n:w explains
September 20, 2019

Timber is top of the class in Abbotsford

Located seventy kilometres east of Vancouver in the Fraser Valley, Abbotsford Senior Secondary School features wood as part of a major rehabilitation and replacement project.

Central to its design, and crowning the school’s three-storey structure, is an intricate and impressive timber rotunda roof built of exposed glue-laminated timber and wood decking. School principal and educator Rob Comeau shares how wood is making the school a place where students feel at home, whether they’re enjoying a piano concert in the rotunda or getting hands-on experience building a tiny wood house as part of their green technology program.

Q: Why did you pursue a career in education? 

A: I was born and raised in Alberta on a farm. I  did my undergrad in agriculture and came out at the wrong time to be a farmer and rancher in the early 1980s. I went to my second love, which was teaching.

Q: Describe your connection to wood as a  building material.

A: When working on the farm, wood was a  tool. It was a fence post, it was a crossbeam, it was the outside of a grain bin. It was simply functional. On the farm, it wasn’t meant to create an emotion, but here in BC, you see the craftsmanship that people can put into the design of a building and how beautiful wood can look.

Q: What makes a school well designed? 

A: Open spaces and light are some of the best design qualities in a school. If you’re in a dark,  dingy cubicle, you’re not feeling very good about where you are. When you can see light and the natural craftsmanship of wood that exists here, those are good design features. That’s BC architecture—light, wood, and space.

Q: Abbotsford Senior Secondary School underwent a major rehabilitation and replacement project. Can you elaborate on how wood was used in the structural and finishing components? 

A: It’s a blend of old meets new and it’s done in a classy way. When you walk in, you’re immediately drawn to the grandeur of the rotunda. There are some very interesting design pieces that catch your eye when you come in. Aesthetically, wood is beautiful, and it speaks to who we are as British Columbians.

Q: How did the new design of the school reuse some of the existing wood from the original structure? 

A: When they took the ceiling out, they found beautiful rafters. They looked at them and  they said, “We can’t destroy this.” We’ve exposed those rafters, stained them, and it is the most gorgeous, inviting gym that you’d ever want to walk into. And some of the older parents still recognize the wood from beams we’ve repurposed as seats in our rotunda. It’s a conversation starter of their memories and time in the school. Now our international baccalaureate business class is going to open up a coffee shop and we’re going to take those remaining reclaimed beams and make them into the countertops and high-top tables—refashioning that wood one more time to create another wonderful part of the building. Wood has a way of speaking to you, years, even decades later.

Q: Research is demonstrating that the visual presence of wood indoors can significantly reduce stress levels. Do you experience this in your school? 

A: I think you definitely feel better once you’ve been in a space that incorporates wood. It clears your head. We often have students that just come to the rotunda to be there, enjoy the space, and hang out. It’s open and the wood beams are beautiful and inviting. I think it helps with anxiety.

Read the full article in the Naturally Wood e-book.

Glue-laminated timber (Glulam), paneling, plywood, and solid-sawn heavy timbers were combined to create the concentric circles shown in this upward interior image of the Abbotsford Senior Secondary School ceiling
Community + Recreation

Abbotsford Senior Secondary School

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