds another layer of savings through automated occupancy scheduling, setback programs, and real-time fault detection that catches problems before they become expensive failures.
- Older equipment has higher maintenance costs, more frequent service calls, and carries the risk of catastrophic failure — especially boilers and chillers. A planned replacement on your schedule is less expensive than an emergency replacement in winter.
- BC Hydro and FortisBC energy efficiency programs offer rebates for qualifying commercial HVAC upgrades. The Government of Canada's Canada Greener Buildings Grant provides additional funding for commercial retrofits that meet energy performance targets. Webir can document energy savings data to support your grant applications.
What Does a Building Automation Quote From Webir Include?
When you request a Webir quote for building automation, controls, or HVAC work, here is exactly what the assessment and proposal process covers:
Energy Efficiency Rebates Available in BC (2026)
Commercial building owners undertaking HVAC upgrades or building automation projects in Metro Vancouver and BC may be eligible for the following incentive programs:
- BC Hydro Power Smart for Business — Incentives for commercial HVAC equipment upgrades, controls improvements, and variable speed drives. Rebate amounts depend on energy savings achieved and equipment type.
- FortisBC Commercial Energy Efficiency Program — Rebates for natural gas-fueled commercial heating equipment, boiler upgrades, and heat recovery systems. Buildings that switch from electric to high-efficiency gas heating may also qualify.
- Canada Greener Buildings Grant — Federal funding for commercial building energy retrofits that achieve measurable GHG reductions. Requires an energy audit and performance verification.
- Canada Infrastructure Bank — Clean Energy Financing — For larger institutional projects, low-cost financing is available for energy efficiency retrofits that meet specific performance criteria.
Webir can provide energy consumption data from Bacnet trend logs to support rebate and grant applications. If you are planning a controls or HVAC project and want to maximize available incentives, tell us at the assessment stage so we can design the documentation process accordingly.
Preventive Maintenance — The Cost of Doing Nothing
The most expensive mechanical failure is the one you did not see coming. A commercial boiler failure in January, a chiller breakdown in July, or an AHU fan failure on a school day — these are not just repair costs. They are disruption costs, liability costs, and emergency service rate costs layered on top of the repair itself.
A quarterly preventive maintenance program from Webir runs $4,000–$15,000 per year for most commercial buildings — significantly less than a single emergency service call plus parts for a major component failure. Beyond cost, preventive maintenance extends equipment life, maintains manufacturer warranty coverage, and provides the written documentation that strata councils and property managers need for AGM reporting and capital reserve planning.
For buildings with Bacnet controls, Webir's remote monitoring service adds another layer of protection — real-time alarm notification means faults are caught in hours, not days. A failing heating valve caught by an alarm at 2 AM is a $400 repair. The same valve found frozen and burst on Monday morning is a $15,000 emergency.
Questions About Costs for Your Building?
Call us or request a site assessment — we give specific numbers, not ranges.
Why Webir for Building Automation & HVAC in Vancouver?
Webir Automation & Control Services Ltd. has been based in Coquitlam since 1986. We are a Reliable Controls Authorized Dealer — the only mechanical contractor in Western Canada to receive the Reliable Controls MVP Award. Our team of 40+ includes Red Seal refrigeration mechanics, Class A boiler fitters, licensed electricians, journeyman plumbers, and certified gas fitters. Every trade required for a building automation or HVAC project is performed in-house.
We serve commercial, strata, and institutional clients across Metro Vancouver including Vancouver, Burnaby, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, Pitt Meadows, Surrey, Richmond, North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Langley, Maple Ridge, New Westminster, Abbotsford, Delta, Mission, White Rock, Tsawwassen, Chilliwack, Hope, Squamish, and Whistler. We also travel province-wide for institutional and commercial projects.
Learn more about our Building Automation & Controls, Commercial HVAC, and Building Automation & Controls services — or request a quote below.