Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Surrey’s Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre honoured for design excellence

Darpan News Desk, 14 Apr, 2016 03:11 PM

    Surrey’s new Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre has received top honours for innovation and technical excellence.  The Lieutenant Governor's Award for Engineering Excellence was presented to Fast + Epp for the structural design of the Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre in Surrey. The ambitious and daring project involved designing the roof to resemble a gently undulating and metaphorically appropriate wave form.

    “This recognition highlights the efforts we place in having unique and innovative architectural design in our new civic facilities,” said Mayor Linda Hepner. “With the record numbers of users at Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre, the facility is already a winner with our residents and families.  Now with this award, I am proud to say that our newest aquatic facility has achieved our goal of both form and function.”

    The prestigious award was presented at the annual Awards for Engineering Excellence Gala which honours the innovation and technical excellence of Association of Consulting Engineering Companies British Columbia (ACEC-BC) member firms. 

    The $55-million Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre was constructed using a highly unusual structural system – a novel hanging timber catenary roof suspended between concrete buttresses and free-spanning 55 metres. Rather than employ conventional steel roof trusses, glue-laminated timber ‘cables’ were introduced, reducing the effective structural depth by 90 per cent. This served to reduce building volumes and energy costs, sequester carbon, and provide the community with an architecturally striking and functionally efficient recreational environment. 

    The Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre is equipped with a 10-lane, 50-metre pool; universal change rooms and a 9,000-square-foot fitness area. More information about the aquatic centre can be found here.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Road Serves As Emergency Runway For Pilot Experiencing Trouble

    B.C. Road Serves As Emergency Runway For Pilot Experiencing Trouble
    The pilot of a single-engine plane was forced to make an emergency landing on a road in British Columbia's Interior on Wednesday.

    B.C. Road Serves As Emergency Runway For Pilot Experiencing Trouble

    B.C. Businesses Call On Christy Clark To Lift Carbon Tax Freeze, Introduce Annual Hikes

    More than 130 businesses have signed a letter urging Clark to lift her government's four-year freeze on the carbon tax at $30 per tonne and introduce annual increases of $10 per tonne, starting in July 2018.

    B.C. Businesses Call On Christy Clark To Lift Carbon Tax Freeze, Introduce Annual Hikes

    Plane Carrying Late Jean Lapierre's Brother-in-Law Makes Emergency Landing After Engine Trouble

    Plane Carrying Late Jean Lapierre's Brother-in-Law Makes Emergency Landing After Engine Trouble
    The twin-engine plane, a Jetstream 32, had left the St-Hubert airport near Montreal on Wednesday night and made a stop in Quebec City on its way to the Iles-de-la-Madeleine.

    Plane Carrying Late Jean Lapierre's Brother-in-Law Makes Emergency Landing After Engine Trouble

    Cops Find Man Accused Of Pepper Spraying Girl At Donald Trump Rally

    Janesville police Sgt. Aaron Dammen said Thursday that investigators have also talked to a man accused of groping the girl at the crowded rally outside a Janesville hotel and convention centre Tuesday.

    Cops Find Man Accused Of Pepper Spraying Girl At Donald Trump Rally

    Economy Grew By 0.6 Per Cent In January, Beating Economists' Expectations

    OTTAWA — The Canadian economy kicked off 2016 by rocketing higher, raising hopes for better-than-expected growth this year.

    Economy Grew By 0.6 Per Cent In January, Beating Economists' Expectations

    Vice Media Must Give RCMP Info On Suspected Canadian Terrorist, Court Rules

    Vice Media Must Give RCMP Info On Suspected Canadian Terrorist, Court Rules
     A Canadian news outlet must give the RCMP background materials used for stories on a suspected terrorist, despite objections from the reporter, a judge has ruled.

    Vice Media Must Give RCMP Info On Suspected Canadian Terrorist, Court Rules