Awards of Excellence — 2015 Recipient | Royal Architectural Institute of Canada

Awards of Excellence — 2015 Recipient

The Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS)
Vancouver
BC
Award Category: 
Green Building (Administered in partnership with the Canada Green Building Council)

Perkins+Will

Lead design architect(s): 

Peter Busby, FRAIC

The Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS) at the University of British Columbia (UBC) was completed in 2011. The architect is Peter Busby, FRAIC, of Perkins + Will, a global architecture firm with offices in Canada.

Conceived by Nobel laureate and UBC environmental scientist John Robinson, the CIRS is an internationally recognized research institution whose mission is to accelerate the adoption of sustainable building and urban development.

The LEED Platinum certified building houses 200 people from private, public, and non-government organization sectors who work together to advance innovation and implementation of in sustainable technology and building practices.

The 5,675-square-metre structure is one of the few buildings worldwide that is considered regenerative. It achieves net-positive energy, net-zero water, and net-zero carbon in construction and operations.

Pursuing the Living Building Challenge,the built environment's most rigorous performance standard, the CIRS harvests sunlight, captures waste heat from a nearby building, and exchanges heating and cooling with the ground. It returns 600-megawatt-hours of surplus energy back to campus while removing 170 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions annually.

Jury Comment(s): 

“With a strong focus on natural light and ventilation, the CIRS integrates a full range of sustainable design strategies,” said the three-member jury.

“CIRS uses both passive and innovative approaches to sustainability to create architecture that is also a tool for research. It offers many strategies that are transferable to other building types.”

Click for full version: 
CIRS was designed to be ‘net positive’ in seven different ways—net-positive energy; structural carbon neutrality; operational carbon; net-zero water; turning passive occupants into active inhabitants; promoting health and productivity; and promoting happiness

Image: Perkins+Will

The 450-seat auditorium is daylit from above

Photo: Martin Tessler

Building integrated photovoltaics account for almost 10% of the energy produced

Photo: Martin Tessler

The living roof on the roof of the auditorium provides a courtyard amenity for office users

Photo: Martin Tessler

A pre-existing ‘desire line’ that cuts through the site was retained

Photo: Martin Tessler

The living screen is planted with deciduous vines—once grown in, it will act as a dynamic shading device that responds to seasonal change

Photo: Martin Tessler

North and West elevation

Photo: Martin Tessler

Large windows for optimal daylighting

Photo: Martin Tessler

The atrium is an educational space where all of CIRS’s visible sustainable strategies are on display

Photo: Martin Tessler