$6.95 jan/12 v.57 n.01
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2011 National Energy Code for Buildings The new model code • Provides energy efficiency improvements (25% on average over the 1997 edition) for almost all types of buildings • Contains 245 technical changes that address new technologies and construction practices • Is supported by the Government of Canada’s ecoENERGY initiatives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
Get the facts • Order a print or electronic copy at www.nrc.gc.ca/virtualstore • Visit www.nationalcodes.nrc.gc.ca for free presentations on the most significant changes • Call 613-993-2463 (Ottawa-Gatineau area and outside Canada) or 1-800-672-7990 from anywhere else in Canada The Code is published by the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and was prepared by the Canadian Commission on Building and Fire Codes in partnership with Canada’s provinces and territories. NRC and Natural Resources Canada provided funding and technical support.
The 2011 National Energy Code of Canada for Buildings provides model energy efficiency requirements for almost all types of buildings, except smaller buildings and housing covered in Part 9 of the National Building Code of Canada. Energy efficiency requirements for smaller buildings and housing are scheduled to be published in late 2012.
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12 BiBliothèque raymond-lévesque a new liBRaRy By manon asselin aRchiTecTe and Jodoin lamaRRe PRaTTe eT associés aRchiTecTes is a sTRiking ResPonse To iTs suBuRBan monTReal conTexT. teXt odile hénaulT
18 Brian c. nevin welcome center, cornell plantations
lenscaPe inc.
Julien PeRRon
Tom aRBan
contents
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news
S turgess Architecture wins award at World Architecture Festival; Farrow Partnership team selected for South African Ministry of Health “Centre of Influence” Projects.
23 insites
BaiRd samPson neueRT aRchiTecTs’ new faciliTy foR a ResPecTed ivy league insTiTuTion TReads lighTly on iTs veRdanT siTe wiTh BeauTy and gRace. teXt leslie Jen
Pamela Ritchot introduces the investigations of the Prix de Rome-winning firm Lateral Office into the Arctic Food Network.
27 technical John leRoux
A strategy for recladding the First Canadian Place office tower in Toronto is revealed by Ian Chodikoff.
30 Books
Four new publications provide good reading for the new year.
33 calendar
Interior Design Show 2012 in Toronto; Rural Readymade exhibition opens at the University of Saskatchewan.
34 Backpage
JanuaRy 2012, v.57 n.01
The NaTioNal Review of DesigN aND PRacTice/ The JouRNal of RecoRD of aRchiTecTuRe caNaDa | Raic
John Leroux provides an example of a contemporary and informal application of coloured glass in architecture. The BiBlioThèque Raymond-lévesque in longueuil, queBec By manon asselin aRchiTecTe and Jodoin lamaRRe PRaTTe eT associés aRchiTecTes. PhoTo By maRc cRameR.
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01/12 canadian architect
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waterfront toronto
viEwpoint
LoCated In toronto’s west donLands, the athLetes’ vILLaGe for the toronto 2015 Pan/ParaPan aMerICan GaMes wILL heLP transforM the CIty’s waterfront.
AbovE
With the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games only a few months away, we can begin to scrutinize the success of the Athletes’ Village that will support these highly anticipated events. London’s experience will hopefully inspire the realization of the Athletes’ Village for the Toronto 2015 Pan American and Parapan American Games. Along with the costly market-transitioning efforts made last year for the Athletes’ Village that was built to support the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics, important lessons can be learned when linking the challenges of housing athletes and officials for events like the Olympics with large-scale urban redevelopments. Leveraging the potential of the Olympics to spur urban redevelopment is not a new concept: the Barcelona Olympics in 1992 is often used as a successful benchmark. Signature architectural projects that will serve as sports venues in London’s Olympic Park are important, but perhaps the Athletes’ Village has the most potential in shaping the city’s future. Designed to host 17,000 competitors and officials on 67 acres of land, the “legacy mode” of the Athletes’ Village is expected to offer a 50-50 ratio of affordable and marketrate housing units. If everything goes according to plan, commercial office space, along with a school, health clinic, shops, and public open space will support the mostly completed 1,493 new housing units. The Village’s 8- to 12-storey towers are arranged in a rectangular grid with three-storey ground-oriented townhouses at the base. Despite the attempt to variegate the façades, the entire development approaches what one might come to expect from a concrete housing complex built in the 1960s. 6 cAnAdiAnArchitEct 01/12
Despite the best intentions to link the Athletes’ Village with its adjacent context, the development remains largely disconnected from the rest of London. After the city was selected to host the 2012 Olympics in 2005, the designated land for the Athletes’ Village was sold to Westfield to develop the retail components and to Lend Lease to build the housing. Lend Lease then encountered financial difficulties, forcing the government to take back the land. In August 2011, US-based Delancey Estates and Qatari Diar—an investment company run by the Qatari government—purchased the Athletes’ Village in Olympic Park from the British government for $907 million. The developers are expected to build an additional 2,000 units after the Olympics are over. Despite its flaws, the design, layout and choice of materials used throughout the Athletes’ Village are of a high standard. And since the plan is to rent rather than sell the units, there is a good chance that the transition will be a success given that Qatari Diar has an incentive to maintain the development. In the case of Vancouver’s Athletes’ Village, developers initially believed that investors would be lining up to buy property in that city’s red-hot real estate market. Sadly, they were mistaken as prospective buyers were disappointed with—among other things—the lack of views to nearby False Creek. Toronto has already begun to lay the groundwork for its Athletes’ Village. With 10,000 athletes, coaches and team officials coming from 41 countries, the Toronto 2015 Pan/Parapan American Games share a few things in common with the Olympic Games—notably an impetus to transform the city through speculative urban development. Located on an 80-acre site in Toronto’s West Donlands, the Athletes’ Village will be designed by Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects, architectsAlliance, Daoust Lestage, TEN Arquitectos and MacLennan Jaunkalns Miller Architects. The legacy projects will include a new YMCA recreational facility, the first student residence for George Brown College, 787 units of market housing, up to 100 units of affordable housing and 253 units of affordable rental housing. The benefits of the Athletes’ Villages in both London and Toronto have yet to be seen, while the fundamental mistakes in the planning of Vancouver’s Athletes’ Village still remain. To be sure, the organizers behind the 2015 Games are carefully measuring their risk; in contrast, one hopes the architecture will exhibit greater risk than what has materialized in London, as the city of Toronto would more than welcome such a bold addition. Ian ChodIkoff
ichodikoff@cAnAdiAnArchitEct.coM
Editor Ian ChodIkoff, OAA, FRAIC AssociAtEEditor LesLIe Jen, MRAIC EditoriAlAdvisors John MCMInn, AADIpl. MarCo PoLo, OAA, FRAIC contributingEditors GavIn affLeCk, OAQ, MRAIC herbert enns, MAA, MRAIC douGLas MaCLeod, nCARb rEgionAlcorrEspondEnts halifax ChrIstIne MaCy, OAA regina bernard fLaMan, SAA montreal davId theodore calgary davId a. down, AAA Winnipeg herbert enns, MAA vancouver adeLe weder publishEr toM arkeLL 416-510-6806 AssociAtEpublishEr GreG PaLIouras 416-510-6808 circulAtionMAnAgEr beata oLeChnowICz 416-442-5600 ext. 3543 custoMErsErvicE MaLkIt Chana 416-442-5600 ext. 3539 production JessICa Jubb grAphicdEsign sue wILLIaMson vicEprEsidEntofcAnAdiAnpublishing aLex PaPanou prEsidEntofbusinEssinforMAtiongroup bruCe CreIGhton hEAdofficE 80 vaLLeybrook dr, toronto, on M3b 2s9 telephone 416-510-6845 facsimile 416-510-5140 e-mail edItors@CanadIanarChIteCt.CoM Web site www.CanadIanarChIteCt.CoM Canadian architect is published monthly by bIG Magazines LP, a div. of Glacier bIG holdings Company Ltd., a leading Canadian information company with interests in daily and community newspapers and business-tobusiness information services. the editors have made every reasonable effort to provide accurate and authoritative information, but they assume no liability for the accuracy or completeness of the text, or its fitness for any particular purpose. subscription rates Canada: $54.95 plus applicable taxes for one year; $87.95 plus applicable taxes for two years (hst – #809751274rt0001). Price per single copy: $6.95. students (prepaid with student Id, includes taxes): $34.97 for one year. usa: $105.95 us for one year. all other foreign: $125.95 us per year. single copy us and foreign: $10.00 us. return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Circulation dept., Canadian architect, 80 valleybrook dr, toronto, on Canada M3b 2s9. Postmaster: please forward forms 29b and 67b to 80 valleybrook dr, toronto, on Canada M3b 2s9. Printed in Canada. all rights reserved. the contents of this publication may not be reproduced either in part or in full without the consent of the copyright owner. from time to time we make our subscription list available to select companies and organizations whose product or service may interest you. If you do not wish your contact information to be made available, please contact us via one of the following methods: telephone 1-800-668-2374 facsimile 416-442-2191 e-mail privacyofficer@businessinformationgroup.ca mail Privacy officer, business Information Group, 80 valleybrook dr, toronto, on Canada M3b 2s9 member of the canadian business press member of the audit bureau of circulations publications mail agreement #40069240 issn 1923-3353 (online) issn 0008-2872 (print)
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What excellence looks like
Architectural team is honoured for pushing design boundaries Zeidler Partnership Architects of Toronto and Snøhetta of Oslo, Norway and New York City have won a 2011 Canadian Architect Award of Excellence for the stunning design of the Ryerson University Student Learning Centre. This prestigious award recognizes the best in building projects across the county. The Student Learning Centre was honoured for pushing the boundaries of design excellence. Jurors called our dynamic building a “great visual portal” – one that “announces and animates the entry to Ryerson’s campus.” “From the beginning, we wanted a transformative and bold development for our city, a building that would serve as an
www.ryerson.ca/ryersonbuilds
outstanding environment for our students to study and collaborate,” says Julia Hanigsberg, Ryerson’s Vice-President, Administration and Finance. “Zeidler Partnership Architects and Snøhetta have given us a spectacular design that surpasses those objectives, and will inspire our campus and engage the community for many years to come.” Congratulations to Zeidler and Snøhetta. We are proud of your impressive achievement and grateful for your outstanding contribution to our campus and to downtown Toronto.
news Projects Ædifica’s snackBox opens in new York’s times square.
