Central City is a project born of Surrey’s complex history as an edge city south of Vancouver, whose rapid growth and lack of planning left it without a sense of a city centre. Having identified the need for a large mixed-use development with a significant public sector component, Revery Architecture brought together three clients – the provincial government, a university, and an insurance company – to redevelop a declining shopping centre, on top of which was constructed space for the university and an integrated office tower for the insurance company. By combining the activities of the shopping centre and the University, all parties saved significant capital costs, construction costs, and operational costs.

A large civic plaza – the first urban open space in Surrey – marks the entrance to the building. A series of atria organize the building on the inside and bathe the interior with natural light. Heavy timber construction, historically associated with British Columbia, is used here in a contemporary and technologically advanced way. A design-build arrangement allowed the architects to work with a wood fabricator to develop and build three distinct timber systems, including a wood space frame constructed from peeler cores, a waste product from the plywood industry.

Facts Client: ICBC Properties

ICBC Properties Type: Institutional, Commercial, Mixed Use, Urban Design

Institutional, Commercial, Mixed Use, Urban Design Size: 1,000,000 sq ft

1,000,000 sq ft Budget: $135 million

$135 million Status: Completed 2004

Completed 2004 Architect: Revery Architecture (formerly Bing Thom Architects)