That's very interesting as well. Of course, one of the things that has been prevalent across the industry right now is the LEED certification standards, the LEED-certified silver, bronze, gold, and platinum standards. These have had quite a pervasive effect upon the development industry. They've really brought up standards. Ontario now has a much more stringent building code as well, which you could argue has been a response to the idea of being able to provide measurable indicators and to be able to track where we're going.
The importance of being able to quantify and understand the values and to be able to compare them is just unmatched. LEED, although it's not perfect, certainly has provided us with a mechanism to be able to provide those indicators and to do that kind of measurement.
LEED-ND will be the new standard for how we look at neighbourhood development and subdivision plans. That includes all kinds of very interesting indicators that will have profound potential impacts, including access, density, access to park space, overall residential density—all kinds of different indicators. All of these things are good things, again, because although they may not be perfect solutions all by themselves, they allow us to have a measurable base level upon which we can now compare different areas of performance. We can look at a LEED-ND subdivision, for example, and compare it to a traditional subdivision. We can look at those performance indicators and measure and track whether we're actually making progress.