Canadian Chinese Construction Association

CCCA member Mr.Bin wrapped up a successful Summer Outdoor Building Supply Event on June 25!
Mr.Bin Outdoor Building Supply Summer Vendor Event 2026 现场全景 panorama, Scarborough

On Thursday, June 25, CCCA member company Mr.Bin Outdoor Building Supply hosted its Summer Vendor Event at 3445 Kennedy Road in Scarborough. Open to the public free of charge from 11 am to 3 pm, the event drew professionals from the construction, landscaping and renovation trades, along with families interested in outdoor and garden projects.

Held under the theme “Share Your Dream Garden with Our Pros,” the event brought together Mr.Bin's various business lines and 11 brand vendors, presenting the full journey of outdoor building supply — from material selection to on-site installation — all under one roof.

Panoramic view of the Mr.Bin Summer Vendor Event with multiple brand booths

Pavers, Natural Stone & Outdoor Porcelain

The event showcased ground-surface materials including pavers, natural stone and outdoor porcelain, with participating brands such as Unilock, Permacon, Best Way Stone (BWS), Brown's Concrete Products, Oakville Stone and Porcea. These materials are widely used for driveways, patios, walkways and terraces — the literal foundation of any outdoor space.

Vendors showcasing outdoor building materials at the Mr.Bin Summer Vendor Event
Brand vendor booths at the Mr.Bin event
Outdoor paving and stone product displays
Brand representatives meeting guests at the Mr.Bin Summer Vendor Event

Outdoor Lighting Systems

The outdoor lighting section featured In-lite, presenting low-voltage outdoor lighting systems. For many homeowners, outdoor lighting is about more than nighttime safety — it sets the mood of a garden and extends how long an outdoor space can be enjoyed.

Polymeric Sand & Installation Accessories

Polymeric sand is a key material for filling the joints between pavers — it locks the units in place, suppresses weed growth and reduces water seepage, often making the difference between a paving job that lasts and one that doesn't. In this section, Alliance presented polymeric sand and installation supplies, LePage brought sealing and bonding products, and CFC was also on hand with related installation materials and accessories.

(New) Equipment Rental & On-Site Test Drives

A major new highlight of the event was Mr.Bin's newly launched equipment-rental line. TerraX brought machinery from brands such as SDLG and LGMG, including compact excavators and aerial work platforms; also on display were Benda motorcycles and AODES ATVs and UTVs. A dedicated test-drive area let guests get a close, hands-on look at how the various machines and vehicles perform. For small and mid-sized contractors and landscaping crews, flexible rental can meet a project's stage-by-stage equipment needs without the burden of a large up-front purchase.

Mr.Bin 夏季户外建材展现场
Mr.Bin 夏季户外建材展现场
Mr.Bin's new equipment rental line, machinery and vehicles on display with test drives

The Display Garden & On-Site Exchange

Beyond the product and equipment displays, Mr.Bin's display garden was one of the event's focal points, showing how different materials look in a real outdoor setting and making it easier for guests to compare options and picture their own projects. Brand representatives were on hand throughout, talking with visitors and answering specific questions about material selection, pairing and installation.

Mr.Bin display garden showing outdoor building materials in a real setting

Free BBQ & Street Food

The atmosphere on site was relaxed and lively. Organizers laid on free BBQ, Hong Kong–style egg waffles and other street food and drinks, along with small gifts for guests. Sampling food while browsing the booths and equipment gave the day the feel of a community gathering on top of the business conversations.

Free BBQ at the Mr.Bin Summer Vendor Event
On-site BBQ and free street food
Free Hong Kong–style egg waffles at the event

One Stop for Trade and Homeowners Alike

As a CCCA member company, Mr.Bin Outdoor Building Supply has long focused on outdoor building supply. By bringing multiple brands, product categories and installation know-how together in one place, the event let industry professionals meet many suppliers and review the latest products and equipment in a single visit, while giving everyday homeowners a hands-on understanding of outdoor materials and first-hand reference for their own garden plans.

