Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surrey’s Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre honoured for design excellence

Darpan News Desk, 14 Apr, 2016 03:11 PM

    Surrey’s new Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre has received top honours for innovation and technical excellence.  The Lieutenant Governor's Award for Engineering Excellence was presented to Fast + Epp for the structural design of the Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre in Surrey. The ambitious and daring project involved designing the roof to resemble a gently undulating and metaphorically appropriate wave form.

    “This recognition highlights the efforts we place in having unique and innovative architectural design in our new civic facilities,” said Mayor Linda Hepner. “With the record numbers of users at Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre, the facility is already a winner with our residents and families.  Now with this award, I am proud to say that our newest aquatic facility has achieved our goal of both form and function.”

    The prestigious award was presented at the annual Awards for Engineering Excellence Gala which honours the innovation and technical excellence of Association of Consulting Engineering Companies British Columbia (ACEC-BC) member firms. 

    The $55-million Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre was constructed using a highly unusual structural system – a novel hanging timber catenary roof suspended between concrete buttresses and free-spanning 55 metres. Rather than employ conventional steel roof trusses, glue-laminated timber ‘cables’ were introduced, reducing the effective structural depth by 90 per cent. This served to reduce building volumes and energy costs, sequester carbon, and provide the community with an architecturally striking and functionally efficient recreational environment. 

    The Grandview Heights Aquatic Centre is equipped with a 10-lane, 50-metre pool; universal change rooms and a 9,000-square-foot fitness area. More information about the aquatic centre can be found here.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Chase The Ace Madness To Resume April 23 In Sydney, N.S., With $2Million Jackpot

    Chase The Ace Madness To Resume April 23 In Sydney, N.S., With $2Million Jackpot
    Chase the Ace is like a 50-50 draw in which players buy numbered tickets for about $5 each.

    Chase The Ace Madness To Resume April 23 In Sydney, N.S., With $2Million Jackpot

    Police Hope Changing Technology Will Reduce Bogus 911 Emergency Calls

    Police Hope Changing Technology Will Reduce Bogus 911 Emergency Calls
    False 911 emergency calls continue to be a problem for police in Canada despite changes in cellphone design that are expected to reduce cases of inadvertent "pocket" dialing.

    Police Hope Changing Technology Will Reduce Bogus 911 Emergency Calls

    Quebec Law Professors File Appeal Against Monarchy Law Passed By Harper

    Quebec Law Professors File Appeal Against Monarchy Law Passed By Harper
    MONTREAL — The rules governing the ascension to the British throne are once again being challenged in Quebec.

    Quebec Law Professors File Appeal Against Monarchy Law Passed By Harper

    Stick With Me, Tom Mulcair Urges Ndp Delegates With Job As Leader Hanging In Balance

    EDMONTON — Tom Mulcair delivered what could turn out to be the speech of his political life Sunday, making one last pitch to the New Democrat faithful to allow him to stay on as leader.

    Stick With Me, Tom Mulcair Urges Ndp Delegates With Job As Leader Hanging In Balance

    Proposed Gordon Stuckless Sentences Show Willingness To Condemn Sexual Abuse: Expert

    Gordon Stuckless's lawyer is recommending his client receive a five-year sentence for sexually abusing 18 boys over several decades, with two years of credit for time spent on house arrest and efforts to prevent recidivism.

    Proposed Gordon Stuckless Sentences Show Willingness To Condemn Sexual Abuse: Expert

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage
    The Northwest Passage which he and his doomed crew of Arctic mariners sought is to be plied this summer by a ship roughly eight times as long and carrying 25 times as many people as Franklin's flagship in 1845.

    Northerners Prepare For Largest Cruise Ship In Northwest Passage