LATEST NEWS
Green Building | Concrete | Trade Contracting | Skills Training | Steel | Water & Wastewater | Professional Services
September 1, 2010
KEITH TUFTS/LYDON LYNCH ARCHITECTS LTD.
Giant glass atriums allow natural light to penetrate into the interior of the new Seaport farmers’ market.
Halifax farmers’ market project a testament to local skills
For RCS Construction and Lydon Lynch Architects Ltd., the recent opening of the $12 million Halifax Seaport farmers’ market marked the successful completion of what is being called one of North America’s most environmentally sustainable buildings.
“We’re incredibly proud of the efforts of our entire team as well as the more than 50 subtrades and suppliers involved in construction,” says Doug Doucet, president of Bedford-headquartered RCS.
Designed by Keith Tufts of Halifax’s Lydon Lynch, the 44,550-square-foot facility has been designed to attain LEED Platinum status, one of only a handful of buildings to meet this standard.
“It’s a great success story for the local professional and construction community,” says Tufts, a principal in Lydon Lynch and the firm’s senior environmental designer. “And it was all done with local expertise and know-how.”
The project involved renovation of a century-old pre-engineered building at Pier 20 on the waterfront. The team included structural engineers Campbell Comeau Engineering Ltd. and mechanical and electrical engineers, M&R Engineering.
KEITH TUFTS/LYDON LYNCH ARCHITECTS LTD.
Four wind turbines are housed on the roof of Halifax’s new $12-million facility.
The new market, which opened in early August, boasts an array of features designed to minimize both energy and water consumption.
Four wind turbines are housed on the roof of the facility, along with more than 600 “solar evacuated” tube collectors which harvest energy from the sun. Seventeen 650-foot-deep geothermal wells are drilled into bedrock.
Giant glass atriums or solar “lanterns” allow natural light to penetrate the building and contribute to a “see-through” design.
Tufts says the facility is expected to consume 75 per cent less energy than a typical R-2000 structure, making it one of the most energy-efficient buildings in North America.
Water conservation was also a major factor in the design. Rainwater is collected in a 10,000-litre storage tank, to be used for toilet flushing and irrigation purposes.
The facility has a large biowall as well as a 25,000-square-foot green roof, the second largest in Canada. An onsite vermiculture room will turn organic waste into compost for use in various planters.
More than one-third of the building materials was sourced locally, Tufts says. Materials with recycled content were specified as well. An existing concrete floor was crushed on site and used for fill. Salvaged steel was re-used.
More than 80 per cent of all wood is Forestry Stewardship Council (FSC) certified.
Landing the contract to build what Tufts refers to as “a LEED Platinum plus” building was a coup for RCS, a medium-sized company that competed against some of Canada’s largest contracting firms to win the job.
But building Atlantic Canada’s first LEED Platinum project posed its share of challenges for RCS and its team.
“LEED is still fairly new to the construction industry here in Atlantic Canada,” Doucet says. “So for a lot of the trades, working on the project was a real educational experience.”
Ensuring that only LEED-compliant products, such as low-VOC paints and adhesives, made it onto the job site required a certain amount of diligence on RCS’s part, Doucet says.
“A lot of the trades hadn’t used these products before.”
Diverting a high percentage of construction waste, a move required to gain a LEED credit, represented another challenge that Doucet says was out of the norm.
“We literally had an employee going around steadily sorting garbage and training people about what had to go in what bins and keeping track of where it actually ended up.”
At the end of the day, more than 90 per cent of construction waste was diverted from landfill.
Delivery of materials had to be carefully orchestrated.
Most of the FSC-certified wood, for example, was harvested from forests in Quebec.
Some scheduled deliveries were disrupted by heavy winter snowfalls.
In another case, two Florida-grown trees that were to be planted inside the building couldn’t be delivered “when there was a lot of dust” being generated during construction.
“It was a challenge to get the building to the point where the timing was right to bring in the trees,” Doucet says.
The landscape contractor drove to Florida himself to pick up the trees.
Similarly, deliveries of the tropical plants for the building’s biowall had to be scheduled precisely “so that the plants would survive when transplanted.” The supplier was in New Jersey.
Other challenges included: addressing unforeseen below-grade structural conditions; having to drill the geothermal wells an additional 100 feet than originally anticipated; installing a non-standard green roof; and manoevrering on an “incredibly tight” site.
“There was also a lot of experimentation by our concrete suppliers and installers to get the white concrete mix design just right,” adds project manager Peter Sarty.
The project was funded by municipal, provincial and federal governments as well as local investors through a community economic development fund.
“Having such a signature green building on the waterfront caught the attention of all levels of government,” says Tufts, whose firm also provided LEED consulting services on the project.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- How to suspend a 13-storey tower over a century-old four-storey structure
- Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens time capsule included construction details of arena
- Harley Davidson to roar into Quebec, with $15-million franchise headquarters under construction
- Steel hurdles for Aga Khan Museum build
- Caterpillar dispute a factor in CAW-CEP union merger talks
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 326 projects with a total value of $2,707,501,216 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Friday.
$800,000,000 Waterloo Reg ON Prebid
$235,700,000 Clarington ON Negotiated
CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT BUILDING
$87,000,000 North York ON CANCELLED/ DEFERRED
| CURRENT STORIES |
- National Research Council web wind tool helps with roof design
- Carillion Canada progresses on Ontario Coroner’s building in Toronto
- Benson Steel faces transport challenge on Toronto Yorkdale Mall construction project
- Knowing the bid rules essential for contractor success
- GDP down 0.1 per cent in November: Statistics Canada
- Ontario labour blitz to focus on musculoskeletal disorders
- Brazilian officials allege illegal construction in Rio de Janeiro high-rise building collapse
- Keeping it local in Lonsdale
- "Jobless boom" hits Saskatchewan
- Transmission line will generate shortages
- Fate of glass bridge not yet decided
- Why 45 days are important in the Builders Lien Act
- Construction and design modifications can promote elderly independence
- Inspired thinking highlights this year's Buildex Vancouver
- Industry to discuss changes in procurement
- The Living Building Challenge
- Getting a bigger bang with Building Information Modeling
- Come Say Hello to the Journal of Commerce
- Construction industry safety myths debunked in seminar
- A look at the challenges of smart structural reconstructions
- A look at the challenges of smart structural reconstructions
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Canada’s leading indicator series continued to charge ahead in December (January 23, 2012)
- 2012 holds promise but there’s no denying the uncertainty (part 2) (January 12, 2012)
- 2012 holds promise but there’s no denying the uncertainty (part 1) (January 11, 2012)
- More








