Mass Timber Civic Centres

View More

The Marpole Community Centre is Designed by Diamond Schmitt in Vancouver

The Marpole Community Centre is a two-storey, 5,000-square-metre civic facility designed by Diamond Schmitt for the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, located in Oak Park. The structure replaces a smaller predecessor and accommodates a gymnasium, fitness centre, field house, multi-purpose rooms for seniors and youth, and a 74-space childcare facility.

Underground parking is positioned beneath the building to preserve the surrounding park vegetation. The structural system combines glulam columns and beams, a cross-laminated timber floor system, and a long-span upper roof built from steel wide flange beams and a CLT deck, with timber exposed throughout the interior.

The Marpole Community Centre targets Passive House and LEED Gold certifications and has achieved a 41% reduction in embodied carbon. The project is also a pilot for the City of Vancouver's Embodied Carbon Guidelines and is pursuing the CAGBC Zero Carbon Building Design Standard. The building's signature doubly curved cantilever roof is supported by long-span steel beams, with strategic glazing connecting interior spaces to Oak Park's landscape.

Trend Themes

  1. Mass Timber Adoption — Wider use of glulam and cross-laminated timber in mid-rise civic buildings is enabling structurally expressive interiors and lighter foundation requirements compared with conventional concrete and steel.
  2. Passive House Integration — Growing incorporation of Passive House principles into public facilities is driving radically lower operational energy profiles and higher envelope performance expectations for community assets.
  3. Embodied Carbon Reduction — Performance targets and pilot guidelines for embodied carbon are shifting design priorities toward material transparency and low-carbon product sourcing across project lifecycles.

Industry Implications

  1. Civic Architecture — Design practices focused on community centres and public buildings are increasingly prioritizing biophilic timber aesthetics and multiuse program layouts that redefine civic identity and stakeholder value.
  2. Construction Materials Manufacturing — Producers of engineered wood products and low-carbon materials are positioned to scale prefabricated systems that shorten onsite schedules and alter supply chain relationships with contractors.
  3. Urban Planning and Parks — Municipal parks and planning departments are aligning site-preserving strategies and below-grade parking solutions with green infrastructure goals, changing how public land is allocated and programmed.

Related Ideas

Similar Ideas
VIEW FULL ARTICLE