77 Wade Avenue is the latest made from trendy Nail-Laminated Timber.

Every few months, members of the green building community get together on Toronto’s Wade Avenue for High Performance Design Meets Boots on the Ground, looking out from Propeller Coffee at a big empty lot. In not too long we will be looking at a big green building, 77 Wade Avenue, designed by Bogdan Newman Caranci.

As Hines and Michael Green demonstrated in Minneapolis with the T3, tenants love the old industrial post-and-beam look. But the “new digital age industrial workers” and their bosses also like modern big spans, modern wiring, and don’t like noise and dust coming from the tenants upstairs. They really want what I call “new old” buildings, which is what 77 Wade appears to be.

© Bogdan Newman Caranci

Judging from the cutaway rendering, the concrete deck on top is almost as thick as the Nail-Laminated Timber (NLT) below, and it is sitting on steel beams. NLT is the traditional way of building a warehouse floor, made by just nailing lumber together. But old NLT warehouses can be noisy and schmutz often falls out between the gaps.

Structurecraft composite floor/ Lloyd Alter/CC BY 2.0

Structurecraft in British Columbia has developed concrete composites where their dowel-laminated timber and the concrete topping work together to make a strong composite floor; 77 Wade may be similar to this.

Is it more efficient than a steel deck or concrete building, when it gets this hybridized? I am not so sure, but it’s great marketing.

© Bogdan Newman Caranci

There is more going on that makes this a very interesting building. The site is near a wonderful linear park and bike trail, near a subway station and very close to the express train to the airport and downtown. It’s got lots of bike parking along with change and shower rooms.

And, there is really good coffee right across the street, although in this rendering they show it replaced with grass.

Everybody is competing to build the tallest wood building, but this is the kind that makes the most sense: 8 storeys is still tall for wood but not too tall for a building. It’s a warehousey building in a warehousey, transitional part of town, a mix of old wood tech like Nail Laminated Timber and modern design and services. We need more of this.