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School Boards & Universities in Regina, Saskatchewan

BusShelters.ca — verified contractors, free quotes

1.4 kPa

Snow load (Ss)

2.4 m

Frost depth

-13.6°C

Avg winter temp

226K

Population

Why School Boards & Universities works in Regina

School boards and universities procure bus shelters for student drop-off zones, campus shuttle stops, off-site athletic-field connections, and staff/faculty parking-lot shuttles. The procurement profile is distinct from municipal transit: typically single-source under $100,000, summer-install windows that must finish before September classes, and integration with campus master-plan signage standards (gate-keeper paint colours, logo placement rules, way-finding typography).

BusShelters.ca has shipped to University of Toronto, McGill, McMaster, Western, Waterloo, Queen's, UBC, SFU, UVic, Université de Montréal, Université Laval, Concordia, Dalhousie, Memorial, and a long list of K-12 boards including TDSB, Peel DSB, YRDSB, OCDSB, CSSDM, EMSB, Vancouver SD 39. School-board work tends to be small batches (4–12 shelters per project) tied to bell-time arrival peaks; university work is larger (20–60 shelters across a multi-year master plan).

The shelter spec for campuses leans toward AODA / CSA B651-18 compliance by default (most institutions exceed minimum compliance), anti-vandal polycarbonate glazing rather than tempered glass for student-traffic zones, brand-matched powder-coat colours pulled from the institution's visual-identity guide, and route-map / shuttle-schedule clip frames sized to the campus map standard. Lighting is specified for safety-after-dark coverage at 150–200 lux at the bench, often integrated with the campus emergency-call system.

Installation is scheduled for the May–August window when student traffic is low; we co-ordinate with campus facilities, locate-clearance, and the institution's permitting officer. Insurance and certificates of insurance are issued naming the board or institution as additional insured per the standard education-sector contract template.

Pricing, scheduling, and special programmes

School-board projects typically run $8,500–$15,000 per shelter installed depending on AODA option set and brand-finish complexity; university projects average $11,000–$22,000 because of the higher architectural-grade specification and integrated lighting/wayfinding. We offer a K-12 stocking-package programme for boards that buy 8+ shelters per year — pre-staged inventory in Brantford, fixed pricing for the school year, and same-week shipping during summer-install windows. For universities running multi-year master plans, we hold fixed unit pricing for 24 months so your facilities team can budget across fiscal years without cost-escalation surprises. Co-op programmes with engineering and architecture students are available — we've hosted student site visits and provided design-charrette support at McMaster, Waterloo, and Carleton in past years.

What you get

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Shelters installed in Regina are engineered to Saskatchewan's climate: minimum ground snow load of 1.4 kPa and wind load of 0.39 kPa per the National Building Code, with an average 107 cm annual snowfall and winter lows near -13.6°C. We supply stamped structural drawings showing roof, post, and anchor capacities matched to Regina's exposure category, plus salt- and slush-tolerant finishes for Regina Transit corridors.
  • A standard school boards & universities install in Regina takes 1–2 days on-site once footings cure. Frost depth in Regina is approximately 2.4 m, so foundations are designed below that line — typically helical piles in winter (October–April) or 1.2–1.5 m concrete piers in summer. From PO to working shelter we plan 6–10 weeks: 2–4 weeks fabrication, 1–2 weeks shipping into Saskatchewan, plus permit and Regina Transit coordination.
  • Yes — we install along Regina Transit's 29+ routes and on private and municipal stops across Regina. Every shelter meets Sask Building Standards accessibility (clear floor area, leaning rail height, contrast strips) which is required on transit-funded stops in Saskatchewan. We coordinate lane closures, transit-agency approvals, and overnight installs so Regina riders see no service disruption.
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