I think wood is an excellent building material. It has high durability, and if the buildings are properly maintained, I think it has a very long life.
When you look at the building code, you see that buildings—except for houses, which in Canada are all wood-framed as you know—are typically an assembly of different materials, from wood, to concrete, to steel. Designers typically try to make the best use of the materials that are available to them for a particular building.
Of course, they do have a choice, and I do see that in some public projects, where the building code allows, there could be a higher use of wood. So, for example, in Vancouver and Whistler, with the Olympic Games, you do actually see structural applications of wood. There's a greater tendency to showcase that province's resource as a wood-producing province. I think there's definitely an opportunity to use more wood in green buildings, with the added benefit that wood does sequester carbon. I think this effect is a definite benefit, whereas some other building materials have a higher durability, like concrete and steel, and of course there are carbon emissions. Then to balance it out, concrete buildings can definitely last longer than wood buildings.
It's just to say that, yes, wood could experience a wider use. I think it's not as widely used right now as it could be, particularly in the kind of institutional, commercial-type buildings, like arenas, recreation centres, or those types of buildings where it would be quite appropriate to use it.