British Columbian homes and workplaces will benefit from more made-in-B.C. solutions aimed at reducing building energy costs and pollution.
The CleanBC Building Innovation (CBBI) Fund is supporting 21 state-of-the-art projects that demonstrate innovative low-carbon, energy-efficient building practices and technologies.
The CBBI Fund provides financial support for building projects and programs that accelerate the availability and affordability of low-carbon building solutions. This includes advanced building designs like Passive Houses, new construction methods like the use of low-embodied-carbon mass timber and ultra-efficient building components like heat and energy recovery ventilators. The second intake of the CBBI Fund received $8 million from the Province’s StrongerBC Economic Recovery Plan, launched in September 2020.
“These projects are great examples of how homegrown innovation and technology are putting us on the path to a cleaner, better future,” said Bruce Ralston, Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation. “Through the Building Innovation Fund, we are investing in projects that showcase British Columbian expertise, reduce pollution, increase energy efficiency and stimulate local economies. By using clean energy more efficiently in our buildings, we’re helping people reduce energy costs, mitigate climate impacts and improve air quality.”
Eleven of the 21 building projects funded throughout the province are being developed by innovative companies on the Lower Mainland. An example of the work funded by the CleanBC Building Innovation Fund is a joint project between the Tseil-Waututh Nation and Darwin Properties in North Vancouver. The CBBI Fund is providing $230,000 toward the construction of two new commercial buildings with mass timber post-and-beam hybrid components, and electric space-heating systems.
Approved CBBI Fund projects fall into one of four streams:
- The material, component and system manufacturing stream supports investment in manufacturing facilities to diversify and expand existing product lines or commercialize new product lines.
- The digital technology solutions stream supports technology development for new or improved digital solutions.
- The demonstration projects stream helps to offset the incremental capital or operational costs of projects that demonstrate novel technologies or applications relative to industry standards.
- The open call for innovations stream supports other types of activities not covered by the other funding streams, such as product development, testing and certification.
Depending on the stream, projects could receive up to a maximum of $1 million.
To view the complete list of CBBI Fund recipients, visit: http://news.gov.bc.ca/files/CBBI_102694.pdf
Featured image: RCMP detachment in Fort St. John, B.C. being constructed using heavy timeber. (KMBR Architects)