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加拿大最大建筑展览SiteSummit 2026将登陆多伦多
SiteSummit 2026建筑展览将于6月23-24日在多伦多乔治布朗学院的滨水校区举行,采用“夏季学校”主题,提供互动式学习和交流机会,旨在让建筑行业专业人士更好地连接和应对行业挑战,对加拿大建筑行业发展具有重要意义
If you work in construction — or anywhere adjacent to it — SiteSummit 2026 is the event to circle on your calendar. Presented by STOREYS' sibling publication SiteNews, in partnership with EllisDon, the 2026 rendition of the can't-miss experience will land June 23-24 at George Brown College's waterfront campus in Toronto. This year's event is built around a "Summer School" theme, replacing the traditional sit-and-listen conference format with attendee-selected “lectures,” smaller “seminars,” and truly cool extracurricular programming designed for genuine connection. The Summer School theme is more than aesthetic — it will recreate the energy of actually being in school: From choosing your “classes” as if you’re working towards a major, all the way through to the social elements that make those school-year moments stick with you forever. Attendees will leave better connected — and better equipped for the industry's next big challenges. Lectures and seminars will be concise and tactical, offering deep dives that go well beyond “Construction 101.” And beyond the learning, SiteSummit 2026 ushers in what everyone loves most about school: Extracurriculars and those beloved “recess” vibes. Think: an Official FIFA World Cup Viewing Lounge, beer pong, and foosball tables — all built into the program, not bolted on as an afterthought. Because the best conversations in this industry have never happened in a breakout room; they happen over friendly competition, around a game, and in the moments that simply don't feel like work. SiteSummit's "Shop Class" exhibitor floor adds yet another dimension — an interactive space where attendees can get hands-on with the technology and products actually changing how the industry builds. The venue anchors the experience. George Brown College's Waterfront Campus is home to Limberlost Place, Ontario's first institutional building constructed from mass timber. The 10-storey, 225,000-sq.-ft structure — designed by Moriyama & Teshima Architects…