SnackBox, the award-winning project by Ædifica and MuvBox, has found a home in the heart of Times Square. Innovative restaurateur Jonathan Morr was looking for a design team that would help him develop a unique solution that would fit in this iconic site. Created from a 20-foot-long shipping container, the concept is the modernday reinvention of the old-fashioned canteen, and serves iconic New York street food with gourmet flair. Located on a section of Broadway that is now closed off to vehicular traffic, the SnackBox is easily moveable and entirely selfsufficient. It works off the grid with its freshand grey-water supply tanks embedded in the floor with power coming from a hybrid energy system combining electric batteries and generator. A section of the walls pivot upwards, transforming into cantilevered steel awnings, and provide shelter from the elements. During colder days, heating for the staff is provided by recuperating heat from the generator. The SnackBox’s black and white graphic stripes provide an elegant contrast to the neon rainbow of colour of its surroundings. At night, the SnackBox vanishes back into its cube, ready to redeploy in minutes, bright and early the next morning. www.aedifica.com hdr selected to design humber river regional hospital.
HDR, as a member of the Plenary Health Care Partnerships team, was selected to design Humber River’s new 1.7-million-square-foot hospital in Toronto. The hospital will be the largest acutecare hospital in the Greater Toronto Area and the first in North America to automate all of its operational processes. The project is the result of a partnership between Humber River Regional Hospital, Infrastructure Ontario, the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, and Plenary Health Care Partnerships. Plenary will design, build, finance and maintain the hospital for 30 years, with HDR providing full architectural and health-care consulting services. As the first fully digital hospital in North America, it is designed to support the latest medical technology in a completely digital environment. Upon entering the hospital, the ability to easily access data and information enables users to “connect” from points such as kiosks situated throughout the hospital or on mobile devices anywhere in the building. Once in patient rooms, Integrated Bedside Terminals (IBTs) allow patients to control their environment, order restaurant-style room service, and communicate with caregivers and 8 canadian architect 01/12
family members via video. Doctors and nurses use voice recognition software to complete charts verbally, and smart-bed technology monitors patients’ vital signs and updates electronic medical records immediately. Lab-work specimens are delivered via pneumatic tubes, with results returned to hand-held mobile devices within minutes. While all this is happening, AutomatedGuided Vehicles (AGVs) deliver supplies and equipment to units and clinics, allowing caregivers to fully devote their time to patient care. Adjacent to the hospital building is the centrepiece of the entire campus, the South Plaza, which will support community events and features outdoor seating and areas for respite. The value of the contract with Plenary Health Care Partnerships in today’s dollars is approximately $1.75 billion. The contract cost covers the design and construction of the hospital, building maintenance, life-cycle repair and renewal, as well as project financing. The Toronto-based Plenary Health Care Partnerships team includes: Plenary Health and HCP Social Infrastructure (developer), PCL Constructors (construction), HDR (architecture), Johnson Controls (facilities management), and RBC Capital Markets (financial advisor). The hospital broke ground on December 2, 2011 and is scheduled to open in late 2015.
awards sturgess architecture wins award at the world architecture Festival in Barcelona.
Held in Barcelona, the World Architecture Festival (WAF) announced that Sturgess Architecture’s Glacier Discovery Walk design was selected to win a category award for Competition Entries in Future Projects. According to the WAF’s announcement, the jury was unanimous, citing the Discovery Walk as “simple, elegant yet highly
A rendering of the competitionwinning indoor soccer centre in montreAl by sAucier + perrotte/hughes condon mArler Architects.
aBoVe
emotional...[and] bridges to the natural in a way that is apart yet within nature.” The Glacier Discovery Walk is a 450-metre interpretive walk carved and folded into a mountainous landscape in Jasper National Park in the Canadian Rockies. The walk ends with a 35-metre parabola cantilever, slightly twisted, facing the Athabasca Glacier in the Columbia Icefield. Engineering and design of the walkway were based on the concept of cropping out from the landscape, creating an experience of a natural extension of the land. Designed to outcrop the mountainside, views of the walkway from the highway a few metres above are obscured, entirely separating the pedestrian experience from the automobile experience. www.worldarchitecturefestival.com/news-index.cfm winners of the Premier’s awards of excellence in design in saskatchewan announced.
In late 2011, the Design Council of Saskatchewan (DCS) held Design Week in Saskatoon, its biennial celebration of design. A variety of activities including free lectures and film presentations were held to promote public awareness and understanding of applied design. The winners of the Premier’s Design Awards program were also announced. In the Architecture category, the Premier’s Award of Excellence in Design recognized the Meadow Lake Courthouse by HDH Architects, while three Awards of Merit distinguished aodbt architecture + interior design’s Mistawasis Health Centre and the International Vaccine Centre in Mistawasis First Nation, and the White Stone Business Park in Saskatoon by SEPW Architecture Inc. In the Landscape Archi-
tecture category, an Award of Excellence was given to the River Landing Riverfront project in Saskatoon by Crosby Hanna & Associates. In the Interior Design category, an Award of Excellence went to Studio FIAT in Saskatoon by Stantec Architecture Ltd. Two Awards of Merit recognized the Ramada Hotel renovation in Regina by Stantec Architecture Ltd. and the Saboroso Brazilian Steakhouse in Saskatoon by HDH Architects. In the Community Planning category, an Award of Excellence was given to Public Spaces, Activity and Urban Form Strategic Framework in Saskatoon by the City of Saskatoon/University of Saskatchewan/Sweeny Stirling Finlayson & Co Architects Inc./Stantec Architecture Ltd. And finally, in the Collaborative category, an Award of Excellence went to the River Landing Pedestrian Linkage in Saskatoon by Stantec Consulting Ltd./ Stantec Architecture Ltd. www.designcouncil.sk.ca
> comPetitions
saucier + Perrotte/hughes condon marler architects selected to design new indoor soccer centre.
The winning project in the architecture competition for the new indoor soccer centre at the
Saint-Michel Environmental Complex (SMEC) was recently unveiled. Among the four submitted by the finalist firms, the jury chose the concept developed by Saucier + Perrotte/Hughes Condon Marler Architects. The other three finalists were: Côté Leahy Cardas Architectes, Eric Pelletier Architectes, and L’Équipe Affleck + de la Riva/ Cannon Design. The roof of the new soccer centre on the site of the former Miron quarry will call to mind a mineral stratum, eloquently heralding the structure as seen from Avenue Papineau. The volumes of the building will rise like a series of luminous crystals among the trees in the wooded embankment bordering the avenue, lending a human scale to the project to observers in the residential neighbourhood. The centre will include one full-size soccer pitch that can be subdivided into smaller surfaces for seven-aside play; locker rooms; a fitness and physiotherapy room; an event and restaurant area; and a family rest area. The centre will also house the offices of the Association régionale de soccer Montréal Concordia. Pursuant to Montreal’s policy on sustainable development for municipal buildings, the Ville de Montréal is targeting LEED Gold certification for this exemplary structure. The total cost of the new soccer centre is $28.3 million, with the Ville de Montréal invest-
ing $15.6 million and the governments of Canada and Quebec contributing another $12.7 million through the Building Canada Fund—Quebec. http://mtlunescodesign.com/en/project/SMECSoccer-Complex-Architecture-Competition Farrow Partnership team selected for south african ministry of health “centre of influence” Projects.
