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EP 7 · 2021-05-10 · 44:50

How Root Architecture Designed the $11M Green Gables Visitor Centre — and Why Atlantic Canada Architects Can't Specialize | Kendall Taylor

Kendall Taylor (Root Architecture) marks 10 years leading a lean Atlantic Canada firm — covering the Green Gables Visitor Centre, LEED pioneering, and why family-first beats career-first.

The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record. Or skip straight to the moments that matter, as clips.
Read the article ▸▶ Watch the 15 clips ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:04Introduction and 10-year anniversaryDan introduces Kendall Taylor of Root Architecture; Kendall describes his trades-family upbringing (carpenter grandfather, cabinet-maker father), path through engineering and architecture at Dalhousie, and graduating at 23.1:51LEED pioneer and Canada Green Building CouncilKendall recounts becoming one of Atlantic Canada's first LEED-accredited architects in 2001 via a seawater cooling/PV project at bio; co-founding the Atlantic CAGBC chapter; and serving four years on the national board of directors. He reflects on 20+ years of sustainability progress and Atlantic Canada's structural barriers to green building adoption.6:48Awards — Green Gables Visitor CentrePeer-nominated awards including 2019 Atlantic Woodworks Architect of the Year and a Canada Wood Council award. Kendall narrates the emotional moment of winning the Green Gables Visitor Centre RFP. He describes the design: three visitor-flow personas (strollers, streakers, stairs), phased barn-extension into 12,000 sq ft mass-timber building, NLT panels, hip roofs and clerestory, and $11M budget.11:22Other landmark projects and Atlantic Canada market realitiesHalifax airport air traffic control tower ('building a Swiss watch'), Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences at Dalhousie with Diamond Architects, Governor's Hall at NSCC, and an upcoming Eastern Passage art gallery. Kendall explains why small-market architects cannot specialize without moving beyond provincial borders, and observes Halifax's construction boom (25 cranes vs none 15 years prior).17:49Architect-contractor relationship and team dynamicsKendall on being 'firm but fair,' making mistakes on every project and focusing on solutions, connecting with site supers and tradespeople on site, and respecting skilled blue-collar workers. He emphasizes the value of cycling junior architects through design, production, and CA on the same project rather than working in functional silos.25:00Design-build and collaboration trendsKendall argues design-build has reduced adversarial contractor-architect dynamics; discusses how relationships are forged through shared challenges; praises mentor Noel Fowler for sending him to project meetings early.28:34Work-life balance and staying in Atlantic CanadaKendall on deliberately choosing family over larger markets (considered North Carolina in 2001), putting career second, maintaining a Monday vegan supper ritual with his two daughters, and finding greater reward in relationships than awards.35:32Root Architecture outlook and closingUpcoming interview for a Dartmouth lakefront building project; Kendall's self-described 'late bloomer' identity; goal of growing to 2-5 staff with the right cultural fit; plans to relaunch the Root Architecture website and use Instagram for content; no plans to retire.
// THE INTRO

Host Daniel Arsenault interviews Kendall Taylor, principal of Root Architecture (Dartmouth/PEI), on the 10-year anniversary of the firm. The conversation spans Kendall's trades-family background, his early role in founding the Atlantic Chapter of the Canada Green Building Council and becoming one of the first LEED-accredited architects in Atlantic Canada (2001-2004), and the design and construction of the Anne of Green Gables Visitor Centre — an $11M, 12,000 sq ft mass-timber project for Parks Canada in Cavendish, PEI. Kendall reflects on the Atlantic Canada market's structural constraints (small projects, fragmented governance, no manufacturing base), the architect-contractor relationship ('firm but fair'), how design-build has improved collaboration, and the professional case for seeing a project through from design to construction administration. The episode closes with a frank discussion of work-life balance, the deliberate choice to stay rooted in Atlantic Canada over higher-profile markets, and a lean firm's social media strategy.

