Lalme’ Iwesawtexw | Seabird Island Community School | Education (Childcare - Grade 12) Wood Design + Construction | naturally:wood
Exterior afternoon view of the Seabird Island Community School with unique trapezoidal cedar-clad roof, built with solid-sawn heavy timber, plywood, and post and beam design

Lalme’ Iwesawtexw | Seabird Island Community School

Location: Agassiz, B.C.
Completion: 1988
Photo credit: James Dow, courtesy of Patkau Architects

Size
2,190 square metres

Structural Engineer
C.Y. Loh Associates Ltd.

Structural systems
Post-and-beam

Project materials
Lumber
Plywood
Solid-sawn heavy timber

Intricate and expressive design achieved without technology

The Seabird Island Band’s all-wood community school draws inspiration from traditional timber-built First Nations longhouses. Completed in 1988, before computer modelling was common, the design was conceived entirely through hand drawings and physical modelling.

Co-design: communication, community and collaboration

The project is celebrated for its collaborative, community-based approach, which provided training for members who worked on the project and drew on principles of co-design—a model that calls for architects working with Indigenous communities to listen extensively to community members and meaningfully incorporate their design ideas. With no digital tools available at the time, the team built a physical model that became a critical tool for the construction team, illustrating how the framing was to be put together and helping to confirm the wood’s dimensions and measurements on-site.  The school was also built by members of the Seabird Island Band, which is a member of the Stó:lō Tribal Council.

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