Business

Clark Builders wins $91.1M British Columbia school build

An article from
site logo

Project Wins

The contractor’s parent firm Turner Construction said the new school will feature a geo-exchange HVAC system and incorporate mass timber elements.


Published March 25, 2024

A rendering shows a vision of the new George Pringle Secondary Schools, which is set to open in 2027.


Clark Builders, which focuses on institutional, commercial and industrial builds, won the project via a competitive bidding process.


Courtesy of Turner Construction

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Award: George Pringle Secondary School
Value: $91.1 million
Location: West Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
Clients: Central Okanagan Public Schools

Edmonton, Alberta-based Clark Builders is heading back to the classroom with a CA$124 million ($91.1 million) contract to build a new secondary school in British Columbia, Canada. 

Parent firm Turner Construction, which is headquartered in New York City, touted Clark’s win of a design-build contract for the new George Pringle Secondary School in the city of West Kelowna in a news release. Clark snagged the project via a competitive bid process with Central Okanagan Public Schools.

The project is another feather in the education portfolio of Clark, which serves institutional, commercial and industrial clients across Western and Northern Canada. Last year, the firm teamed up with Turner to build a $54.5 million mass timber student housing facility at the University of Fraser Valley in British Columbia. 

The school will be built with greenhouse gas and energy reduction strategies achieved through a sustainable geo-exchange system for heating and cooling. The energy efficient design features also includes heat recovery, building automation and lighting control, and incorporates mass timber components. 

The school will accommodate 1,200 students, Turner said, and is slated to open for the September 2027 school year.

Related Articles

Back to top button