
ELLISDON — EllisDon served as design-builder for Toronto’s
Centennial College project, completed in the fall of 2023. The
project used cross-laminated timber from Quebec manufacturer
Nordic Structures.
Two construction science specialists from EllisDon say Canada’s
homegrown mass timber construction sector is creating its own
momentum, with the cost gap between the product and traditional
materials continuing to decrease and innovators learning new
best practices with every successful project.
As of Jan. 1, Ontario’s Building Code has been updated to allow
construction of mass timber buildings up to 18 storeys, up from
12 storeys.
An RBC report estimated the market could reach $4.9 billion by
2030 if global demand continues to grow at an annual rate of
14.5 per cent.
The same study noted widespread adoption of wood, specifically
mass timber, could cut embodied emissions in buildings by as
much as 25 per cent.
Mark Gaglione and Vincent Davenport, directors of construction
sciences with EllisDon, say success breeds success in the
sector. Two of the firm’s Toronto projects that were completed
in the past year-and-a-half, T3 Sterling Road from Hines and
Centennial College’s A Block Expansion project, used mass timber
from British Columbia and Quebec respectively.
Davenport and Gaglione say they are agnostics when it comes to
advocating for building materials, given that mass timber may
not be the best solution in every case. They say use of mass
timber tends to be owner-driven — committed owners opt for mass
timber for reasons of esthetics, sustainability and innovation.
“Initially it was a big cost premium, 25, 30 per cent, and then
three, four years ago, it was down to like 15 per cent and today
we’re sitting closer to a single-digit-per cent cost premium,”
said
Gaglione.“The cost of timber is changing as the markets are
developing and more people are coming online.”
The Centennial College project, completed in late 2023, was a
133,000-square-foot, $112-million expansion that saw 20
classrooms, eight labs and offices constructed. EllisDon was the
design-builder.
It was one of the first mass timber post-secondary facilities in
Canada and achieved certification under the CaGBC’s Zero Carbon
Building Standard.
The project used cross-laminated timber from Quebec manufacturer
Nordic Structures. The glulam beams use timber from black spruce
trees from northern Quebec forests, Davenport explained.
“They’ve built a business around taking smaller, less mature
trees and producing high-value products out of it,” he said.
Gaglione and Davenport said the project was notable for several
reasons including the extensive testing EllisDon undertook to
advance its knowledge of moisture resilience and also the
teamwork that went into determining the optimum use of mass
timber with other materials. Nordic has its own team of product
engineers and EllisDon is able to draw upon extensive in-house
expertise.
“Centennial College is a good example of a (mass timber) job
with multiple concrete cores and a concrete podium that allowed
that design team and client to really achieve what was the
optimum delivery of those goals – carbon sustainability,
esthetics,” said Gaglione.
Davenport said the pre-project moisture testing program enabled
the team to assess different coatings and membranes.
“What would we do to mitigate that risk of wood getting too wet
during construction, one, and two, what happens if the wood does
get wet during construction?” said Davenport. “What’s our backup
plan?”
T3 Sterling Road is an eight-storey timber-based office building
in Toronto’s Junction Triangle designed as a creative office
campus. It was completed last year. The architects were DLR
Group and WZMH Architects, with EllisDon as the general
contractor.
The structure used Dowel Laminated Timber (DLT) floors,
supported by glulam post and beam framing. Steel brace frames
act as the lateral system.
Davenport said the use of DLT was an opportunity to showcase
innovation from StructureCraft, based in Abbotsford, B.C. DLT
has proved so successful that in February the firm spun off a
new subsidiary, DowelLam.
The product is engineered to allow use of single spans up to 60
feet for roofs and 32 feet for floors.
“StructureCraft produces that product in Canada and it’s a great
product,” said Davenport.
Meanwhile, across the country, the drive for innovation in the
sector continues. EllisDon has developed a hybrid panel product
and is patenting a full mass timber modular system. The use of
mass timber in facades may be just around the corner
“We’re going to keep pushing the envelope on doing research and
development and things like the hybrid panel,” said Davenport.
“Stay tuned.”
Source:
canada.constructconnect.com