BC Cancer Research Centre

Location

675 10th Ave

W Vancouver, BC

Canada

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Completion date
December 2004
Site/Building area
Building: 21,460 m2
Budget
$95,000,000
Certifications & Awards
  • LEED Canada for New Construction and Major Renovations 1 Gold
  • 2005: Award of Merit, Consulting Engineers of BC
  • LEED Canada Gold Certification
Project Team
  • Owner: BC Cancer Foundation
  • Project Manager: Stantec
  • Architect: Henriquez Partners/ IBI Group Architects in Joint Venture
  • Structural Engineer: Glotman Simpson
  • Mechanical Engineer: Stantec (formerly Keen Engineering)
  • Electrical Engineer: RA Duff & Associates
  • Landscape Architect: Durante Kreuk Ltd.
  • General Contractor: Ledcor Construction

Summary

Key Sustainability Features:

  • Potable water consumption reduced by 43% with low flow plumbing fixtures and waterless urinals
  • 26% of all construction and finishing materials had recycled content
  • Annual energy savings predicted to be $381,269
  • $7 million under budget
  • Finished one day ahead of schedule
  • Water efficient landscaping reduces sprinkler requirements by 76%
  • 77% of building materials were manufactured locally and 26% of the raw materials were extracted locally
  • Heat recovery from the chiller offsets approximately 60% of the space heating load
  • Energy efficient lighting is 23% more efficient than MNECB including occupancy sensors and daylight sensors
  • Views for over 90% of spaces
  • The B4 basement level houses one of the largest vivariums in Western Canada

The BC Cancer Research Centre is a 15-storey research building that is home to 600 scientists and medical professionals conducting research into more than 200 types of cancer. It is a LEED Gold certified project, the first healthcare/laboratory facility in Canada to achieve such a high level of certification.

The Centre reduced its use of energy by 42% without relying on harmful HCFCs. Energy efficient strategies include a heat recovery chiller, chilled/heated slab flooring throughout office spaces, and natural ventilation wherever possible. The success of these methods meant that traditional mechanical systems could be reduced in size, leading to further reductions in energy use. Considering that the Centre operates continuously, this represents a tremendous energy savings over the building's lifecycle.

Electrical and mechanical equipment is housed in interstitial service floors between each laboratory floor, facilitating major equipment reconfigurations with minimal interruptions to ongoing research.

As a health research centre, it was imperative that the indoor environment provide a healthy work place, encouraging researchers to reach peak performance. Low-emitting finishing materials were selected to contribute to better indoor air quality, which is further enhanced with abundant daylight and operable windows.

The building includes architectural symbolism that makes reference to the research mandate of the building: round lab windows symbolize Petri dishes, office windows are coloured to represent an abstract of Chromosome 8, and a double helix staircase alludes to our molecular biology. It is hoped the architecture of this building will attract and retain top research scientists from around the world.

Despite its unique green approach the project was finished on schedule and $7 million under budget, contrary to the belief that green design costs more.

Tours: Only the ground floor and the Rix Family Discovery Centre (library) are open to the public. Monday to Friday 8am to 5pm. No need to call in advance.

This post was imported from the 'Greater Vancouver Green Guide', it's part of the 'Green Guide Portal' to the Green Building Brain.