Aiming to dramatically improve health and reduce costs, the South African Ministry of Health has funded an international design competition to build exemplary Health-Promoting Lifestyle Centres (HPLCs). Jury members from five continents have selected Farrow Partnership’s team as the winner in response to an open design brief, which called for a new type of health centre. The HPLCs are planned for assessment, adaptation and construction in the rural settings, townships and cities throughout the country’s nine provinces. The HPLCs are intended to advance strategic goals of South Africa’s national health insurance system by introducing a new “salutogenic” model that changes how people think about their health. While the concept of pathogenic (disease-causing) is well recognized, the notion of salutogenic (health-causing) presents a groundbreaking shift toward a vision of
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what’s new healthy living beyond conventional models of acute care, prevention and sustainability. “We have 8,000 known causes of disease, and maybe architecture canada | raic launches new only 80 known causes of health,” observes Dr. services portal. Alan Dilani, director of the International AcadArchitecture Canada | RAIC has launched its new emy for Design and Health, which organized the online services portal. Featuring many functioncompetition in partnership with the South Afriality and usability improvements, RAIC members can Ministry of Health. The Farrow team’s winwill notice an immediate difference in the look ning design was assessed on the basis of 40 and feel of the new portal, including a modern salutogenic and performance criteria. “In this and updated store and dedicated events registrascheme, the Protea—the national flower for South tion section. Africa, serves as a metaphor for hope, healing www.raic.org/notices/miscellaneous/2011/ and renewal, its form carefully placed at the heart portalfeatures_e.pdf of the health-promoting lifestyle centre (HPLC),” said the judges. “Designed to serve as a Vancouver art Gallery’s new exhibition community landmark housing a wide variety of website invites visitors to check into the health, education, retail, library and theatre Grand hotel. spaces, [it] will set an international standard for A new website created by the Vancouver Art Galsalutogenic design that explores and promotes lery gives visitors the opportunity to follow galthe full range of the causes of health.” In contrast lery curators over the next two years as they deto long-established acute-care “Centres of Excel- velop a major exhibition. As part of the Gallery’s lence” in treating disease, the design is conceived longstanding commitment to exhibitions examas an innovative “Centre of Influence” for proining architecture, design and visual culture, moting healthy living. This competition is the Grand Hotel will explore both the design and sofirst of its kind in Africa and offers the winners cial construction of hotels. The exhibition opens an opportunity to build these facilities with in June 2013 and curators Jennifer M. Volland funding provided by the South African Ministry and Bruce Grenville will share their explorations 3:22 PM of Health. SOPREMA_Pub Sopraseal XpressG.pdf 1 11-10-06 in a dedicated website and blog as they shape the
Air/vapour barrier for walls
Designing Ecological Tourism (DET)—a collaborative research platform that investigates the challenges faced by ecotourism in the developing world—has launched a new website to showcase its findings. Led by Assistant Professor Aziza Chaouni of the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design, DET has brought together faculty members from the University of Toronto and Ryerson University, as well as international experts, local stakeholders, government officials and graduate students. DET’s goal is to develop and disseminate transferable tools, strategies, and visions for low-impact forms of tourism, which safeguard fragile environments and invigorate local economies. It seeks not only to introduce graduate students to working in developing world contexts, but also to nurture collaborative research environments that combine the three disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture and planning with ecology, economics and sociology. info@designingecologicaltourism.com
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Work from the illuminating notion that the sky’s the limit.
Julien PeRRon
aerospace inspired by cloistered abbeys and the aeronautical history of its community, this new public library is an elegantly assertive response to its natural environment.
BiBliothèque Raymond-lévesque, longueuil, queBec manon asselin aRchitecte and Jodoin lamaRRe PRatte et associés aRchitectes in consoRtium teXt odile hénault photos maRc cRameR, Julien PeRRon proJect
architect
When PBS television journalist Charlie Rose interviewed architect Rem Koolhaas last October, he quoted film director Mike Nichols as saying, “The same way I want an actor to surprise me, I want an architect to give me something I did not know I wanted.” Being delightfully surprised by architects is what has been occurring for a small segment of clients in Quebec over the past 20 years as a direct result of an innovative govern12 canadian architect 01/12
ment-sponsored program that has allowed a number of successful design competitions to be realized. One extraordinary and positive outcome of a recent design competition in Quebec was the Raymond-Lévesque Library in Longueuil, designed by Manon Asselin Architecte (MAA, also known atelier TAG) and Jodoin Lamarre Pratte et Associés Architectes in consortium. MAA is a
small but intense Montreal-based architecture firm led by Manon Asselin along with her life and work partner Katsuhiro Yamazaki, both of them McGill graduates. In addition to a couple of master plans and a few small renovations, MAA’s portfolio consists of only three public buildings, each the result of a design competition. Asselin and Yamazaki’s work was first noticed in 2001 after they won a two-stage open competition for a public library in Chateauguay, near Montreal. The jury, which included the enthusiastic and culturally aware mayor at the time, Sergio Pavone, had sifted through 57 entries—then three during the second stage—before choosing
maRc cRameR
MAA’s submission. While quite a number of theatres, museums and similar cultural venues had been built as a result of government-sponsored competitions, few libraries—with the exception of the Grande Bibliothèque du Québec—had been the subjects of a competition within the existing program. The Chateauguay competition was highly unusual for two important reasons: the authorities insisted on holding a competition for their future library, and they chose a design team led by what was then an unknown young architect, Manon Asselin. Her second project, a theatre in Old Terrebonne located north of Montreal, was also the re-
a suRReal Rocky landscaPe cReates a dRamatic entRy to the liBRaRy while acting as a Retention Pond foR suRface wateR Runoff. above the liBRaRy is suPPoRted By concRete Pilotis, affoRding unencumBeRed views to the suRRounding landscaPe.
opposite
sult of an open competition. The winning entry was produced by the same team and partners Asselin had used for Chateauguay—her own firm along with Jodoin Lamarre Pratte et Associés Architectes. Again they surprised the community with a delightfully assertive building, set in a unique natural and historical setting. A few years later, Asselin decided to tackle another library competition, this time in Longueuil— Quebec’s third-largest city located across the
St. Lawrence River from Montreal. Longueuil had never held a competition before and might never have done so if public funding had not been so closely tied to the competition process. The site chosen for the Raymond-Lévesque Library is located in recently annexed St. Hubert, a municipality long known for its airport—one of the first to operate in Canadian history—and its aeronautics industry. The building was also meant to be the cultural component of the Parc 01/12 canadian architect
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Julien PeRRon Julien PeRRon
much of the landscaPe functions to collect wateR Runoff, tReating the contaminated wateR thRough sPecial Plantings. left and bottom left liBRaRy visitoRs aRe offeRed numeRous views to the exteRioR, and disPlacement ventilation fRom the flooR is one of many sustainaBle featuRes in this PuBlic Building.
above
Julien PeRRon
de la Cité, a conservation area appreciated for its natural setting. Remembering her first visit to the site, Asselin commented, “You could actually feel the breeze and smell the forest.” This first impression remained a strong influence on her design submission. The team’s starting point was a wind diagram that served to determine the library’s overall volume and the shape of the roof. Crucial to the design process was the fact that in this competition—the first integrated design competition to be launched within the Quebec government’s program—environmental issues and energy performance had to be addressed concurrent with the design process. As a result of the project’s specific technical requirements, a young engineering firm specializing in sustainable building, Martin Roy et Associés Inc., was brought in to work with the architectural consortium. In the competition entry, plans and sections seemed to flow from the combination of program demands, symbolic elements and the surrounding natural elements. The winds shaped the roof, and a cloister-like courtyard— a reference to the abbeys that informed Asselin’s Master’s thesis at McGill— allowed natural light to flood the building. Even the North Star, experienced through two specially oriented skylights on the upper level, found its way into the building. Brises-soleil were introduced to filter the sun’s rays but also recall the surrounding forest. Finally, rainwater fed into two sculptural retention ponds were meant to act as cooling devices during summer months. Little change was made to the original design once construction began. Seen from the roof, the slightly askew two-storey volume has a central opening, reminiscent of Asselin’s appreciation for cloisters. At ground level, the northwest façade is cut away to allow park users to reach the heart 14 canadian architect 01/12
maRc cRameR
the dynamic ciRculation PatteRns, along with the Beauty of the BRises-soleil aRe in evidence once inside the semicloisteRed couRtyaRd. right RamPing and continuous PRomenade-like ciRculation cReates many oPPoRtunities foR inteResting vantage Points and oveRlooks. above
maRc cRameR
of the building—its courtyard—without having to go through the library. The main entrance, located close to this public access, is tucked beneath the second-floor slab and leads to the central desk, which acts as a horizontal and vertical pivot for the library’s functions. Beyond the desk, the southwestern wing is entirely devoted to children and toddlers who are accompanied by their parents to a fuchsia-coloured soundproof corner. Teens, adults and genealogy fans are invited to ascend the stairs, next to the long wooden desk designed by MAA. On the second level, enclosed glass areas accommodating various functions break the rhythm of innumerable rows of bookshelves. Views across the courtyard through layers of glass, sloping roof sections and wood louvres provide a constantly changing visual experience. The reading room, hovering in mid-air above the entrance, is the final destination of a long architectural promenade ascending up through the building. In terms of performance, the design team sought to reduce the costs normally associated with heating and air-conditioning by 50 percent. To reach this goal, the building was equipped with both an active and passive geothermal system. Ventilation was carefully planned using a number of strategies including fresh-air intake whenever possible. Heat comes through openings in the concrete floors, which also act as effective thermal mass. Along the building’s upper-level perimeter, louvre panels made of carbonized wood—a popular choice in Quebec for both its aesthetic and environmental criteria—are positioned at slightly different angles to follow the 01/12 canadian architect
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entRy hall café multiPuRPose Room PRess/PeRiodicals main counteR offices technical seRvices
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above sPecially oRiented skylights Point to the noRth staR while cReating a gReat deal of visual inteRest in the Reading aRea.
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path of the sun. Rainwater from the roof is channelled towards two interconnected retention ponds on the site. One of the ponds is located inside the courtyard, while the other is located in the parking area, across a path leading to the nearby nature trails. One could say Longueuil’s Raymond-Lévesque Library achieves a number of goals. The project 16 canadian architect 01/12
has already received nearly a dozen awards for its design, sustainability and programmatic excellence. As was recently confirmed by a major award granted to the architects by library professionals, the building fulfills its mission as the city’s flagship library. The high performance of its reduced energy consumption and water conservation reaffirms the fact that sustainability
and design excellence are not mutually exclusive. As Asselin notes, “Ideally, in a building, performance becomes poetry and poetry becomes performance.” And finally, competitions are likely to create more outstanding buildings than any other selection process. Quebec has proven this repeatedly over the last two decades, largely due to its unique European-inspired competition program, a process that has led to the construction of more than 30 cultural facilities across the province— many of them receiving multiple awards. One can only hope that other governmental bodies in Canada will come to understand the numerous benefits resulting from the architectural competition process. ca Odile Hénault is a Quebec-based architectural writer.
