Frost-Protected Shallow Foundations in Nova Scotia: Code, Design, and Feasibility
A frost-protected shallow foundation (FPSF) is an engineered alternative to the conventional deep footing. Instead of digging the footing down below the depth of seasonal frost penetration, an FPSF places rigid insulation around and beneath a shallow slab or footing so that geothermal heat and building heat hold the soil under the foundation above freezing. The frost line, in effect, is moved up and out — the structure stays above it without the excavation a deep frost wall demands.
For anyone weighing what a Nova Scotia parcel can support, the foundation system is not a detail to settle later. It is a line item that interacts with soil, drainage, the National Building Code as adopted in this province, and the unit yield a lot can carry. This article sets out how FPSFs work, what the code actually requires, and how a development firm reads the trade-off when it models a small multi-unit building in the Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM).
What the National Building Code requires — and what it permits
Nova Scotia's building regulation adopts the National Building Code of Canada 2020 (NBC 2020), along with the 2020 National Energy Code for Buildings and National Plumbing Code, in force as of April 1, 2025 under N.S. Reg. 198/2024 [1]. The Code is provincial law, but building permits, inspections, and occupancy permits are administered and enforced municipally — in HRM, by the Planning & Development office — so process and fees vary by municipality [2].
The default rule for foundations in Part 9 (Housing and Small Buildings) is set out in Table 9.12.2.2 of the NBC. Footings must rest either below the depth of frost penetration, or at 1.2 m but not less than the depth of frost penetration, depending on soil and drainage conditions [3]. That "1.2 m" figure is a frequently quoted shorthand, but it is a ceiling on the conventional case — not a universal minimum, and not the whole rule.
The Code does not mandate a single method of frost protection. A footing may be set below frost depth, or it may be protected against frost by other means. An FPSF is one of those other means: rather than reaching depth, it uses insulation to ensure the soil under the foundation does not freeze. The engineering basis for this is well established in Canadian research — the National Research Council has studied frost-heave protection of footings with thermal insulation, confirming that insulation can keep soil under a shallow foundation above the freezing point and prevent the heave that depth would otherwise guard against [4].
Two practical consequences follow for a Nova Scotia project. First, an FPSF is a design that an engineer specifies and a building official reviews against the Code — it is not a workaround, and it does not exempt a project from inspection. Second, because the insulation thickness and extent are climate-dependent, the design is specific to the site: colder ground (a higher air-freezing index) demands more insulation, and poorly draining soils may push the design back toward a conventional footing. A geotechnical assessment is the input that decides whether an FPSF is appropriate at all.
How an FPSF is built
The construction sequence is what gives the FPSF its appeal: it trades depth for insulation, which means far less excavation than a frost wall or full basement.
Excavation and grading. Where a conventional frost wall may require digging well past a metre, an FPSF needs only a shallow excavation to accommodate the drainage layer, insulation, and footing. Shallower digging reduces the chance of hitting groundwater and disturbs existing drainage patterns less. The site is graded so surface water runs away from the building footprint before anything else is placed.
Drainage layer. A layer of clean, well-graded washed gravel or crushed stone is placed and compacted beneath the footing. Drainage is not optional for an FPSF — wet soil conducts heat away and can defeat the insulation, so the granular base must connect to positive drainage (to daylight or an approved stormwater system) and the system must keep insulation above the groundwater table. Compaction matters: settlement under the slab can crack insulation or open thermal gaps.
Insulation. Rigid foam — typically extruded polystyrene (XPS) or expanded polystyrene (EPS) — is installed horizontally (extending outward from the foundation to push the frost line away) and vertically (down the foundation edge). Below-grade insulation should meet the relevant ASTM standard for rigid cellular polystyrene so its compressive strength and long-term R-value hold up under load and against soil moisture. Insulation that will be exposed above grade needs a protective covering (parging, cement board, or a compatible coating) against UV and physical wear.
Concrete and backfill. The slab or footing is poured without displacing the insulation or leaving voids, then exposed insulation is covered and the foundation is backfilled with free-draining material in lifts. Nova Scotia's short, cold building season tightens the window for concrete work, which is one reason sequencing and weather contingency belong in the schedule from the start.
Where an FPSF fits — and where it doesn't
The honest framing is conditional, not promotional. An FPSF earns its place when the site cooperates and the building is heated; it can be the wrong call otherwise.
