Save a building, fight climate change

Demolishing an existing building, throwing it away in a landfill, is a staggering act of conspicuous consumption, writes Sarah Sheehan.

The Sir John Carling building implodes as it is demolished in Ottawa in 2014. The former government building was completed in 1967 and demolished at a cost of $4.8 million, but the bigger cost might have been the wasted energy invested in the building’s construction. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

This column is an opinion by Hamilton-based writer Sarah Sheehan. For more information about CBC’s Opinion section, please see the FAQ.

Reduce, reuse, recycle: adaptive reuse fits the sustainability mantra of the “three Rs,” but all too often we overlook the green side of architectural conservation. 

Whether it’s a Gothic Revival church, a modernist Centennial project, or a contemporary design in glass and steel, a completed structure has a huge carbon footprint. Demolishing an existing building, throwing it away in a landfill, is a staggering act of conspicuous consumption. And yet this destructive, extractive approach to Canada’s built heritage has been normalized over generations. 

Reusing old buildings is an easy way to reduce our carbon footprint, but first, our thinking about development needs a reset. 

As Canadians, we can be cavalier about our abundance of resources, and existing buildings are no exception. Our construction industry relies on a cycle of premature obsolescence, demolition, and redevelopment. Older buildings are often seen as a liability, while much new development still operates on a “take, make, waste” model — an extractive model for growth that’s the opposite of sustainable.  

A colossal amount of waste

Half the world’s carbon emissions are from extractive industries such as mining; in the last 15 years, emissions increased the most from the extraction of non-metallic minerals associated with construction, such as sand, clay, and gravel. In fact, demand for concrete is so high that we’re running out of sand

For Canada, add deforestation and throwing away millions of tonnes of wood waste, including old-growth lumber, and you have a colossal amount of waste. 

Acknowledging the up-front emissions involved in construction lets us see existing buildings not as future trash, but as valuable stores of embodied carbon. Also known as embodied emissions or embodied energy, embodied carbon refers to the total energy expended — invested — in a building’s construction, from extraction of natural resources, manufacturing, and transportation, up to final completion of a new structure. 

This carbon investment accounts for up to 50 per cent of a building’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions over its entire lifespan, even for buildings constructed with the most sustainable, up-to-date methods and materials. 

Toronto’s Distillery District is shown lit up for Christmas 2021. The district is an example of a successful conversion of an industrial site into a centre for tourism and culture. (Showwei Chu/CBC)

Embodied carbon was a hot topic in Glasgow last fall, as delegates met for the 26th UN Climate Change Conference (COP26), six years after the 21st edition gave us the Paris Agreement.

Joining the high-profile international delegates were members of the Climate Heritage Network, a group of sustainability-minded architects and urbanists like Carl Elefante, who coined the phrase, “The greenest building is one that is already built,” and Mark Thompson Brandt of MTBA Associates in Ottawa, who often refers to “the common sense of recycling buildings.” 

A leader in built-heritage conservation as climate action, Brandt has advised on federally-owned heritage sites in Ottawa, including the House of Commons, the Connaught Building, even 24 Sussex Drive. His firm is also behind Building Resilience, an online toolkit for sustainable retrofits and rehabilitation of existing buildings. As Brandt told a post-COP26 gathering hosted by the National Trust for Canada, “Heritage conservation is environmental conservation. They’re one and the same thing.” 

Built heritage, natural heritage: the climate emergency demands that we undo the established, artificial division between natural and built environments for a more holistic view of conservation, heritage, and sustainability. 

Of course, re-thinking how we value architecture is something heritage advocates have been doing for decades. Yet the not-so-green status quo persists, based on postwar ideas that valorize unsustainable consumption. This lingering legacy amounts to a powerful incentive to waste. 

Developers and regulators need to catch up

Since the Second World War, we’ve taken new development for granted as a sign of progress and prosperity. Think of the Crane Index, a simple tally of construction sites as a measure for growth. Susan Ross, who teaches at Carleton’s Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, emphasizes the growing imbalance: “By the 20th century, architects had completely bought into a real estate process that had made obsolescence its rallying cry, not yet recognizing how unsustainable the cycle of destruction and construction can be.” 

Yet Canadians already recognize the value of recycling architecture; it’s developers and regulators who need to catch up. 

Across the country, there is no shortage of examples of successful adaptive reuse. Converted industrial sites like Montreal’s Usine C, Hamilton’s Cotton Factory, and Toronto’s Distillery District have become power centres for tourism and culture. 

Even houses of worship, often seen as purpose-built and a hard sell for reuse, work brilliantly when repurposed. In Ottawa, there’s Bluesfest HQ in a former Westboro church, nestled alongside new infill housing. In Saint John, New Brunswick, Cooke Aquaculture has their offices in a stunning former synagogue. And in Winnipeg, work has started on Augustine Centre, a hub to encompass arts space, childcare, and a shelter/drop-in program — reimagining a century-old church for a greener future. 