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vaRious soundPRoofed Rooms accommodate meetings and classes without Being visually disconnected fRom the Rest of the liBRaRy; the undeRside of the main staiR; the BRight fuchsia wall indicates the location of the childRen’s Reading aRea; the ReinfoRced concRete wall at the Building’s entRy cReates an inteResting counteRPoint to the liBRaRy’s uPPeR volume.
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client ville de longueuil architect team manon asselin aRchitecte: manon asselin, katsuhiRo yamazaki, thomas BalaBan, matt Balean, lauRie dammegonneville. Jodoin lamaRRe PRatte: nicolas RangeR, caRlo caRBone, géRaRd lanthieR, guylaine Beaudoin, seRge BReton, chaRles-andRé gagnon, maxime gagnon. structural snc-lavalin mechanical/electrical maRtin Roy et associés landscape manon asselin aRchitecte and Jodoin lamaRRe PRatte et associés aRchitectes interiors manon asselin aRchitecte and Jodoin lamaRRe PRatte et associés aRchitectes contractor tRidôme constRuction coRPoRation budget $12.3 m completion octoBeR 2010
site plan 1 2 3 4
main entRance couRtyaRd Retention Pond wateR Jets and geotheRmal field 5 “the BuBBle”
0 6 PRomenade and access to PaRc de la cité 7 wood lot 8 Red maPles 9 coveRed PlaygRound 10 floweR gaRden
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16 adveRtising columns 17 Retaining wall 18 landscaPed wateR Retention Basin 19 Planting “islands”
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GrowinG a Future a new Facility For a respected ivy leaGue university treads liGhtly on its verdant site with beauty and Grace.
project Brian C. nevin WelCome Center, Cornell Plantations, ithaCa, neW York architect Baird samPson neuert arChiteCts text leslie Jen photos tom arBan
Located in Ithaca, New York, Cornell University has long held an esteemed reputation as an Ivy League academic institution, and its impressive Plantations is no less respected, as it has func tioned for well over a century as an important entity for academic research in botany and land scape architecture. Its roots can be traced as far back as 1875, when Cornell’s campus plan specified construction of an arboretum and a conservatory for teaching botany. Nobel Prize winning research has been conducted on the 18 canadian architect 01/12
grounds of the Plantations; cytogeneticist Barbara McClintock conducted groundbreaking research through her genetic experiments in hybridizing maize. To this day, the Barbara McClintock Shed still stands in the southeast corner of the site as a historical testament to the important academic and scientific advances that were made here many decades ago. By 2003, the time had come for the University to augment and enhance Cornell Plantations, and funding from private donors helped make this a real possibility. Baird Sampson Neuert Architects (BSN) were retained, based on their award winning design of the Niagara Butterfly Conserv atory (CA, November 1996), located just north of Niagara Falls, Ontario. Initially, Cornell Univer
sity wanted a similarly sized building for the campus—a large public conservatory for tropical plants, including visitor services and educational functions that would facilitate its goal of ex panding Plantations stewardship and educational programming while enhancing its visitation and visibility from the surrounding campus. However, a reassessment of the budget and ongoing maintenance costs along with a re focused strategy centering on a more sustainable alternative resulted in a modestly sized in dependent Welcome Center—the result of which is a 6,000squarefoot twostorey structure. In addition to providing general visitor services, the facility also has an educational component, for both guests and students in the Graduate Fellow
ship program in Public Garden Leadership. The client was explicit in articulating the importance of respecting the “intimate place” of the Botanic al Garden, something the architects took to heart and which is clearly evident in the sensitive in sertion into this most unique landscape. The Cornell campus possesses a fairly striking topography defined by the glacial history of the area. This part of the state is known as the Finger Lakes region, named for 11 long and narrow par allel lakes running northsouth, all carved by the advances and retreats of glaciers during the Ice Age. Glacial motion powerfully sculpted the dis tinctive landscape and topography of this region incised by gorges, evidence of which can be found on the University campus.
the WelCome Center’s gentlY Curving south façade features exPansive glazing, an aBundanCe of natural materials, and an inviting entrY Court. above, top to bottoM looking West from the uPPer level, one Can see the Wood-sheathed multi-PurPose sPaCe hovering over the tWo-storeY exhiBition hall and loBBY; exhiBition disPlaY Cases in the loBBY flank the entrY into the Café and gift shoP. opposite
Beebe Lake and its Fall Creek extensions div ide the campus laterally into north and south; the Plantations site lies just southeast of the lake. Conceptually, the design team led by principal in charge Jon Neuert and project architect Yves Bonnardeaux defined the site in terms of the bowl and the knoll. Glacial advances carved out a massive depression in the landscape, its path gently curving, leaving an aggregation of glacial deposits which formed an elevated knoll within
the larger bowl. At the base of the knoll spreading out to the perimeter of the bowl is an expansive flatland where a wide variety of organized gar dens have been planted over the years. Siting of the Welcome Center within this bowl was critical to the architects’ design process. In itially, four distinct sites and strategies were pro posed for the built structure within the garden, but Neuert and Bonnardeaux’s preferred site was the one the client eventually agreed to. As well as 01/12 canadian architect
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minimizing site disturbance, Neuert maintains that the building’s nesting into the base of the knoll as it transitions to flatland results in the structure becoming a real part of the landscape rather than just operating as a mediating device. Furthermore, unlike the other three options, this particular site has the advantage of being visible from the precipice above, providing an important sightline for the project. A most curious incident perhaps cemented this decision: shortly after an earlystage concept phase meeting with the client, the two architects set out to further investigate and photograph these potential sites when a sudden intense lightning storm forced them to seek refuge in their car. As they were driving away, they heard a loud crack and spun around to see a giant tree 20 canadian architect 01/12
that had just been struck by lightning—now split in half—come crashing down to the ground. The storm stopped as abruptly as it began, and the pair drove back in amazement to find the felled tree, still steaming, immediately adjacent to their favoured site. According to Bonnardeaux, they needed no further encouragement to proceed with their selection. With respect to site preparation, the architects removed a motley array of sheds and other utili tarian structures that had been constructed in the 1950s—and restored the physical condition of the knoll, part of which had been bulldozed to ac commodate these crude structures. Because of its considered siting, the building nests itself com fortably into the landscape, creating an interest ing sectional dynamic. As the design accentuates
the highlY exPressive and sCulPtural east elevation ClearlY reveals interior funCtions and the ComPonents of the Building, suCh as deeP overhangs and a suBstantial Wood louvred sCreen on the south façade.
above
the transition between flatland and knoll, the building’s two levels engage two separate topo graphic conditions. The ground floor functions as an extension of the flatland and meadow, form ing a very direct connection with the public gar dens, particularly since the chosen site benefits from the adjacency to a series of existing conver gent pathways. A second condition is experienced from the Welcome Center’s upper level, where the gentle slope of the grassy knoll can be appre
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ciated, particularly from the large multipurpose room which opens directly onto a generous out door events terrace on a plateau. Additional sec tional variation is apparent in the interior, with a central twostorey space comprising the exhibi tion hall, café and gift shop, which can be viewed from the multipurpose room and bridge above. As the project is really about the gardens form ing the heart of the Cornell Plantations rather than the building itself, the parking lot is located a short distance away at the perimeter of the site, encouraging visitors to engage in a pleasant stroll through the gardens towards the Welcome Cen ter’s entry court. In so doing, the transition from natural to built form is subtly manipulated through the choice of materials for the project. Drylaid stone retaining walls extend from the exterior entry court into the interior, penetrating through the fully glazed walls into the exhibition hall lobby, forming a base for the exhibition cases on one side, and on the other, a screening wall concealing the more prosaic functions of mechanical, electrical and washrooms. The dramatic and unified south façade comprised of an expansive screen of deep ipe wood louvres further communicates warmth and a certain organic quality, while also providing passive solar shading in summer and maximizing solar heat gain in winter. It is important to note that as the facility is seasonal, two cycles of use are addressed in ac commodating distinct user groups. As expected, the Welcome Center operates during the academ ic year as a teaching facility and educational in stitution, but during the summer season, tourists and other visitors make up the bulk of those entering its doors. Additionally, horticultural experts and researchers use the building year round. This is why the large multipurpose room was designed for maximum flexibility: in addi tion to its function as one large classroom or two smaller classrooms when the dividing wall is slid into position, it can also be utilized as a confer ence or lecture facility. Furthermore, the Wel come Center facilitates revenue potential as a venue for weddings, as it provides an idyllic set ting for such occasions given the natural beauty of the surrounding gardens. As sustainability is an integral part of BSN’s practice, significant advances were made by the firm in addressing environmental and green in itiatives. The orientation of the building on an
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site plan 1 vehiCle entranCe/exit 2 Parking lot 3 arrival terraCe 4 BiCYCle Parking 5 Pedestrian WalkWaY 6 snoW storage 7 urBan forest 8 rain garden WalkWaY and Pedestrian Bridges 9 rain garden/BiosWale 10 neW stormWater outfall 11 existing stormWater outfall 12 PathWaY 13 roCk garden/alPine Plants 14 transitional future garden
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roadWaY and PathWaY Barrier-free Parking vegetated turnaround entrY Court Café terraCe WelCome Center knoll Plateau outdoor Pavilion ComstoCk knoll existing mulCh PathWaY existing ring road leWis Building Container garden roBison York herB garden
eastwest axis maximizes opportunities for pas sive solar gain, while existing vegetation and deep overhangs provide shade and prevent ex cessive solar gain at certain times of the day. An infloor hydronic heating system is connected to a rooftop solar vacuum tube system, while hot water storage tanks are bermed into the hillside of the knoll. To further reduce energy consump tion, passive ventilation and natural cooling strategies are employed on the lower level, with motorized operable vents promoting the stack effect. The Welcome Center has done away with airconditioning, with the exception of the up perlevel multipurpose space which regularly experiences high occupancy levels, thus neces
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sitating extra cooling. Moreover, the use of superinsulated exterior wood walls and high performance double glazing also aids in reaching sustainability targets. Neuert is particularly proud of the bioswale system the firm developed, as it serves a multi tude of functions. As a “rain garden” sited next to the parking lot, it forms a critical part of the ar rival sequence, introducing the site to visitors through an environmentally based garden theme. On a conceptual level, it acknowledges and de marcates the route of an ancient glacial river, which sculpted the topography of the garden and the larger landscape. And in receiving and cleansing stormwater from the upper campus and
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level 1 above, top to bottoM the seCond-floor multi-PurPose room sPills out onto a outdoor terraCe, alloWing oCCuPants to enJoY the grassY toPograPhiCal Condition of the knoll; the north elevation Best reveals the seCtional ComPlexitY of the faCilitY as it melds effortlesslY With the gentle sloPe of the knoll.