The Canadian Chinese Construction Association continues to follow the development of its member companies and is glad to share quality industry events and information with the wider community.

CCCA Visits a Canadian Charitable Organization – Mon Sheong Foundation

On June 11, 2026, a delegation from the Canadian Chinese Construction Association (CCCA), led by President Alex Huang and Founding President and Chief Supervisor Raymond Wan, visited the Mon Sheong Foundation's integrated care community in Richmond Hill. It was the association's first time stepping inside a Canadian senior-care home to see, up close, how it operates and how it cares for its residents. For an organization rooted in the building industry, the visit was more than a tour: how senior-care facilities are built, and how well they fit the bodies and daily lives of older adults, is precisely where the industry and the community meet.

The Delegation

The visiting delegation consisted of CCCA directors and member representatives. Those attending included President Alex Huang (Amway Power Engineering), Founding President and Chief Supervisor Raymond Wan (Oriental Architecture), Vice President Chi Wing Yan, Secretary-General Iris Zhu (Irisky Wealth Management), Chief Financial Officer Jenny Li (Wisetronic), Director William Cao (Hongfeng Windows and Doors), Director Andy Gao (Dacheng Glass), and Head of Development Sue.

On the Mon Sheong side, the delegation was received by Chief Operating Officer Eumie Leung, together with Director of Development & Communications, Director Wong Chan Yuk, Deputy Director of Development, Kang Kai (Project Planning Officer) and Donation Coordinator, who guided the group throughout the visit.

Mon Sheong Foundation: Six Decades of Community Eldercare

The Mon Sheong Foundation integrated care community in Richmond Hill

Founded in 1964, the Mon Sheong Foundation is Canada's first registered Chinese charitable organization. Its name comes from Lord Mengchang, and its mission is to care for the elderly, encourage the young, and promote Chinese culture. Over more than sixty years it has grown into the largest non-profit long-term care operator in Ontario, currently running 1,001 long-term care beds alongside senior apartments, adult day programs, a Chinese school, and other services. The Richmond Hill campus we visited brings three different levels of senior care together in one place, forming a clear spectrum from independent living to full nursing care.

Three Care Models

Resident living quarters on the campus

The first is the Senior Apartment (also known as Mon Sheong Court), which offers a safe and comfortable home for seniors who are independent and mobile. Designed for those aged 55 and over, units are individually purchased with no waiting list. It features 24-hour closed-circuit television monitoring, emergency medical call systems in both rooms and corridors, and a dining room offering a variety of meals along with meal-delivery service. The building also houses a recreation room, an elegantly designed dining hall, a library, a clinic, and a pharmacy, so that residents can meet all their daily needs without leaving home.

The second is Private Care, for those needing daily assistance. It requires no waiting and is privately paid. Many families choose it precisely because the wait for government-funded long-term care is simply too long to bear.

The third is the Long-Term Care Centre, for adults aged 18 and over who require 24-hour health care. It is government-funded, with rates set by the province and standard across Ontario.

Between Supply and Demand: A Community Issue Worth Facing

Waiting lists were an unavoidable theme of the visit. According to the Ontario Long Term Care Association, more than fifty thousand people across the province are currently waiting for a long-term care bed; and according to the Mon Sheong Foundation, the average wait across its own homes is about five to seven years. Behind these figures is a clear trend: the population is aging rapidly. In York Region, the senior population is projected to roughly triple over the next two decades, making the pressure on care beds ever more acute.

For CCCA, this is the moment the issue turns from abstract to concrete — because the other side of a bed shortage is a test of our capacity to build.

Senior-Care Facilities Are, at Heart, a Building Challenge

Care and living facilities inside the home

Once inside, it becomes clear that a senior-care home differs fundamentally from ordinary housing, with many features approaching hospital standards: dedicated nursing areas, physiotherapy rooms, and on-site doctors and nurses. The space itself is designed around the bodies of its residents — beds that raise, lower, and roll for easy transport; dining tables and chairs adjustable in height; activity rooms and dining halls placed on the same floor so residents need not constantly move between levels by elevator.

