Environmental design
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Rent-free months and gift cards: How Toronto-area landlords are vying for tenants
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Program offers a promising future
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 23, 2025Infill housing is not the enemy of nature
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 20, 2025Leaving auto repair life in the rear-view
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jul. 7, 2022Greenhouse sprouts in inner-city neighbourhood
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021Short-term housing, on-site counselling seek to address veteran homelessness
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021We’re still fighting for basic accessibility
4 minute read Friday, Oct. 1, 2021People with disabilities have to fight for basic accessibility every day – and it's exhausting! I live with a disability that requires me to use crutches to get around. I work as a dance educator with students that have various disabilities. I’ve learned first-hand that "accessibility" is a word that is thrown around plenty but largely ignored in practice. It’s time this changed.
We live in a society with so much abundance of knowledge and experience to create accessible spaces for all, yet we are still so far behind. Accessibility is a basic right, enshrined in the Accessible Canada Act, adopted in 2019 to create a barrier-free Canada and enable the full and equal participation of persons with disability in all aspects of life.
Canada also joined the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to protect and promote the rights and dignities of persons with disabilities “without discrimination and on an equal basis with others.”
Yet I still encounter inaccessible spaces almost every day.
Renewed museum showcases history of former municipality with wealth of artifacts
6 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 26, 2021WAG's angular architecture combines form, function in a building both timeless and of its time
8 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 24, 2021Winnipeg School Division to review all its schools named after people
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 23, 2021Roads quieted by COVID fill with birdsong: study
4 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 16, 2026Custom-crafted dog kennels more plush than penal
8 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 10, 2021GLAZED windows and limits on lighting are options the City of Winnipeg is considering to save birds from flying into buildings.
Approximately 25 million birds die in Canada annually by colliding with windows, according to a study used as part of the city’s research into the problem.
“We’re losing our birds, especially our migratory birds, at a really fast rate,” said Kevin Fraser, a University of Manitoba associate professor who studies the species. “Light and windows are huge threats.”
Winnipeg is part of the Mississippi flyway, a major migration route for birds.