the parking lot, the bioswale also addresses stormwater management con siderations and demonstrates the continued interdependence between plants and people. Although only LEED Silver was mandated by the client, the firm believes they have achieved the requirements for LEED Platinum status, and are currently awaiting word from the US Green Building Council on their submission. The Welcome Center at Cornell Plantations has clearly been well re ceived. In 2011, the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Archi tects honoured the project with an Award of Excellence, as did the Ontario Association of Architects. And in 2010, prior to its completion, the project received an Award of Excellence from this very magazine. As the Welcome Center was considered only the first phase of an ongoing process, BSN is engaged in a review capacity for Phase 2, which principally concerns an expansion within the flatlands, with the planned inclusion of a number of environmentally based gardens such as a new biofuel garden as well as an international crop and weed garden. Respected local Ithacabased land scape architecture firm Trowbridge & Wolf are leading this second phase. But Cornell is not done with BSN yet: they are currently in the schematic design phase of a training facility for the University’s marching band. 22 canadian architect 01/12
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exhiBition hall/loBBY exhiBition Cases reCePtion gift shoP Café seating hallWaY meChaniCal
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From Cloud Gardens Park (CA, August 1994) in Toronto nearly 20 years ago, to the Niagara Butterfly Conservatory (CA, November 1996), to the French River Visitor Centre (CA, April 2007), and now the Welcome Center at Cornell, “there is indeed a trajectory in the ongoing evolution of BSN’s work with respect to armatures and linkages amongst the projects,” says Neuert. From site response to architectural innovation and environmental sustainability, the firm’s level of sophistication and finesse is clearly blooming in every possible way. ca
architect teaM Jon neuert (PrinCiPal in Charge), Yves Bonnardeaux (ProJeCt arChiteCt), harveY Wu, andrea maCeCek, Jesse dormodY, mauro Carreno, CYril Charron, Winda lau, ian douglas, teddY BenediCto structural BlaCkWell BoWiCk engineering (toronto) Mechanical/electrical m/e engineering (roChester) civil t.g. miller P.C. (ithaCa) landscape halvorson design PartnershiP (Boston) interiors Baird samPson neuert arChiteCts leed/sustainability Baird samPson neuert arChiteCts contractor Welliver mCguire inC. (montour falls) executive project ManaGer norm aidun project ManaGer luke BroWn area 6,000 ft2 Building; 3.2 aCres of grounds on a 25-aCre site budGet $5.5 m coMpletion JanuarY 2011
Insites
Northern Speculations
A Toronto-based architecture firm is investing a considerable amount of energy into improving a food delivery network for Canada’s Far North. TEXT
Pamela Ritchot Lateral Office
IMAGES
Despite its far-off location and sparse population, the Canadian Arctic is a critical frontier of nation al importance. Canada’s vast north might be home to one of the world’s least dense populations, but its youth demographic is growing faster than anywhere else in the country. This northern frontier, no matter its distance from the densely populated southern band of Canadian cities stretching coast to coast, is of national concern because it is devoid of the infrastructure required to plan the sustainable communities necessary to secure its future. Immediate and tangible measures are needed to inform a period of strategic development that is in step with the sensitivity of its geography and culture. If this cannot be realized, then the cultural practices of hunting, fishing and Arctic mobility that were once so vibrant across northern communities could be lost forever.
Our nation’s most remote regions continue to attract much political attention, challenging the architectural profession to come up with creative solutions. Once hard-wired to produce design and construction documents for traditional buildings, the contemporary architect is facing a professional and ideological shift to favour crossdisciplinary design research that some consider to be “speculative play,” a term that involves constant and rigorous inquiry into the conditions of our surroundings, often deferring the production of actual buildings. This kind of design research can liberate or expand architectural practice across the thresholds of urban, ecological and regional design, and can place increased emphasis on the social, geopolitical and anthropological conditions of our world’s most complex regions before an architectural solution is even considered. In this way, the pressing issues of the Arctic offer inspiring and challenging opportunities for the broad-minded architect. Led by Mason White and Lola Sheppard, Toronto-based Lateral Office has been speculating on strategies and designs for marginalized and remote regions of the world since 2007. In 2008,
Lateral Office’s research into an Arctic food network seeks to harness the rich tradition of mobility, hunting and fishing in the North, supporting it with a flexible network of shelters.
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following their design research for the Bering Strait and Reykjavik, Iceland, Lateral Office expanded their interest in the Arctic to begin their Next North project. An anthology of six pilot projects, Next North investigates the issues and challenges central to Arctic development through six themes woven throughout their work: mobility, ecologies, culture, resources, monitoring, and settlements. For example, their Ice Road Truck Stops project uses an energy-capturing structural mesh to construct Arctic ice roads, thereby securing a seasonal transportation network while constructing varying conditions in which aquatic ecologies can flourish year-round. White describes these projects as a series of “opportunistic synergies”—the strategic coupling of two or more programs under a single infrastructural project. In Health Hangars, an aircraft hangar undergoes simple adaptations to provide 01/12canadian architect
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for the programmatic and spatial requirements of both an airport facility and health facility. This clever yet unexpected pairing responds to regional challenges of Northern construction and material logistics, thereby allowing research to critically inform architectural action. Through their hard work, Lateral Office’s Arctic inventions might actually possess the intelligence to become a reality. Treading these challenging Arctic waters, Lateral Office has developed an inquisitive design practice that operates across related streams of research and “speculative play.” Founded in 2003, the partnership between White and Sheppard has taken a critical step back from the expected role of architect as builder. As their name suggests, Lateral Office explores architecture as the by-product of lateral, tangential and potentially disparate streams of thought and empirical processes. Parallel to this, White and Sheppard have simultaneously developed the research collective entitled InfraNet Lab where they continue to posit new roles for architecture and urban form as conduits for the world’s resources. Their research into such networked conditions as hydrological and transportation systems directly influences—and perhaps expands—the design practice coming out of Lateral Office. Through
often favours purpose-engineered structures that serve short-sighted single-use needs. By way of “quick-fix” solutions to remote territories across the Arctic, it has become rare that a project demonstrates an understanding of the region’s current and future challenges. Historically, attempts at Northern development show us that government-led projects can quickly fail. Bureaucratic and monetary setbacks are a common occurrence across all levels of government, causing even the most essential of projects to quickly lose momentum—often resulting in the cancellation of Northern projects. Their long winters pose distinct challenges for construction and the transport of materials—the climate is simply not forgiving of any setbacks. Thus, a reliable flow of funding is essential for building in remote regions, which raises the importance of private capital. For the Arctic, private funding could ignite a rapid rate of development
this carefully constructed partnership, the couple has been producing systemic urban forms that respond to multiple issues at once, strengthening relationships between landscape, infrastructure and architectural systems. Historically, we have failed to develop the necessary infrastructure to sustain Northern and Arctic communities. Avoiding local conditions and culture, the federal government has typically demonstrated sporadic interest in the North, with their interest peaking when they need to utilize the Arctic’s land mass and resources for geopolitical value. Following the onset of the Cold War, the intrigue of the Arctic frontier raised its appeal as an important territory for national expansion. Under the Diefenbaker government (1957-63), there was much talk of strategizing a Northern vision for Canada, but this only accelerated a period of shortsighted Arctic development. The government’s fundamental aim during this period of history was to maximize the region’s riches while essentially eroding the traditional Inuit way of life. Wrongfully presuming that this land mass and its resources are for the taking, intrusions from Ottawa have perpetuated a top-down model of development that persists today. With this mindset, large-scale infrastructural development
BELOW Lateral Office’s research involves designing new types of shelters that seek to merge traditional and contemporary construction techniques. Walls could be constructed of mesh for improved airflow in the summer and could accommodate compacted snow in the winter.
