The City of Summerside in Prince Edward Island will receive a $2 million grant from the federal government for the development of Atlantic Canada's inaugural certified passive energy designed industrial facility.
Tag: news
The Canada Green Building Council (CAGBC) unveiled the 2023 CAGBC Awards winners at its Building Lasting Change conference. The annual awards celebrate innovative projects, teams, and individuals making positive contributions to Canada’s green building sector.
Alberta Ecotrust Foundation and Efficiency Capital have partnered to deliver deep energy retrofits in multi-unit residential buildings throughout the province.
A new gateway building at the historic entrance to the University of British Columbia’s (UBC’s) Point Grey campus will encompass commitments to zero-carbon design, Indigenous reconciliation, and health and wellness.
Plans to build a permanent cultural performance centre in Montreal will see eight of the city’s former subway cars used in its construction.
An underutilized building in Toronto’s Corso Italia neighbourhood has been transformed into a mixed-use creative hub, reflecting the local architect’s belief about urban renewal—serving as a catalyst for change, with positive impacts on a...
The Harrison McCain Pavilion, an addition to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery—a Fredericton, New Brunswick, landmark—has been designed as a modern take on the existing architecture, with the goal of creating a public space fostering...
The world’s largest wooden city planned for Sweden
(06/21/2023)
Swedish urban developer, Atrium Ljungberg, has unveiled plans to build a wooden city in Stockholm, which will extend more than 250,000 m2 (2.6 million sf), making it the world’s largest known wooden construction project.
The revitalization of the heritage venue, Young People’s Theatre (YPT), in downtown Toronto, includes a new building across the street and renovated crucial features to the existing 1977 building, with retention of some characteristic...
Situated in Montreal’s Côte-des-Neiges borough, the Le Paquebot project is heavily influenced in its name and design by the Streamline Moderne, an international architectural style of Art Deco movement which emerged in the 1930s.