Waterloo, ontario: nrc pavilion

 

 
 
 
 

Building a Flood Resilient Housing for Canada

Through a National Research Council of Canada funded project, the Buoyant Foundation Project is completing preliminary prototyping and testing to develop flood-resilient housing for Canada. The project is being carried out in three phases. 

  • Phase one involves the design, construction and installation of a floating research pavilion on a  storm water  retention pond at the University of Waterloo to monitor and evaluate the performance of various buoyant materials under freeze-thaw cycles.  

  • Phase two involves the design and construction of a retrofit prototype. 

  • Phase three involves the drafting of design guidelines for amphibious retrofit construction in Canada as a preliminary step toward having amphibious retrofit construction included in the national building code.  

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In the face of climate change, the NRC pavilion is a valuable endeavour to study effective means of flood-resiliency for vulnerable First Nation communities. Buoyant foundation retrofits have the potential to empower communities to avoid displacement by reducing recovery time and costs.