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Section Detail 1 c opper skin: building material for fluctuating climatic conditions 2 smokestack: provides the opportunity to smoke hunted game and acts as a wayfinding device in the sparse landscape 3 skylight: allows natural light and heat to penetrate the space
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4 s now wall: snow is packed in wall cavities to provide an additional layer of insulation 5 solar storage: batteries store collected solar energy to provide an alternative source of power during the dark winter months 6 fire pit: for the preparation and cooking of native foods 7 fishing holes: provides protected fishing holes throughout the seasons of the year
8 a nchor system: provides weight to stabilize the floating structures as well as an underwater surface for algae to grow, to attract fish 9 data transmission: for the transmission of data signals (internet, cell phone and satellite services)
10 e nergy-harvesting buoys: to harvest and store wave pressure as an alternative source of energy 11 solar cells: building form provides optimum angles for solar panel placement 12 snow, ice and water collection: proviides a natural source of fresh water for cooking, washing and consumption
at a much larger scale than these communities could initiate or manage on their own. For these reasons and more, Lateral Office’s Arctic investigations are strategically focused on the lessons learned from the Aboriginal peoples of the North, and their landscape. The firm looks to the culture, traditions, ecologies and geographical context of the North to inform their proposed technological and systematic speculations. Undoubtedly, this cross-disciplinary scope must eventually face a critical audience and a broad range of skeptics who might ask: “How far away from reality is all of this speculation?” As Lateral Office learns to avoid naïveté in their work, they just might show us how an innovative design practice can exert significant influence on a region’s development. The firm continues to receive support for their investigative work. Last October, Lateral Office was honoured with the Holcim Foundation’s Award for Sustainable Construction, receiving a Gold Award North America for their most recent development under the Next North project—the Arctic Food Network (AFN). This project proposes immediate architectural solutions for the cultural practices of hunting, fishing and landscape mobility that are becoming increasingly threatened across the Foxe Basin in Nunavut Territory. In response to such regional challenges, the AFN is promoting a series of shelters to serve as camps, ecological harvesting stations, and data hubs. The Holcim Foundation awards futureoriented works that demonstrate an understanding of people and their regions and a capacity to improve the living conditions in these contexts. Holcim has awarded building systems that range from locally manufactured bamboo and earthenwall construction in rural Pakistan to long-term urban renewal strategies for post-tsunami Chile. Projects are awarded across the five major regions of the world and must align with the Foundation’s priority issues of innovative progress, ethical standards, environmental quality, economic prosperity and contextual proficiency. Winners of their first-phase regional competition receive seed money to facilitate the development and construction of their projects as they prepare to compete for the Global Holcim Awards 2012. Lateral Office’s award of $100,000 US from the Holcim Foundation promises to drastically accelerate their investigations into Northern issues. The competition’s jury commended the AFN’s great potential to redefine sustainable living and provide the Inuit with access to an improved future that is transferrable across other Northern regions. In this future, geographically disconnected communities prosper through the mutual connectivity of three uniquely designed site conditions: land, water/ice, and coastal. Lateral Office’s distributed Arctic shelters provide navigational aids by way of data transmission towers
Arctic Bay
Baffin Bay
Pop. 700
Pond Inlet
Pop. 1325
Clyde River Pop. 825
Gulf of Boothia
C Pop. 1550
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Pop. 650
Pop. 525
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Repulse Bay Pop. 750
Pangnirtung Pop. 1325
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Iqaluit
Pop. 6200
Kimmirut Pop. 400
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Fishing shelter Water and support over snow water collection
Permafrost foundation pilings
Wayfinding devices
Components: Local specificity and adaptability through deployment of an array of tools
and lighting devices that maintain safe access across the region. Using their limited understanding of local ecologies, hunting practices and the changing Northern diet, Lateral Office are studying how people traverse the land and use modest structures to secure and manage their local food network. Rather than imposing complex systems or advanced technologies on this fragile context, White and Sheppard have employed simple systems that White describes as
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“soft infrastructures” which improve adaptability and participatory customization by local users at each site. As climate change alters the conditions of ice, snow and open water, so too must the users alter these mobile structures by adapting them from floating water sites to structures on land. Harvesting stations across various sites—such as fishing holes and shelters, indoor greenhouse cultivation, as well as underwater mussel and kelp infrastructure—requires local intervention 01/12canadian architect
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A_HUB 23A Aquaculture Centre SHEDS
B_HUB 23B Freezer Field
POLES H2O drainage Solarium
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C_HUB 13 Protein Pass
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Water + snow Permafrost collection foundation
Mussel, kelp & fishing infrastructure
Ground level cold storage
Deep permafrost Wayfinding cold storage devices
Lighting
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Mesh for fishing shelters over water
Communication towers
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1_MESH boat dock 2_SHED fishing shelter 3_SHED cold storage 4_POLE data transmission 5_SHED kelp drying 6_POLE wayfinding
1_MESH 2_SHED 3_SHED 4_POLE 5_SHED 6_POLE
1_MESH boat dock 2_SHED fishing shelter 3_SHED cold storage 4_POLE data transmission 5_SHED kelp drying 6_POLE wayfinding
Aquaculture Activities
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Hub Typologies
Each of the AFN’s hubs encircling Nunavut’s Foxe Basin will relate to its local ecosystems and proximity to communities. The proposed hubs are to be distributed at 160-kilometre intervals and occupy various types of landscapes: land, water/ice, and coastal conditions.
ABOVE
to develop individual sites as micro-economies that evolve out of newly strengthened cultural practices of land-based sustenance. Managing these ecologically based economies requires cold storage both at and below the permafrost layer, in addition to vital heat sources such as fire pits and smokestack structures to warm groups of nomadic caribou hunters. These soft infra structures also provide fuel to smoke their game. The Holcim Awards jury for North America awarded these interventions for their ability to advance local patterns of living off of the land without defaulting to the single-purpose topdown strategies of the past. In short, the AFN merges architecture, landscape and infrastructure to create a greater synergy that will enhance the evolving relationships between people and their environment across the region. Lateral Office’s AFN is also attempting to facilitate the evolution of the Inuit’s cultural relation26 canadian architect 01/12
ship with their rapidly changing region. Their snow-wall construction, for example, combines packed snow within a wall clad in a copper skin. These snow-and-copper walls are oriented at favourable angles for exhausting smoke from cooking fires, or for capturing solar energy for storage in battery cells and interior lighting. Recalling past traditions of igloo construction, this multipurpose infrastructure hopes to improve the functionality of future Arctic shelters—one that engages site conditions and facilitates the ability to grow local food—all while fostering a productive hub in a newly networked landscape. To prepare for the Global Holcim Awards 2012, White and Sheppard are using their prize money to develop two concurrent streams of work. First, they will test the architectural systems driving their new “infrastructural synergies” by building a full-scale mock-up of one or more of these systems. One such example could be an anchor system that simultaneously stabilizes floating structures in open water while providing a growth site for algae that will boost harvestable fish populations. Secondly, the pair is also working with Nunavut’s Department of Culture, Language, Elders and Youth to test their ideas in community engagement and to develop a reality for the future of a viable AFN. As local ideas push back on White
and Sheppard’s speculations, they hope to see a level of community-based invention emerge. Hopefully, the common use and operation of the AFN will strengthen the cultural ties that unite the Inuit population. Echoing the Holcim Foundation’s priorities, Lateral Office’s culturally derived investigations demonstrate architecture’s agency in developing a viable regional network that can become a part of Inuit daily life, and will move them further along in evolving a sense of identity and community that embraces 21st-century challenges and opportunities. As the AFN works toward finding regional solutions to regional issues, Lateral Office has already proven the value of research-led speculative design to influence regionally informed architecture in a real way. If adopted, the methodology behind the Arctic Food Network will provoke new potentials in sustainable development for remote regions around the world. For Lateral Office, their AFN project could validate the evolution of their cross-disciplinary research practice and find an ever-expanding place for architectural speculation in the Arctic. CA Pamela Ritchot is an architect and urban designer currently working at planningAlliance in Toronto on a regional development project in Northern Manitoba.
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Since it was completed in 1975, First Canadian Place has stood as a symbol of Toronto’s dominance in the financial industry in Canada. Today, the 72-storey, 2.4-million-square-foot office building remains the operational headquarters of the Bank of Montreal, and houses a large percentage of the city’s top law, brokerage and finance offices. But the Type A tenants began to lose their faith in this Class A office building in May 2007 when one of the tower’s stone panels loosened and tumbled 50 storeys to the street below—miraculously, nobody was hurt. This incident triggered a plan of action initiated by the building’s desperate owners that resulted in an extensive $100-million energy retrofit and a complete recladding of what remains Canada’s tallest office building. Almost by definition, a skyscraper represents the embodiment of a client or client group’s desire to dominate a city skyline with a symbol of corporate fortitude. Furthermore, when a skyscraper is complete, it often becomes a zeitgeist building—representing the latest in technological, economic and cultural achievements of the day. A few of the better-known skyscrapers completed over the past 80 years that have captured the imagination of the public include: the Empire State Building in New York City, the John Hancock Center in Chicago, the 30 St Mary Axe Building (formerly known as Swiss Re and informally known as the Gherkin) in London, and the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. All of these skyscrapers certainly pushed the limits of the building technology of their times, and they all will eventually require significant upgrading if they haven’t already undergone costly refurbishments. For example, the retrofitting of the 1931 Empire State Building approached $550 million when it was completed in 2011. It is expected that the owners’ investment will pay for itself in less than five years. High energy prices, evolving legislation to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and competitive real estate markets represent huge incentives for building owners to upgrade older properties. We can certainly expect that after 30 to 40 years, most high-rise buildings will require upgrading of mechanical equipment and the replacement of at least some building materials. This was the case for First Canadian Place (FCP).