It tends to fit:
- Heated buildings that lose enough heat to the ground to help hold the soil above freezing. A heated FPSF is the design the method was built around.
- Sites with well-draining soils where the granular base and grading can keep the insulation dry.
- Slab-on-grade forms — including many small multi-unit configurations — where a full basement was never part of the program and the depth a frost wall would add buys nothing.
It is weaker, or unsuitable, where:
- Soils drain poorly (heavy clay, high water table). Additional drainage engineering may be needed, and at some point the conventional footing is simpler and more robust.
- The building is unheated or seasonal, which removes one of the heat sources the system relies on. Unheated FPSF variants exist but are a distinct, more conservative design.
- A basement is wanted for living area or services, in which case the excavation an FPSF avoids is excavation the program requires anyway.
A recurring vulnerability worth naming: the exterior insulation is exposed to landscaping equipment, snow removal, and grading over the building's life. Protecting it during construction and specifying durable above-grade covering is part of getting the long-term performance the design promises.
Energy code, accessibility, and the rest of the envelope
A foundation choice does not sit alone. Under Section 9.36 (energy efficiency for houses and small buildings) of the NBC as adopted in Nova Scotia, the province is phasing in tiered energy-performance requirements: at least Tier 2 for Climate Zone 6 applies to housing and small buildings as of April 1, 2026, having moved up from Tier 1 on April 1, 2025 [5]. Continuous sub-slab and edge insulation, which an FPSF provides by design, contributes to envelope performance — but the energy target is set by the whole assembly, not the footing alone.
Multi-unit projects also have to account for accessibility. Nova Scotia's Built Environment Accessibility Standard Regulations (N.S. Reg. 48/2025) apply to construction beginning on or after April 1, 2026, and they explicitly exclude private residences with three or fewer dwelling units [6]. Separately, the NBC requires at least one barrier-free entrance and a barrier-free path of travel on the entrance level [7]. A slab-on-grade FPSF can make barrier-free entry simpler than a building lifted on a frost wall — a small but real interaction between the foundation decision and code-required accessibility.
What this means for a small multi-unit feasibility study in HRM
Here is where a development firm's lens differs from a how-to guide. The foundation is one variable in a parcel's feasibility, and its value is in how it moves the whole pro forma — not in any single saved number.
Unit yield comes first. HRM's Housing Accelerator Fund (HAF) amendments, in effect since June 13, 2024, permit a minimum of four dwelling units as-of-right on every centrally serviced residential lot, with the Regional Centre's ER-3 zone allowing up to eight units per lot depending on lot area [8][9]. What a parcel can become — fourplex, sixplex, a small low-rise — is settled by zoning and lot geometry before foundation type ever enters. An FPSF supports the slab-on-grade forms many of these buildings take, but it does not change the entitled unit count.
The foundation interacts with cost, not in isolation. Construction costs in this market are substantial and rising. CMHC's Housing Design Catalogue, on a Halifax Q1-2025 basis, estimates hard construction cost for small multi-unit buildings at roughly $217,000 to $387,000 per unit — about $223 to $345 per square foot for four-to-six-unit buildings — and those are hard costs only, excluding land, financing, soft costs, developer profit, and a recommended 5–10% contingency [10][11]. Statistics Canada's building construction price index shows Halifax residential construction prices rose 3.9% year-over-year as of Q4 2025 [12]. Against numbers of that scale, a foundation method earns its keep through reduced earthwork and a shorter, less weather-exposed footing sequence — meaningful, but a contribution to the cost picture rather than a headline. Helio publishes no price of its own; the figures above are CMHC's and StatCan's, cited as such.
Permits and charges are municipal and verifiable. In HRM, building permit fees for new residential buildings of four units or fewer are charged per square metre of floor area — $4.04/m² at or above grade — with a $31.25 minimum, effective April 1, 2024 [13]. Halifax Water's Regional Development Charge adds $5,405.81 per unit for multiple-unit dwellings (and $8,048.66 per single-unit dwelling or townhouse), effective April 1, 2024 and frozen at 2023 levels [14]. An occupancy permit, requiring a valid building permit and a passed final inspection, is needed before a multi-unit building can be occupied [15]. None of these depend on foundation type, but they are the fixed costs a feasibility model has to carry alongside it.