Architecture is a renewable resource. It’s time we stopped seeing it through the lens of planned obsolescence.


Do you have a strong opinion that could add insight, illuminate an issue in the news, or change how people think about an issue? We want to hear from you. Here’s how to pitch to us.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Great Western Railway to reduce train timetable due to Covid disruption thumbnail

Great Western Railway to reduce train timetable due to Covid disruption

SERVICES: Great Western Railway has announced new railway services GREAT Western Railway (GWR) has announced a temporary reduced timetable due to Covid pressures. GWR has said the reduced temporary timetable, that comes into effect from Saturday, is being put in place because of "Covid-related staff absences". GWR says the changes Worcestershire commuters will notice are: •…
Read More
Christians are tortured, beheaded and burned in Kenya thumbnail

Christians are tortured, beheaded and burned in Kenya

Em um ataque terrorista a uma aldeia na região costeira de Lamu, no Quênia, que faz fronteira com a Somália, suspeitos militantes do grupo al-Shabaab torturaram e mataram pelo menos seis cristãos, cinco dos quais foram decapitados. De acordo com The Christian Post, o ataque aconteceu por volta das quatro horas da manhã. Cinco das…
Read More
The Walrus Talks at Home: Our Digital Lives thumbnail

The Walrus Talks at Home: Our Digital Lives

  How has the pandemic changed the way we engage with media? In honour of Media Literacy Week, MediaSmarts is encouraging Canadians to pause and reflect on the state of digital literacy and our media consumption. As the pandemic continues, many aspects of our lives—work, school, entertainment, and even health care—have moved online. The future…
Read More
Court releases suspect in torture and murder of Isolation prisoners until February thumbnail

Court releases suspect in torture and murder of Isolation prisoners until February

Шевченківський районний суд Києва залишив під вартою підозрюваного в катуваннях і вбивствах ув’язнених у незаконній в’язниці «Ізоляція» Дениса Куликовського. Про це йдеться в рішенні суду від 31 грудня 2021 року. Хоча ім’я підозрюваного в рішенні не вказане, обставини справи вказують на Куликовського. Згідно з текстом, таким чином суд задовольнив клопотання старшого слідчого Служби безпеки України…
Read More
UMC's September revenue writes the second highest Q3, climbs to 55.9 billion yuan, and continues to set a new single-season high thumbnail

UMC's September revenue writes the second highest Q3, climbs to 55.9 billion yuan, and continues to set a new single-season high

聯電財務長劉啟東。(鉅亨網資料照)Tag半導體晶圓代工聯電晶圓代工廠聯電 (2303-TW) 今 (6) 日公告 9 月營收 187.5 億元,雖中止連 4 個月創高紀錄,較上月微幅衰退 0.2%,但年增 29%,並寫單月次高,續站穩 180 億元;第三季營收 559.06 億元,季增 9.8%,年增 24.6%,續創新高;前 9 月累計營收 1539.11 億元,年增 17.02%。 據聯電財測,第三季晶圓出貨量將季增 1-2%,ASP 以美元計算將較上季成長 6%,毛利率估 34-36%,產能利用率維持 100%。 聯電共同總經理簡山傑也說,產能仍供不應求,正在跟客戶談明年訂單、甚至更長期的合作。 市場近期傳出,聯電第四季啟動第四波漲價,11 月平均漲 10%,部分製程漲幅上看 15%;外資也預期,晶圓代工成熟製程明年至少還會再漲 6%,樂觀情境漲幅上看 11-13%。 美系外資看好,受惠台積電漲價效應,聯電下半年營收增幅將優於市場原先預期,且明年毛利率可望進一步提升至 44.6%,EPS 挑戰 6.25 元。 聯電2303台積電2330延伸閱讀獲頒清大名譽博士 聯電洪嘉聰:今年營收將破2000億元聯電產能供不應求 總座:已在談明年、甚至更長訂單聯電轉骨決戰28奈米 在晶片缺貨潮扮演關鍵角色傳俄企挖角專家發展半導體 聯電:非從公司離職的前任員工聯電蘇州和艦8吋廠營運正常 維持滿載生產籌銀彈擴產 劍指晶圓代工三哥聯電
Read More
A representative party of the Korean people thumbnail

A representative party of the Korean people

El Partido del Trabajo de Corea (PTC) cumple este 10 de octubre su aniversario 76, con el recordatorio de lo expresado por el gran líder Kim Il Sung, en igual fecha del año 1990, cuando aseguró que su fundación «fue un acontecimiento histórico que propició radicales cambios en la vida sociopolítica del pueblo». Afirmó que…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share