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FCP was designed by architect Edward Turrell Stone, and the Toronto firm of B+H (then known as Bregman+Hamann Architects) were the architects of record. Stone happened to be the same architect responsible for another well-known skyscraper also clad in white marble and incorporating a similar tubular steel-frame structural system—the Standard Oil Building in Chicago which, at 83 storeys, was the fourth-tallest building in the world when it was completed in 1973. A year after the building opened (its name changed to the Amoco Building and it is currently known as the Aon Building), one of the marble slabs detached from the façade and crashed into the roof of a nearby building. Stainless steel straps were hastily added to hold the slabs in place until 1990 when all 43,000 of its Carrara marble slabs were replaced with granite. The final cost associated with the retrofit was well over half the original price of the building. After the single panel fell off of FCP in 2007, Brookfield Office Properties, the owners of the property, commissioned numerous studies to determine the necessary steps that should be taken to replace its 45,000 panels, which were invariably stained and distorted in both concave or convex patterns, the result of many harsh winter freeze-thaw cycles and increased wind pressures caused by the proliferation of subsequent highrise buildings in the downtown core over a 30year period. Notwithstanding the deterioration of FCP’s marble cladding, the construction of the building itself was very sound. Although a highperformance glazing replaced the original vision glass, the metal window frames were in nearperfect condition. One of the greatest challenges of the FCP renovation project was to keep the building operational during the replacement of the exterior cladding, and to mitigate any inconvenience or disruption to the tenants. The building’s marble panels were replaced with 5,625 white fritted or tinted glass panels designed with the engineering assistance of Brook Van Dalen & Associates. Each glass panel weighs 453 kilograms, whereas each marble panel weighed around 90 kilograms. However, one new glass unit replaces four marble panels and four glass panels, so the building has experienced considerable weight loss. Halcrow Yolles conducted much of the pre-construction engineering, including a study to determine if the building would naturally rise from its foundations as a result of its lighter mass. With the foundation firm, this was not the case. Because of the iconic importance of FCP to Toronto’s skyline, considerable effort was made to ensure that the glass panels had a similar complexity in depth and colouration as the original white Carrara marble panels. Once removed from the site, the discarded panels were used in a variety of applications such as aggregate for con-
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crete, roadway construction, and a few kitchen and bathroom renovations across the city. The B+H architect team, led by principal in charge Douglas Birkenshaw, project director Kevin Stelzer, and project manager Bronwyn Sibbald, met this challenge, and went even further by improving the building’s slender profile by placing tinted glass panels at the corners to accentuate the sharpness of the new cladding. A vitally important element to the project’s success was the $23-million custom-designed and built suspended elevator platform—a singularly important piece of engineering that contributed to the saving of over 1.3 million hours of labour, thereby hastening the project’s timeline. This 15-metre-tall three-storey platform weighing 113,000 kilograms is constructed of standard off-the-shelf aluminum and steel components so that the structure could be broken down and used for future applications. The platform is constructed in 14 separate sections and is capable holding up to 160 workers at a time. It takes roughly three days for 80 workers to remove the marble panels on the lower floor of the platform and to subsequently install the new panels. When viewing the platform up close, it appears to be incredulously suspended from the building by attaching itself to narrow skate-like metal clips inserted into the window-washing slots on the exterior of the façade. Once the marble panels, existing sealant, stone, and panel support brackets are removed on the lower level, special carts transfer the old material to the elevators. The upper level of the platform is where the new glass panels are installed. Each panel is hoisted onto a steel monorail running the entire circumference of the platform. As soon as the panels are in place, they are hooked onto a secondary monorail positioned closer to the building where they appear to be effortlessly lowered into position and installed. The procedure was finessed to a fine art, largely due to EllisDon’s construction management experience. In fact, the entire construction site was particularly well designed to stockpile material and establish a system for the loading and unloading of special carts to remove the marble and install the new curtain wall. The double-decker loading platforms above Adelaide Street were even designed to accommodate the removal of snow from the upper platform, and is a further testament to the foresight of the design and construction team. Construction for the retrofit began in November 2010, managing to reach the podium by the end of December 2011. The entire process of upgrading FCP’s cladding and building systems enabled the owners to take this building into the 21st century while quietly reviving a tired icon that emerged when Toronto overtook Montreal as the financial capital of Canada. ca
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Books IAN ChodIKoff, GeoRGe KAPelos, PAIGe MAGARReY ANd seAN RUTheN
reviewed BY
place creativity well ahead of profitability. This book seeks to balance creativity and profitability so that architects can continue to design good buildings while being paid their full worth. ic newfoundland Modern: architecture in the smallwood Years 1979-1972 By Robert Mellin. Toronto and Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2011.
the Business of design: Balancing creativity and Profitability By Keith Granet. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011.
Pay your consultants as soon as you are paid and remember to always deposit 10 percent of your earnings into a savings account. These are but two of the many pointers outlined in Keith Granet’s useful book The Business of Design. Published on thick paper with large-print text, this guide approaches the look and feel of a children’s book—but don’t let its deceptively simplistic graphic appearance fool you. Granet wants his readers to learn from his many years of experience advising countless architecture firms into achieving greater profitability and long-term success. In other words, this is a business book designed for the architect who loathes reading business books. Readers can clearly follow the necessary steps to establish, grow, or turn around just about any design firm through the book’s discussions on budgeting, fee structures, human resources and marketing plans—all accompanied by easy to understand charts and graphics. Practitioners of all levels can benefit by reading this book as the content ranges from providing advice on developing a business plan to mentoring a senior associate. Every chapter finishes with a candid interview with notable architects such as Michael Graves, John Merrill, Eugene Kohn and Richard Meier on topics ranging from developing a business plan, marketing, and staffing. It is no secret that many architects will take on a project simply because they like the client’s site more than the actual client. Learning how to say “no” to a potentially disastrous situation is just as important as understanding the real costs associated with managing a successful project. One of Granet’s most important messages is realizing the value of the services provided by an architect. Architects typically lack basic business skills because they 30 canadian architect 01/12
There’s a compelling photograph reproduced in Robert Mellin’s Newfoundland Modern. It’s a picture from the early 1960s, showing Newfoundland’s Premier Joey Smallwood examining a display of the World Trade Center. Smallwood, mesmerized and dwarfed by the huge project model, is no doubt imagining how architecture could fuel his dreams of a new Newfoundland. Modernity, culture and the central role played by architecture in shaping Newfoundland’s identity are at the heart of Mellin’s engaging chronicle. With impressive research, the author explores Newfoundland’s architectural maturation in the years immediately after confederation from three distinct vantage points. First, he gives us a view of Smallwood the tyrant as he waged war on Newfoundland’s established architectural professionals in order to impose his own ideas of how architecture should be practiced in his province. Second, in a clever narrative mirroring Smallwood’s self-aggrandizing Newfoundland: Canada’s Happy Province (1966), Mellin presents a critical commentary on the ways Smallwood the demagogue embraced Modern architecture in order to single-handedly transform Newfoundland from colonial backwater to a progressive modern state. Finally, Mellin traces the careers of two exceptional practitioners of the time—Frederick A. Colbourne and Angus J. Campbell—whose talent and vision served to help Smallwood realize his ambitions. Newfoundland Modern is not a conventional architectural history, as Mellin is a practitioner as well as an academic. He is a skilled writer with a keen observer’s eye, a wry wit, and a deep awareness of the architectural importance of the works he’s exploring. He interweaves highlevel interpretations of form-making with on-the-ground anecdotes concerning the challenges of using new technologies in remote settings. As with his previous work Tilting, he brings us into the lives and times of the
organic gardens. The book includes large-scale public projects (MVRDV’s Pig City concept for the Netherlands is exactly what it sounds like), residential initiatives, individual building components like irrigation systems, composters, and even urban livestock products like UK pet-care emporium Omlet’s Eglu Go—a portable backyard chicken coop. Carrot City is an insightful read, moving from macro to micro while offering useful ideas to practitioners and homeowners alike. PM toward a culture of wood architecture By Jim Taggart. Vancouver: Abacus editions, 2011.
individuals who advanced the province’s architectural culture. Mellin proves to us that Newfoundland presents more than the ersatz history and cozy neovernacular promoted by the province’s contemporary tourism apparatus. In so doing this work stands as an important measure for asserting the value Canadian architects have in place-making in our Dominion. Luscious illustrations, amusing stories, an extensive bibliography and discursive footnotes all make for a solid scholarly work of authority and lasting value. Gk
As an urgent and critical document on how the increased use of wood in our built environments can mitigate global climate change, this thorough and thought-provoking book could not have arrived a moment too soon. Filled with poignant observations on the use of wood in architecture, both historically and currently, as well as many supporting case studies documented through excellent photography and lively graphics, the book serves as a small monograph showcasing recent work by Canadian architects and structural engineers who have explored the potential of wood to create innovative structures that rival contemporary concrete and steel structures. Most importantly, Taggart critically discusses the embodied energies of conventional construction materials, introducing the idea of “constructive environmentalism” as a way to reduce the carbon footprint in many architectural projects. As he points out in the third chapter, “there are many reasons to revive a wood building culture in Canada: to reaffirm cultural identity, to re-establish regional character, to resuscitate local economies, and perhaps more importantly, to make a contribution toward the mitigation of climate change.” As an added bonus, the book features many construction details in its margins, including an axonometric of the majestic tree columns inside the Carlo Fidani Peel Cancer Centre in Mississauga, the roof panels of the Richmond Olympic Oval, as well as cross-sections of the curving columns in the West Vancouver Aquatic Centre. Jim Taggart, who has now been editor of SAB Magazine for five years, has made a determined and impassioned plea for the critical rethink of wood use in our built environment. sr
carrot city: creating Places for Urban agriculture By Mark Gorgolewski, June Komisar and Joe Nasr. New York: The Monacelli Press, 2011.
