Platform-frame wood construction is the dominant residential building method in Canada. Canadian houses haven't been tested at predicted seismic shaking levels because significant earthquakes have either been too weak or too remote to cause widespread damage in populated areas. That means code requirements and research data must carry the full weight of seismic design decisions.
This 4-page document gives you the "why" behind NBC Part 9 and Part 4 seismic provisions. Written when the NBC 1995 was in force, it documents what actually fails in earthquakes (weak first storeys, knee walls, foundation soils, unrestrained cladding), explains why platform-frame typically performs well when properly designed, and shows what special measures exist when conventional shear walls can't fit the architectural programme.
For ExAC candidates, the payoff is direct: Section 2 questions on NBC Part 9 structural and safety requirements often test whether you understand the structural logic behind the rules, not just the rules themselves. This document provides that context in the most efficient possible format.