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Timber construction and Indigenous practices a natural fit, say panellists

Don Procter
Timber construction and Indigenous practices a natural fit, say panellists
DON PROCTER - Kyara Wendling of Smoke Architecture speaks at a panel session on Indigenous partnerships in building in timber. From left: Ivan LaRoche, UBC Prairie Arctic Regional Council; Valerie Vanderwyk, Aboriginal Apprenticeship Board of Ontario; and Patrick Chouinard, Element5.

The connection between timber construction and First Nations communities goes back ages, long before today鈥檚 mass timber movement in major cities such as Toronto.

That movement should grow, however, in Indigenous communities as relationships are forged between mass timber proponents and First Nations partners.

Patrick Chouinard, of mass timber manufacturer , said he hopes more Indigenous fabrication centres for mass timber can be established by Element5 in First Nations communities.

He said Element5 could produce 鈥渢ruckloads of billets鈥 and ship them to Indigenous areas to set up in First Nations-owned facilities for fabrication tailored to local projects.

鈥淭hey own their own projects, hire local labour.鈥

Chouinard was a conference speaker on a panel session on Indigenous collaboration.

鈥淢ass timber generally is ideally suited for First Nations communities because you can use it for so many kinds of buildings,鈥 he said, pointing out firehalls to housing as examples.

Among 鈥渢he most beautiful buildings in mass timber are in Indigenous communities,鈥 he said at the conference sponsored by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry in partnership with the. The conference was organized by Mike Yorke.

鈥淭hey have figured out how to integrate these buildings with nature and with their culture.鈥

When Element5 was founded in 2015 it partnered with in northern Ontario to have a measure of control over the supply chain 鈥渇rom the forest floor to finished product.鈥

White River is 19 per cent owned by the First Nation community in White River.

Element5鈥檚 first Indigenous project was London鈥檚 Southwest Ontario Aboriginal Health Access Centre, an open CLT and glulam design. Wood was specified for the project in part because of its healing properties, he said.

Chouinard said the company hopes to play a role in mass timber in educational institutes in Toronto to create 鈥渉ealthier schools鈥 and also for housing on First Nations communities because of its durability, affordability and erection speed.

Panellist Valerie Vanderwyk, executive director of the Aboriginal Apprenticeship Board of Ontario, said the board is working to secure partners for mobile training in Indigenous communities.

The idea is to 鈥渢ear down that residential school model of training for Indigenous youth where we move them from their communities for education.鈥

While training in-situ isn鈥檛 always possible, Vanderwyk said creating a support system for Indigenous youth to be successful in educational endeavours outside their communities is paramount.

She said the board prefers partnering with 鈥渂uilding trades friends, partners and associations鈥 that ensure young people trained will have good jobs waiting.

Retention efforts are equally important, she added, noting Indigenous youth under 25 are the fastest growing demographic in 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023.

鈥淭here is your labour pool.鈥

She said Indigenous communities want to work with construction partners 鈥渨ho want to facilitate changes that we all know needs to take place.

鈥淲hen we have opportunities to bring people together like this (conference) who are genuinely invested in making improvements for Indigenous people that is where we start to see the change.鈥

As a training services representative for the Workers Health & Safety Centre, Vanderwyk said she helps First Nations create Ministry of Labour-approved occupational health and safety programs in their own communities.

Ivan LaRoche, of the Carpenters鈥 Prairie Arctic Region Council in Winnipeg, told the conference audience there is a desire in First Nations communities to pursue Red Seal certified building trades but that training isn鈥檛 always accessible.

The Carpenters鈥 council works with organizations such as the Indigenous Leadership Development Institute to develop apprenticeship programs and it works with contractors to ensure those students secure good jobs.

He said Manitoba鈥檚 workforce is aging and collaborative initiatives with Indigenous communities on training and retention is vital to developing a sustainable workforce.

Also part of the panel session was Kyara Wendling, an intern architect at Smoke Architecture, an Indigenous-led, all-women firm based in Hamilton.

Wendling highlighted a number of mass timber projects in the firm鈥檚 portfolio as an 鈥淚ndigenous collaborator,鈥 including Centennial College鈥檚 recently completed A-Building.

She said mass timber is often a material of choice in the Indigenous communities Smoke has worked.

Wendling draws parallels between cross-laminated timber and traditional Indigenous building techniques which include bending and tying multiple tree saplings together to form a strong structure.

鈥淟ooking back at traditional Indigenous ways of stewardship (of the forest supply) we can continue to use wood in a sustainable way.鈥

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