Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mass timber funding for B.C. university projects

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2022 04:06 PM
  • Mass timber funding for B.C. university projects

VICTORIA - British Columbia is helping build four housing and infrastructure projects using mass timber, including a new building at the University of Victoria.

Ravi Kahlon, minister of jobs, economic recovery and innovation, says the university is among those to get $1.2 million in funding that will be used to help build a 783-bed housing and dining facility set to open in September.

The university also has two other mass timber projects in the works including an engineering and computer science building and a centre for Indigenous laws.

Plans for the province's mass timber demonstration program include four new projects, which range from multi-unit homes to mixed-use commercial and industrial buildings.

Kahlon told a news conference on Thursday that large-diameter trees are not needed to make mass timber.

Instead, the building material can be made by piecing together smaller pieces of wood with glue and nails.

He says mass timber can match or exceed the strength of concrete and steel while reducing carbon emissions by up to 45 per cent.

The minister says B.C. could have as many as 10 new mass timber manufacturers by 2035, which could fill an anticipated 4,400 jobs in manufacturing, construction and design.

MORE National ARTICLES

Unvaccinated military face uphill battle: lawyer

Unvaccinated military face uphill battle: lawyer
Controversy over mandatory vaccinations for the military has re-emerged during the pandemic, with chief of the defence staff Gen. Wayne Eyre ordering all personnel to be inoculated against COVID-19.

Unvaccinated military face uphill battle: lawyer

PBO report questions need for stimulus spending

PBO report questions need for stimulus spending
In a report this morning, Yves Giroux says the federal guardrails designed to guide spending decisions appear to have been met, suggesting any stimulus should be wound down before the fiscal year ends in March.

PBO report questions need for stimulus spending

Ship at 'high' readiness for NATO mission: admiral

Ship at 'high' readiness for NATO mission: admiral
Due to COVID-19 restrictions, families weren't permitted on the wharf in Halifax for the traditional sendoff as the HMCS Montreal pulled away from the jetty and its 240 crew members set off for the six-month deployment.

Ship at 'high' readiness for NATO mission: admiral

Annual inflation hits 30-year high in December

Annual inflation hits 30-year high in December
Statistics Canada reported Wednesday that the annual pace of inflation climbed in December to 4.8 per cent, a pace that hasn't been seen since September 1991.

Annual inflation hits 30-year high in December

B.C. welcomes more than 200 Afghan refugees

B.C. welcomes more than 200 Afghan refugees
Sean Fraser, Canada's minister responsible for refugees, says the latest arrivals are among a total of 7,000 refugees that have now been airlifted to various parts of Canada.

B.C. welcomes more than 200 Afghan refugees

Two people injured in Whalley shooting

Two people injured in Whalley shooting
On January 19, 2022 shortly after 3:00 a.m. Surrey RCMP responded to the report of shots fired inside a warming center in the 10600-block of King George Boulevard. Two people were located with injuries believed to be gunshot wounds. Both victims were transported to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and have since been released.

Two people injured in Whalley shooting