LATEST NEWS
Steel | Building Envelope | Engineering | Roadbuilding | Trade Contracting
February 8, 2010
FLYNN CANADA LTD.
A ribbon of stainless steel, dubbed the borealis, snakes around and through the Art Gallery of Alberta forming the soffit, roofs and architectural elements.
Art Gallery of Alberta addition showcases steel
The addition to the Art Gallery of Alberta (AGA) was designed to be a showpiece, anchoring the arts firmly in downtown Edmonton’s Sir Winston Churchill Square.
While six structural steel columns support the 27,000 square-foot addition, its most striking feature, dubbed the borealis, is an apparently continuous ribbon of stainless steel that snakes around and through the building, forming the soffit, roofs and architectural elements.
The borealis was designed by Randall Stout Architects Inc. of Los Angeles to represent the northern lights, a frequent feature of the Edmonton night sky.
The borealis winds through the gallery, emerges to form a roof canopy at the front entrance, then drops down to create a snow cone, that will collect snow and ice from the building’s roof.
Construction manager and general contractor Ledcor Construction Ltd. of Edmonton chose Flynn Canada Ltd. to help realize the sinuous structure in a design assist contract.
Flynn partnered with A. Zahner Company of Kansas City to provide the fabricated shapes.
Together they worked with both the architect and the structural engineering consultant, DeSimone Consulting Engineers of San Francisco, to refine the Building Information Modeling (BIM) model into a real-world structure.
Flynn and Zahner had previously worked together on the recent Art Gallery of Ontario redesign.
“The BIM model governed the project,” said John Mplias, Flynn Canada’s senior project manager on the AGA.
“It was a real representation. We could zoom in, rotate and even slice-and-dice to get a complete understanding of how all of the components had to fit together. This inevitably saved a great deal of time and resources.”
BIM was the primary enabling tool between the major trades, to install such features as glazing, and structural architectural panels.
Although the contractor’s responsibility extended to the skylights, glazing, railings and roof, the borealis was one of the most challenging parts of the contract, says Art Bundschuh, vice-president, Mid-West Region with Flynn.
“It was divided into 10 sections,” he said.
“The project presented itself as a jigsaw puzzle with no two pieces exactly alike. Every bullnose, every panel, had a unique ID.”
And while the design was intended to make the ribbon of steel appear continuous, the real-life product had to respect the art gallery’s building envelope, which needed to protect climate-sensitive artwork.
Had the borealis formed a true continuous path, it would have acted as a conductor to the outside air, where winter lows approach -50C.
“At a corner where two sections of curtain walls came together, for example, the model provided a single finite line to communicate a junction,” said Bundschuh.
“We took this information and understood that two curtain wall extrusions, air seals, etc. were required to provide a functioning corner, all the while adhering to the original design intent.”
Where the borealis and its supporting cantilever appears to penetrate the envelope, connections were comprised of steel face plates separated by one-inch thick blocks of oak, a wood which offers low thermal conductivity.
This design allowed only the connection bolts to bridge the envelope.
“Neil Prunier of Randall Stout Architects was on site on a regular basis,” said Mplias.
“When unforeseen design issues arose, his presence allowed us to make quick decisions which ensured the production schedule remained intact.”
All sub-trades used the same model, interpreted it and were also required to provide real-world solutions to interface with the work of the other contractors.
Steel detailer Empire Iron Works, for example, took computer modeling information to cut the structural steel precisely, using lasers at its Edmonton plant.
“The gallery is in downtown Edmonton, thus manoeuvering of equipment, materials and material lay-down and staging was challenging,” said Mplias.
“We solved this by instituting just-in-time delivery of materials that could be installed over the coming two to three days. So many facets in glazing and metals required an integrated dance between our two groups.”
Panels supplied by Zahner defined the shape of the borealis.
Metal skins were applied to the framework, and then glazing was installed.
The lone exception was the third floor terrace, where a completed assembly was hoisted into place after glazing.
Begun in November 2008, the borealis was completed in plenty of time for the new AGA’s January opening.
“The entire construction team worked together to make this special project a resounding success,” said Bundschuh.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- International Living Building Institute launches new challenge
- Infrastructure gets funding increase in B.C. Budget 2010
- Terrane Metals Corp. set to start construction on mine near Fort St. James, British Columbia
- Society aiming for net zero energy for all new builds by 2030
- Dominion Construction gets two B.C. contracts
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 342 projects with a total value of $2,911,425,288 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
HOTEL RESORT, GOLF COURSE & WELLNESS CENTRE
$477,000,000 Kelowna BC Prebid
$229,795,000 Edmonton AB Negotiated
$50,000,000 Winnipeg MB Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Government takes over Northwest Territories P3 bridge project
- Canadian construction experts visit earthquake-ravaged Haiti
- Winnipeg gets new water treatment plant
- Weighing in on the Tercon Contractors appeal decision
- Construction restarting on hospital in Fort St. John, British Columbia
- In new movie, Hamilton construction worker becomes ‘Defendor’ at night
- ‘Quality product cannot come from cutting corners on safety’
- Shop owner suing VANOC over pre-Olympics road construction disruptions
- Fraud charges laid against former head of Quebec labour union
- Pursuit of LEED could result in professional negligence, insurance executive warns
- Province holding information sessions on new Ontario accessibility standard
- Work continues on Market Wharf condo in Toronto
- Chilliwack Cultural Centre project sets tilt-up concrete record
- WSIB report a clear response to ideas we submitted, Ontario General Contractors Association chief says
- SNC-Lavalin subsidiary Profac under scrutiny over federal contract billing
- As prices surge, China may raise interest rates
- Canadian soldiers repair blown-up bridge in Afghanistan
- Canadian Mechanical Contracting Education Foundation offering Gold Seal course for supervisors
- Slovak construction minister sacked amid corruption scandal
- Historic Kingston Dry Dock restored, enhanced
- Centre for Energy Innovation in Windsor, Ontario built using Termobuild HVAC system
- Canadian Standards Association parking garage standard gets tougher
- Accelerated schedules a challenge for vinyl flooring
- Good materials, shoddy workmanship produces poorly performing floor
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- A dozen incredible measurement sets on Canada’s changing ethnic mix (March 9, 2010)
- How fragile is recovery around the world? (March 3, 2010)
- The world financial crisis goes into extra innings (February 25, 2010)
- More

| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Rounthwaite Dick & Hadley Architects begin work on arena plans for Flamborough, Ontario (Aug 17, 2009)
- Orillia Market Square aims for LEED Silver certification (Jun 25, 2009)
- Designs for new York Region District School Board building features energy efficiency (Jun 23, 2009)
- IPC Energy considers Milford location for future wind farm (May 22, 2009)
- Waterloo partnership seeks LEED Silver for West Side Family YMCA and District Library (May 22, 2009)



