Vancouver's architecture, by design, was never meant to handle extreme heat - Action News
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Vancouver's architecture, by design, was never meant to handle extreme heat

Experts agree much of Vancouver's architectureis uniquely vulnerable to intensifying heat in Canada, because it was only ever designed for a milder climate, leaving the city with tens of thousands of older buildings needing urgent upgrades.

City 'unique in Canada' because architects weren't preparing for weather extremes

A woman sits on her balcony during a hot period of weather.
A woman sits on her balcony during a period of hot weather in Vancouver in July 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Two summers ago, as Denis Laplantebaked beneath theskylights in his home during a lethal heat wave, he decided the day had come to usethe emergency space blankets he'd been saving for20 years.

He dug two of the crinkly silverblankets out of his basement and hauled them up a three-metre ladder to reach the windows. Using some cafcurtain rods, he rigged the material against the skylightstoblockthe sun from getting in his1980s townhouse.

"It was quite cheap and it worked really well," said Laplante, now 70, who has lived in Vancouver's Champlain Heights neighbourhood nearly half his life.

"[Some of] the space blankets actually degraded in the sun," he noted. "The following year and this year again ... we put some cardboard with aluminum foil up."

Experts saymuch of Vancouver's architectureis uniquely vulnerable to intensifying heat in Canadabecause it was designed for milder weather, leaving the city with tens of thousands of buildings needing urgent upgrades. They saydesigners need to shift back to basic, sustainable building techniques to keep residents cool naturally, because relyingonair conditioning won't be a long-term solution.

A man in a blue plaid shirt uses tin foil to cover a window.
Denis Laplante began using an emergency blanket to cover the skylights in his Vancouver townhouse during heat waves. Experts saymuch of Vancouver's architectureis uniquely vulnerable to intensifying heat compared to its Canadian counterparts, because it was designed for milder weather. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"There's lessons in history," said Donald Luxton, who has worked as a heritage consultant in the city for 40 years."We have to just think really hard about the environment and not try to conquer it, but work with it. And that's more, historically, how buildings were designed."

Said Luxton, "I think we've forgotten a lot of things that our parents and grandparents probably knew about."

Old designs passedin Vancouver's former climate

Indigenous people who lived in the area the xmkym (Musqueam), Swxw7mesh (Squamish) and slilwta (Tsleil-Waututh) peoples had an innate understanding of the need to design buildings to work with the climate, rather than against it, based on their in-depth knowledge of the land.

Homeshadremovable curtain walls or outer coverings to control sun exposure and air flow. Split cedar planks were used on rooftops, whichcould be angled or rotated to manage rain.

"Thereare these innovations of Indigenous cultures right herein the Vancouver area thatare meaningful as we look forward now to thechanging climate and howcan we keep our buildings comfortable," said Nancy Mackin, an architect who studies Indigenous design.

"There's so much to be learned from just having this intense awareness of what's around us."

After colonization, much of Vancouver's architecture used Victorian-era porches, verandas andsmall glass windows that reduced sun exposure and allowed for a cross-breeze, Luxton said.

WATCH |Disproportionate number of people who died during 2021 heat dome didn't have air conditioning:

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A new report says that a disproportionate number of financially vulnerable people died in British Columbia during the punishing 2021 heat dome event. Many who died had no air conditioning.

By the 1960s, mid-level high-rises werereplacing single-family homesin the city's West End. Glass-walledcondosstarted dominating the skyline in the 1980s, proving extremely profitable in a city known for its views.

"In a place like Vancouver, where so much of what you're sellingis location and view and access to nature ... more glass was a really big, big selling point,"said Sara Stevens, an associate professor of architecture at the University of British Columbia.

The problem with so much glass, of course, is that it allows so much heat in, which must then be offset by air conditioning.

"So much of the city was built in that time period when it was thought that [fossil fuel] energy would be cheap and the technology would save us," said Stevens.

Rows of single-family homes are pictured in the foreground of the Vancouver skyline.
Experts say that both single-family homes and large apartment buildings need to be climate-proofed in Vancouver. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

B.C. isexperiencing morerecord-breaking summer heat waves, including the heat dome that killed more than 600 people in 2021. A review foundmost of those people were elderly,had adisability, livedin poorer neighbourhoods and did not have AC.

Luxton and Stevenssaid the city can go back to basics for retrofitting to undo its reliance on cooling technology. Features like heavy awnings, shaded windows, reflective exterior paint and more green space can reduce sun exposure.

"We are unique in Canada in the sense that ... we haven't had the extremes of climate," he said.

"We need to set an example [now] and I would point to the fact that you aren't going to do anything by sticking a bunch of regular old air conditioners in a bunch of windows," Luxton said. "That's the challenge."

Using incentives to balance sustainability and housing

In July, the City of Vancouverlaunched the Resilient Apartment Retrofit Accelerator program, whichoffers $3.5 million in funding for landlords to pay for heat-related building upgrades.

The city has taken an incentive-based approach to encouraging renovations, rather than introducing hard and fast rules, because upgradescan displace residents in acity already contending with an affordability crisis.

Air conditioners are seen in the windows of a brick low-income building in Vancouver.
Air conditioners are seen in the windows of a low-income building along East Hastings Street in Vancouver in June 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"We really have to be sensitive to what we do on the rental and non-market [side], because that is where people that may be are more vulnerable [are housed]," said Sean Pander, the city's green and resilient buildings manager.

"We've heard from those folks saying, 'We recognize you're trying to protect us. We recognize you're trying to help us but we need to be housed today and tomorrow,'" he said.

Another challenge is getting developers on board, because views still sell.

"The heat dome that we had a couple of years ago has not translated yet into major changes in construction standards," said Patrick Condon, a professor of urban design at UBC. "The industry is not favourable towards changes in the standards on the construction of a high rise."

B.C. has committed to reducing carbon emissions in the buildings sector by 59to 64 per cent by 2030.The Pembina Institute, a non-profit energy think-tank, has estimated the residential sector will need $1.6 billion annually in retrofit incentives for the province to meet its commitment to be net-zero by 2050.

After settling on his own tin-foil solution to reduce the heat inside his house, Laplante has since helped an elderly friend install blackout curtains on her south-facing windows.

He said he's grateful to have afix, even if it's temporary.

"I have a solution," he said. "There's an awful lot of people who don't, and I feel for them."

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