Drumming up green building
Alberta’s Big Oil growth creates an unlikely green building boom in Calgary.
Centennial Place
“In design, in sustainability, The Bow will be second to none,” says Michael Brown, associate vice president of Matthews Southwest, the developer behind the project. “There is nothing like it in Calgary.”
But if The Bow is intended to showcase a certain kind of 21st century urban innovation, its occupants are targeting decidedly 20th century business practices. The 1.7 million-square-foot skyscraper will be taken up entirely by EnCana, Canada’s largest oil and gas producer and a driving force behind the exploration of Alberta’s oil-rich tar sands. But can a city be at once the headquarters for the country’s petroleum industry and a leader in the development of sustainable building policies?
Black gold
With reserves six times the size of Saudi Arabia, Canada’s tar sands have triggered a modern-day black gold rush—and international condemnation from environmental groups.
In a report released last winter, Environmental Defense, a Canadian nonprofit, described the region’s tar sands oil project as “the most destructive project on earth.”









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