// THE LESSONS
See all 11 lessons ▸
In small markets like Atlantic Canada, architects (and construction firms) cannot afford to specialize — breadth of project type is a survival requirement.
absolutely nothing i don't specialize in anything intentionally because if you're not europe it's atlanta canada
▶ Clip18:23
Cycling junior architects (or construction professionals) through every project phase — design, production, and construction administration — builds far better practitioners than silo-based large-firm models.
i just got to know the business so well during that period of time and it just gave me a real solid footing
▶ Clip29:00
Being 'firm but fair' on site — acknowledging mistakes and focusing on solutions rather than blame — earns lasting respect from contractors and creates relationships that outlast any project.
you're firm but you're fair — that's a very good compliment coming from the construction side
▶ Clip24:04
Design-build procurement reduces adversarial contractor-architect dynamics compared with design-bid-build, because the same parties collaborate before and during construction.
a lot of architects and contractors work in the design build world a lot and i think that helps the relationships be better
27:23
NLT (nail-laminated timber) is a simple, cost-effective mass-timber option available to Atlantic Canada projects — engineered two-by-fours on edge, crane-placed in large panels.
nail laminated timbers is so simple it's just basically two by fours on their side nailed together
▶ Clip15:24
Atlantic Canada's green building adoption was structurally constrained by fragmented multi-level government, small project scale, and no regional manufacturing base — not lack of will.
we don't have a manufacturing base here like other parts of north america so a lot of challenges
▶ Clip5:12
Staying in a lower-visibility regional market deliberately — rather than chasing larger centres — can be a rational career decision when the non-work value of community and family is accounted for.
i put my career second my family first and that was never a difficult decision for me
▶ Clip36:51
Designing with the end-user's movement patterns (fast-through vs. slow explorer) before settling on building form leads to more functional public buildings.
we had to really think about how people move through the building — the streakers, the strollers, the stairs
▶ Clip13:32
Drawing on childhood vernacular knowledge — barn forms, post-and-beam carpentry — can anchor a contemporary institutional building to its landscape and ease client acceptance.
i can get into this really easy you know it was very natural for me to be inspired by barn structures
▶ Clip14:33
The best estimators tend to have worked on site — field intuition translates to faster, more accurate take-off of complex assemblies that don't reduce to square-foot math.
the best estimators are often the guys that had worked on the sites for years because they're able to just have that inherent intuition
▶ Clip30:27
Growing a small firm by cultural fit rather than headcount keeps quality and client relationships intact; recruiting in a labour-tight market requires building a reputation worth joining.
i don't want it to grow just by numbers i want it to grow because the person is the right fit
▶ Clip22:50
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
Story · 1:53
i was lucky back in 2001 i worked on a project at bio and they were very interested in sustainability
Framework · 4:23
the challenge was in atlantic canada working here most of our projects are relatively small
Emotional · 9:22
i remember the day that we were awarded the green gables project it was a thursday
Story · 11:13
so it started out we had a big design charrette held in charlottetown
Framework · 12:36
people travel from china japan and this is one of their stops on their route
Framework · 13:38
the other challenge we had was the biggest building on site was the barn at 600 square feet
Framework · 14:46
and then as we were working along we kind of migrated from a conventional barn structure into a post and beam frame
Hot take · 18:05
in this market i mean you have to roll up your sleeves and get involved in all kinds of scales of projects
Story · 20:13
the air traffic control tower we used to say is like it was like building a swiss watch
Hot take · 23:02
when i started the business it was hard to find work and now it's hard to find good employees
Framework · 28:34
i was lucky when i started noel fowler sent me to a project meeting i was about three months out of school
Hot take · 30:24
the best estimators are often the guys that had worked on the sites for years
Emotional · 32:21
my father-in-law's name is george hatfield and he was in the construction business for his whole life
Hot take · 25:27
in this market i mean we've got what 25 cranes in the air right now
Emotional · 35:32
when i started my career i didn't know where i was going to end up my family's been here since 1810
All 11 lessons from this episode, on one page.
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// FEATURED BUSINESSES
root architecture inc

A small Dartmouth, Nova Scotia architecture firm specializing in sustainable, mass-timber and LEED-ori…

Full dossier · 1 project ▸
Lydon Lynch Architects

Halifax-based architecture firm specializing in sustainable design across Atlantic Canada, with a port…

Full dossier · 4 projects ▸
// FACT-CHECKED ✓ web-verified, with sources
✓ VERIFIED
Kendall Taylor was one of Atlantic Canada's first LEED-accredited architects in 2001, and co-founded the Atlantic chapter of the Canada Green Building Council.
SOURCE ▸
✓ VERIFIED
NLT (nail-laminated timber) panels were used in the Green Gables Visitor Centre — engineered two-by-fours on edge, crane-placed in large panels.
SOURCE ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
root architecture incKendall TaylorGreen Gables Heritage Place Visitor CentreCanada Green Building Council (CAGBC)Diamond Schmitt Architects (formerly A.J. Diamond, Donald Schmitt & Company)Lydon Lynch ArchitectsParks Canada AgencyPublic Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC)
// PROJECTS NAMED
Green Gables Heritage Place Visitor CentreHalifax International Airport Air Traffic Control TowerFaculty of Arts and Social Sciences - Dalhousie UniversityGovernor's Hall - NSCCEastern Passage Art GalleryDartmouth Lake BuildingBio Seawater Cooling Plant
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · MEAf0porZ78