New facilities push these standards further. Among the Mon Sheong Foundation's current expansions in York Region, the new Long-Term Care Center at 30 Apple Creek Blvd. in Markham is an eleven-storey, 320-bed building expected to be completed in mid-2026, set to become the largest long-term care home in the city; a second home in Richmond Hill will offer 288 beds and is expected to be finished by the end of 2027. Once both open, the Foundation will operate seven long-term care centers with roughly 1,609 beds in total. These new homes emphasize Infection Prevention and Control (IPAC), with each room fitted with its own HVAC system and a private washroom — all of them real, tangible contributions from the building industry.

Building to meet need is among the most direct contributions the industry can make to the community — including in the many areas where smaller builders and suppliers can take part.

Cultural Belonging: The Other Half of Aging Well

A rich slate of daily activities for residents

Beyond the facilities, what stayed with us was Mon Sheong's care for cultural belonging. Here the meals are Chinese, the television plays Chinese-language dramas, notices and printed materials are bilingual, and residents play mahjong and sing karaoke together. The home also organizes a rich slate of activities — dim sum, bus outings to visit temples, group hikes, and singing competitions. A pair of couplets is posted at each resident's door, and when someone has a birthday, a “Happy Birthday” banner appears above it.

These details point to something simple: for Chinese seniors, being able to grow old amid familiar language, food, and customs is a need that generic facilities cannot easily replace — and it is exactly why community-rooted organizations matter.

From Understanding to Action: Fundraising for Mon Sheong

Understanding is only the first step; what matters more is action. Recognizing how urgently the community needs more senior-care beds, the CCCA has chosen to lend concrete support to the Mon Sheong Foundation by helping raise funds for the development of its new long-term care homes, so that more seniors can sooner find a place to call home. For the association, this is both a tribute to an organization that has served the community for six decades and a tangible way for the building industry to give back and take part in meeting a real social need.

CCCA's Takeaways and Responsibility

The CCCA delegation during the visit

The visit gave the association a clearer view: senior care is at once a livelihood need and an industry question. The supply of beds, the standard of facilities, and the dignity of residents all come back to building well, and building right. As a platform for sharing industry information, CCCA intends to keep paying attention to senior care and age-friendly construction, connecting the industry's professional knowledge with the community's real needs. Everyone grows old; being cared for with dignity, within a familiar culture, is something worth safeguarding together as a community.

CCCA Honorary Chairman Victor Oh Reconnects with Foreign Minister Wang Yi During His Canada Visit

At the invitation of Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi paid an official visit to Canada from May 28 to 30, 2026 — the first visit by a Chinese foreign minister in ten years. During the visit he met with Prime Minister Mark Carney, held talks with Minister Anand, and met with former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi meeting Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa
Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa, May 2026.

Victor Oh, Honorary Chairman of the Canadian Chinese Construction Association and a former Canadian senator, has long worked to support newcomer integration and people-to-people exchange between Canada and China. According to his own social media post, he reconnected with Minister Wang Yi during the visit — having hosted him at the Canadian Parliament years earlier — and asked him to sign a photo he had kept for many years.

CCCA Honorary Chairman Victor Oh reuniting with Foreign Minister Wang Yi
CCCA Honorary Chairman Victor Oh reconnects with Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
Victor Oh and Foreign Minister Wang Yi meeting again in Canada
The two meet again, a decade on.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi signing a photo for Victor Oh
Foreign Minister Wang Yi signs a photo that Mr. Oh had kept for many years.
Victor Oh with visiting guests
Group photo during Wang Yi's visit to Canada
A group photo taken during the visit.

As a non-profit industry organization, the CCCA welcomes the normalization of trade and cultural exchange between the two countries, and hopes this momentum will create more room for practical cooperation across Canada's construction and related sectors.