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Canadian Architect

[REV]. -- Vol. 67, no. 7 (oct., 2022). -- , . -- . -- Canadian Architect

  Contenido parcial: Our editorial opens the issue by looking at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2022 report. - Cities are starting to come on board, implementing carbon budgets in both new and existing buildings. A group called Rise for Architecture has been working at implementing an architecture policy for Canada. - One of the largest scale projects aiming to recalibrate the relationship between built infrastructures and natural ecologies is taking place in Toronto’s Port Lands. - Sustainability research is taking place in different segments of the building industry. We report on an Alberta design-build firm exploring panellized net-zero retrofits in the Canadian market. We also hear from Integral Group about the huge embodied carbon impact of mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems. - In the AIA Canada Society Journal, embedded within our pages, an interview with Angela Brooks and Lawrence Scarpa, winners of the 2022 AIA Gold Medal, probes how sustainability, housing affordability, and design innovation are interwoven. - The issue is rounded out by reviews of two projects that build on—and add value to existing urban infrastructures. North of Toronto, MJMA and Stantec have elegantly transformed the De Havilland plant at the former Downsview airport into an aviation technician training facility for Centennial College. And in Montreal, the city has emerged from pandemic lockdowns to a new artistic installation by Claude Cormier et associés.
  ISSN: 00082872

  1. 
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Lam, Elsa
Canadian Architect [REV]. -- Vol. 67, no. 7 (oct., 2022). -- Ontario : Southam Magazine Group, 2022. -- Canadian Architect

Contenido parcial: Our editorial opens the issue by looking at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2022 report. - Cities are starting to come on board, implementing carbon budgets in both new and existing buildings. A group called Rise for Architecture has been working at implementing an architecture policy for Canada. - One of the largest scale projects aiming to recalibrate the relationship between built infrastructures and natural ecologies is taking place in Toronto’s Port Lands. - Sustainability research is taking place in different segments of the building industry. We report on an Alberta design-build firm exploring panellized net-zero retrofits in the Canadian market. We also hear from Integral Group about the huge embodied carbon impact of mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems. - In the AIA Canada Society Journal, embedded within our pages, an interview with Angela Brooks and Lawrence Scarpa, winners of the 2022 AIA Gold Medal, probes how sustainability, housing affordability, and design innovation are interwoven. - The issue is rounded out by reviews of two projects that build on—and add value to existing urban infrastructures. North of Toronto, MJMA and Stantec have elegantly transformed the De Havilland plant at the former Downsview airport into an aviation technician training facility for Centennial College. And in Montreal, the city has emerged from pandemic lockdowns to a new artistic installation by Claude Cormier et associés.
ISSN: 00082872

1. ARQUITECTOS CANADIENSES
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