Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Honourable committee members, thank you for this opportunity.
My name is Carol Phillips. I'm a partner at Moriyama Teshima Architects. Our work centres on designs that celebrate community identity, embrace sustainability and create pride in our built environment.
For the past seven years of my 30-year career, I have been embedded in realizing large-scale projects that prioritize mass timber construction and net-zero carbon emissions and leverage the potential of prefabricated building components.
These include a 10-storey college at Toronto's waterfront and a commercial headquarters building on a ravine, and these have led to an 11-storey rental housing project proposed on top of an abandoned federal post office and modular elementary school projects, among others.
Of these many advanced technologies, I would like to particularly focus on mass timber and how it can play a role as Canada addresses its housing shortage while also supporting our environmental, economic and social goals.
Mass timber is an engineered wood product that offers a structural alternative to, and can work in concert with, concrete and steel. It is manufactured by laminating standard lumber pieces into massive beams, columns and floor and wall panels.
First emerging in Europe in the 1990s, the technology has been in use there pervasively for 25 years. It is durable, lightweight and, crucially, it stores carbon rather than emitting it, making it an effective way to reduce the environmental footprint of new buildings.
Canada already has a growing capacity to produce mass timber using locally sourced wood from provinces like British Columbia, Alberta, Quebec and Ontario, positioning us to be a global leader as demand grows and embodied carbon reduction in our materials is required.
This industry is uniquely suited to Canada, which is 40% forests, and where 90% of our forests are on Crown lands, managed and regulated provincially and by territorial governments. These forests, as the fires demonstrate, need management while industry needs supply. There is an opportunity, then, for a mutually sustainable human-nature relationship.
In mass timber buildings, architects and engineers work collaboratively with builders and manufacturers, leveraging the potential of digital technologies for direct communication between design and fabrication software to produce building components that literally click together.
Mass timber is factory produced and accurate within a millimetre of tolerance. Its lightness makes it an ideal candidate to intensify by adding to existing buildings, and for quality control, its kit-of-parts approach allows for rapid deployment and risk reduction. It's a natural for the six- to 18-storey residential building scale, which is the missing part of many urban centres and one that suits many growing communities. It's beautiful and renewable, and, just as our trees are not the same across Canada, timber construction allows for the possibility of a regional expression in our diverse nation.
To unlock mass timber's full potential, we need to address some things.
One is procurement practices in public buildings. The design, bid and build approach doesn't support the flexibility needed for mass timber projects. Embracing collaborative methods, such as construction management, streamlines project delivery.
The second is inter-ministerial coordination. Greater collaboration across federal, provincial and even municipal levels could drive timber adoption. A national, multi-level task force could align policies and lead to the necessary standardization that is required to truly scale the industry.
Next is building codes. Shifting from prescriptive to performance-based building codes would allow mass timber to be used more freely.
The final thing is incentives. To innovate is to do something that you or others have not done before. Governmentally shared incentives, such as tax credits, paid premiums for prototypical projects or grants, could accelerate industry innovation by funding manufacturing or growing professional skills.
Mass timber construction is also about fostering a safer, more inclusive and resilient construction industry. Prefabrication leads to safer work environments; opens more accessible job opportunities, including for women; and creates pathways for engagement with indigenous communities and sustainable forestry and manufacturing. It is faster and quieter, which means it has less impact on communities while addressing the housing shortage.
Finally, mass timber's benefits resonate with a broad spectrum of priorities, providing a pathway to meet climate and environmental goals while supporting Canadian-made industrial solutions that strengthen our economy. It is aligned with job creation, worker safety and social equity, and it is a Canadian solution that is rooted in leadership, notably in Quebec and from coast to coast.
Thank you.