Interior view of low rise Crawford Bay Elementary-Secondary School main hallway showing hybrid construction utilizing paneling, post + beam, and a roof of stacked wood planks

Ray Wolfe on school design

Crawford Bay Elementary | Photo credit: Witmar Abele, courtesy of KMBR Architects Planners Inc.

Ray Wolfe discusses the benefits of wood construction in schools and why going taller makes sense in urban areas

In this special episode of the Construction Record podcast (external link), Ray Wolfe, an architect and partner at Thinkspace Architecture Planning Interior Design Ltd. discusses Design options for three and four-storey wood school buildings in British Columbia, a report prepared by thinkspace and Fast + Epp for the Canadian Wood Council and Wood Works BC.

Wolfe discusses the need for taller wood-based institutional buildings like schools particularly in cities like Vancouver where real estate is at a premium. Wolfe also goes into the other benefits of wood construction both for schools and other buildings and the progress made as wood becomes a more prevalent choice for the construction of many different types of structures.

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