Financing and program fit. For purpose-built rental, the federal and provincial Purpose-Built Rental Housing rebates refund 100% of the GST and the 9% provincial part of HST on qualifying new rental units, to a federal maximum of $35,000 per unit [16]. An energy-efficient envelope — to which a well-detailed FPSF contributes — can also support climate-compatibility points under CMHC's MLI Select multi-unit mortgage loan insurance, which awards points across affordability, accessibility, and energy efficiency to unlock higher leverage and longer amortization for projects of at least five units [17]. The foundation is one of many inputs to those program calculations.
The feasibility takeaway
A frost-protected shallow foundation is a legitimate, code-recognized approach for the right Nova Scotia site: a heated building on well-draining soil where a slab-on-grade form suits the program and a deep frost wall would add depth without value. It can reduce excavation and edge thermal bridging, and it pairs naturally with the slab forms common to small multi-unit buildings under HRM's current zoning.
But the foundation is a consequence of the feasibility study, not the start of it. What a parcel can become is decided by its zoning, its lot, its soil, and the cost and financing realities of the HRM market — and the foundation is selected to serve that answer. The right question for an owner is not "should I use an FPSF?" but "what is the most this land can support, and which foundation serves it best?" That is the order in which the numbers actually resolve.
Regulatory, tax, program, and cost figures in this article are current as of 2026-06-22 and are drawn from the primary sources cited below. Code editions, fee schedules, rebate caps, and incentive programs change; verify against the source before relying on any figure for a specific project.
Sources
- Government of Nova Scotia — "Province to Adopt 2020 National Building Codes" (Sept 20, 2024). https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2024/09/20/province-adopt-2020-national-building-codes
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Building Code & Regulatory Information. https://www.halifax.ca/home-property/building-development-permits/building-code-regulatory-information
- National Research Council Canada — National Building Code of Canada 2020 (Part 9, Table 9.12.2.2, Foundations). https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/object/?id=515340b5-f4e0-4798-be69-692e4ec423e8
- National Research Council Canada — "Frost Heave Protection of Cottage Footings with Thermal Insulation" (NRC Publications Archive). https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/td/?id=5617349a-1546-4d0a-8d1e-dd25319f1065
- Government of Nova Scotia — "Province to Adopt 2020 National Building Codes" (tiered energy-code phase-in dates). https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2024/09/20/province-adopt-2020-national-building-codes
- Built Environment Accessibility Standard Regulations, N.S. Reg. 48/2025 (Accessibility Act). https://novascotia.ca/just/regulations/regs/accbuiltenviro.htm
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Accessible / Barrier-Free Entrance Design Guidelines (per National Building Code Section 3.8). https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/home-property/building-renovating/2024.01-barrier-free-entrance-guidelines-v1.03.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Recent changes to planning documents for housing (Housing Accelerator Fund). https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/housing-accelerator-fund/urgent-changes-planning-0
- Halifax Regional Municipality — HAF Amendments: ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024). https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- CMHC — Housing Design Catalogue, Construction Cost Estimate Summary (Atlantic). https://assets.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/sites/housing%20catalog/resources/hdc-construction-cost-estimate-summary-atlantic-en.pdf
- CMHC — Housing Design Catalogue, Construction Cost Estimate Summary (Atlantic) — per-square-foot and costing-scope notes. https://assets.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/sites/housing%20catalog/resources/hdc-construction-cost-estimate-summary-atlantic-en.pdf
- Nova Scotia Department of Finance — Building Construction Price Index, Q4 2025 (reporting Statistics Canada Table 18-10-0289-01). https://novascotia.ca/finance/statistics/archive_news.asp?id=21693
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Permit Fees (License, Permit and Processing Fees, Administrative Order #15). https://www.halifax.ca/home-property/building-development-permits/permit-fees
- Halifax Water — Regional Development Charge. https://www.halifaxwater.ca/regional-development-charge
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Application to Occupy (per Nova Scotia Building Code Act). https://www.halifax.ca/home-property/building-development-permits/commercial-mixed-use-building-permits/application-occupy
- Canada Revenue Agency — GST/HST Purpose-Built Rental Housing (PBRH) Rebate. https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/purpose-built-rental-housing.html
- CMHC — MLI Select. https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/professionals/project-funding-and-mortgage-financing/mortgage-loan-insurance/multi-unit-insurance/mliselect