Building and Trades
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Heat wave leaves schools sweltering
5 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 11:35 AM CDTIndelible imprint: Prolific architect’s early-20th century works helped shape our city
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 30, 2026Fairmont Hotel in Winnipeg to donate beds, chairs, tables, lamps ahead of renovations
3 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026Future of Palace Theatre forming as consultations start
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026Vacant property owners overwhelmingly ignoring city fines imposed after fires
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 26, 2026Proponents of solar power push for provincial infrastructure investment to boost grid resilience
15 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 23, 2026Daycare loses playground structure in brazen overnight theft
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 22, 2026Only unions consulted about jobs deal for provincial builds: industry
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Hydro advisory circle brings ‘wealth of Indigenous perspectives’
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 19, 2026A critical project in waiting
4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026Like most Manitobans I live in the city. I live in a home built about a century ago, in a well-treed neighbourhood. A 27-year-old gas furnace heats my home — one that needs replacing soon. I’d love to quit burning gas and electrify.
The options aren’t great. Electric heat costs more than double what gas does. Air source heat pumps work much of the winter, but fail during our worst cold snaps, leaving us dependent on expensive electric heat or gas backup — plus a noisy outdoor unit that ruins the patio.
If I had more land, like those with larger rural properties, I could bury horizontal coils in the ground for a fraction of the cost of drilling. But on my small city lot the only option is drilling 400- to 500-foot boreholes in the front yard. Expensive, even with Efficiency Manitoba incentives.
So: keep burning gas, or put up with a noisy compressor and still need a backup heat source. Those are my choices. But they don’t have to be.
Province has to untie Winnipeg’s hands in fight against vacant, boarded-up properties
5 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026Skilled trades: a first-choice career
4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026Skilled tradespeople have always played a leading role in shaping Canada.
They’ve built, modified and maintained infrastructure that houses us, keeps us safe and makes it possible for us to have an advanced and diverse economy for generations.
Yet, somehow, we’ve failed to communicate this to young people at the family dinner table, in primary, middle and secondary school classrooms, at virtually any point of influence when discussing post-secondary education options.
This neglect around the optics of skilled trades has created a gap in public knowledge about what they entail. Skilled tradespeople have evolved their roles and capabilities in lockstep with the complexity of the world in which they work.
The dangers of gambling on nuclear power
5 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026Dismissing climate science, setting Canada apart from most nations and planting us firmly in the United States’ camp, the Carney government is betting the farm on a “nuclear renaissance.”
There have been numerous indications this was coming. But Energy Minister Tim Hodgson’s April 29 statement to the Canadian Nuclear Association, following immediately on the launch of the “Canada Strong Fund” left no doubt that our investment banker prime minister is determined to pursue his nuclear energy superpower dreams.
As the UN Climate Envoy, Mark Carney famously said there is “no path to net zero without nuclear.” This has been a mantra of successive Liberal governments even as Canada’s last nuclear build was in the 1980s, and nuclear’s share of global electricity production has been steadily declining. It’s also been the rallying cry of nuclear advocates spending big to persuade anxious populations experiencing floods, droughts and wildfires that nuclear power will solve our climate disaster in the making. That claim is false.
Eight years ago, the Liberals rolled out their “SMR roadmap,” predicting the first (slightly) smaller new reactors would be operational in 2026. It isn’t happening. A new report by M.V. Ramana and Susan O’Donnell — Assessing Small Modular Nuclear Reactors in Canada — details the $4.5 billion spent by Canadian governments on SMRs with zero kilowatts of electricity generated to date. Most of that money went to the potential first SMR in Canada, the BWRX 300, an American design by GE Hitachi that uses enriched uranium fuel, not available in Canada.
City working to reduce number of vacant buildings but can do more, mayor says
4 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 14, 2026Discussion paper floats ways Ottawa can help fund giant electrical grid buildout
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026AtkinsRéalis bets on nuclear-powered AI factories amid data centre surge
5 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026City gets $4M from federal Housing Accelerator Fund
3 minute read Wednesday, May. 13, 2026Winnipeg is set to receive more than $4 million from the federal government for 150 housing units.
Churchill project not worth the risk
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 12, 2026Job-site policy cited in cost of Brandon school construction
5 minute read Saturday, May. 9, 2026BRANDON — The Construction Association of Rural Manitoba has said it will cost as much as 20 per cent more to build a school in Brandon because of the labour policy introduced by the provincial government in 2025.
The regulations include prioritizing union workers when adding extra staff and paying a fee of 85 cents per worker per hour, executive director Shawn Wood said.
“We know from talking to our members: if they’re going to bid on a project, just the additional admin costs and the additional cost of that 85 cents per man hour puts them anywhere from a five to 20 per cent increase in cost,” Wood said.
“I believe the Brandon school will be closer to the 20 per cent.”
Developers selling some land slated for delayed ‘complete community’ near Polo Park
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 7, 2026Infrastructure, military spending, economy dominate talk in federal finance minister’s visit
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Hopes rise for reuse of heritage buildings
5 minute read Preview Sunday, May. 3, 2026Water feature: 113-year-old St. B tower to be saved
3 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 2, 2026Manitoba construction groups call for journeyperson-to-apprentice ratio rework
4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026While Ottawa moves to invest billions into skilled trade workers, Manitoba construction groups say the provincial government refuses to budge on its apprenticeship ratio guidelines at the cost of their industry.