What started as a Toronto exhibit exploring how building design can facilitate the production of food in cities is quickly going global. The show, entitled Carrot City, is travelling across the globe, and is concurrently being exhibited in Berlin and Hartford. The curators, Ryerson University professors Mark Gorgolewski, Joe Nasr and June Komisar, recently authored a textbook for the movement. Carrot City: Creating Places for Urban Agriculture approaches the concept of urban agriculture with a focus on the facts and numbers that prove its utilitarian and infrastructural capabilities, of which design plays an integral role. The 40 built and unbuilt projects presented in its pages—each accompanied by text zoning in on logistics rather than theories—offer case after case illustrating how urban agriculture can work when integrated with innovative forward-looking design. The Edible Schoolyard, for example, aims to improve New York City school meals while giving children the chance to learn about growing and preparing healthy food; architecture firm WORKac designed a series of spaces at two New York schools to implement learning and cooking spaces around quarter-acre 01/12 canadian architect
31
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calendar Design Exchange Awards: Winners Exhibition
Photography Collected Us: The Malcolmson Collection
November 24, 2011-February 26, 2012 Taking place in the Exhibition Hall at the Design Exchange in Toronto, this exhibition showcases this year’s winning work from across Canada, offering an opportunity for visitors to explore the various design dis ciplines, and to appreciate the most current and innovative pro jects being produced by Canadian designers. www.dx.org/dxa
January 24-March 10, 2012 This exhi bition of historical photography at the University of Toronto Art Centre is comprised of rare and beautiful objects (an early daguerreotype, several saltpaper negatives) dating from the mid19th century to the present. It encompasses many of the great names of photography in Eur ope and North America: Gustave Le Gray, Eugène Atget, Julia Margaret Cameron, Margaret Bourke White, Man Ray, Aleksandr Rodchenko and Paul Strand, to name a few. www.utac.utoronto.ca
Rural Readymade
January 13-May 5, 2012 This exhi btion at the College Art Galleries at the University of Saskatchewan features work by a number of con temporary artists who explore the readymade in contemporary ex perience. Focusing on the use and adaptation of found materials, the work of these artists blurs regis ters—between the mundane and aesthetic, lowtech and notech, found and familiar. www.usask.ca/kenderdine/ design Week at the design exchange
January 23-29, 2012 As part of Toron to’s Design Week 2012, the Design Exchange is proud to offer a variety of programming for the citywide de sign experience at the DX. Events will include a screening of codirector Ben Murray’s Unfinished Spaces, the exhibition launch of Stephen Burks’ Man Made Toronto, a panel discus sion of the Evolving Visual Consum er, a relaunch of the renowned DX Resource Centre, and more. www.dx.org
Fernando romero lecture
charles Bloszies lecture
January 25, 2012 San Francisco based architect Charles Bloszies speaks at 6:30pm in the Peter Kaye Auditorium at the Vancouver Public Library.
January 31, 2012 Architect Fernando Romero of FREE in Mexico City de livers the Kohn Shnier Lecture at the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape & Design at the Univer sity of Toronto at 6:30pm. Stanley Saitowitz lecture
February 6, 2012 Part of UBC’s Hous ing and the City series, Stanley Saitowitz of San Francisco’s Stanley Saitowitz/Natoma Architects lec tures at 6:30pm at UBC Robson Square in Vancouver. Jeanne Gang lecture
February 7, 2012 Architect Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang in Chicago de livers the Bulthaup lecture at the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape & Design at the Univer sity of Toronto at 6:30pm.
versity’s Department of Architec tural Science in Toronto at 6:30pm. Vesa honkonen lecture
February 13, 2012 As part of the Forum Lecture Series hosted by Carleton University’s Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, Vesa Honkonen of Vesa Honkonen Architects in Helsinki, Finland lectures at 6:00pm at the National Gallery in Ottawa. carme Pigem lecture
February 13, 2012 Carme Pigem, prin cipal of RCR Arquitectes in Olot, Spain delivers a lecture at 6:30pm at UBC Robson Square in Vancouver. Pigem’s work is characterized by a simple yet refined architectural lan guage that reflects the Catalan region of Spain where she lives.
FormoreinFormationabout these,andadditionallistingsoFCanadianandinterFebruary 9, 2012 Theo Deutinger of nationalevents,pleasevisit Rotterdam Ad_apples_3x5_PRESS.pdf architecture firm TD 10/8/09 10:29:58 AM www.canadianarchitect.com theo deutinger lecture
Peter Yeadon lecture
January 26, 2012 Peter Yeadon of New Yorkbased architecture firm Decker Yeadon LLC and the Rhode Island School of Design lectures at Ryerson University’s Department of Architectural Science in Toronto at 6:30pm.
Architects lectures at Ryerson Uni
interior design Show 2012
January 26-29, 2012 Taking place at the Direct Energy Centre in Toron to, the Interior Design Show is Can ada’s largest contemporary design fair. Each year worldrenowned de signers and architects participate as keynote speakers and as creators of inspiring feature exhibits. Come see the design world’s trailblazers, gamechangers and celebrities in exhibits and on the stage. www.interiordesignshow.com C
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toronto design Offsite Festival
January 23-29, 2012 The Toronto Design Offsite Festival (TO DO) features exhibitions and events across the city of Toronto. Formed by an association of several “offsite” shows, all of the exhibitions and events feature and promote new Canadian practices—not only the art and design within each show, but also the ways they are organized, curated and produced. http://todesignoffsite.com
CMY
come Up to My room 2012
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January 26-29, 2012 Come Up To My Room (CUTMR) is the Gladstone Hotel’s annual alternative design event, and invites artists and de signers to show us what goes on in side their heads. The fourday event is in its ninth year at the Gladstone Hotel, featuring 11 room installa tions and 13 public space projects. www.comeuptomyroom.com 01/12canadian architect
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Backpage
Bottled Up
The religious and spiriTual associaTions of sTained glass are reconsidered in conTemporary and informal applicaTions of coloured glass in archiTecTure. teXt + photo
John leroux
We thrive on such things as beauty and colour, but in an equally intuitive way we yearn for pattern, rhythm, symbolism and radiance in our surroundings. Often responding to these needs, stained-glass windows are dynamic creations that radically transform with the changing light, the angle of the sun, the time of day, and weather conditions. Unlike a painting, they are considered permanent and eternal—anchored in their particular place as a strategic part of the architecture. While it is seldom celebrated, Fredericton, New Brunswick has some of the finest stained glass in Canada. This precious assortment runs the gamut from 19th-century church windows resplendent with Gothic Revival majesty, to bold post-war glazing that strove for a more modern expression of society’s values. While light passing through a church’s stained-glass windows was seen for centuries as a sacred and tangible contact with God, a unique example of homemade architecture on the outskirts of Fredericton shows that the power, reach and simple joy of sunlight passing through coloured glass is not limited to religious structures 34 canadian architect 01/12
or the artistry of traditional glaziers. When James and Inge Pataki, owners of the Gallery 78 commercial art gallery in Fredericton, chose to build a summer camp alongside an inlet of the St. John River at Longs Creek in the early 1980s, they engaged a number of their friends, including renowned artists Bruno and Molly Bobak, to hand-shape a unique “stained-glass” bottle cabin. Using a technique borrowed from cordwood houses, the walls were assembled from bottles stacked in a mortar bed. Like the best folk or naïve art, the walls are informal yet sophisticated, and they vary through patterned designs of white, green and brown bottles. Overseeing the interior open space is a bold happy face, a cheerful anthropomorphic assemblage of coloured bottles that comprise one panel of the wall. By the end of the Modern era, stained-glass artists were striving to make their works part of the architecture itself. British glass artist John Piper called it “the simultaneous creation of a light-filled unit.” Like an abstract painting, the Patakis’ idea was less a carefully designed matrix of coloured bottles that read as a window, but rather one of an expressive presence of colour and light permeating the interior. One’s experience of the structure changes entirely according to the intensity of light, which is startling and unexpected considering that on the outside, the camp is as grey and opaque as a cinderblock. Through resourceful scavenging, the Patakis have
an assemblage of coloured glass boTTles sTacked in a morTar bed creaTes a brighTly illuminaTed wall in a summer camp cabin in new brunswick.
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built one of New Brunswick’s most exceptional buildings. On a sunny day, the interior effect is magical. What would the medieval cathedral builders think of the bottle cabin? Would they see God pouring through the gin and wine bottles, or would they just be perplexed by a house made of glass and cement? Further to this, can we equally consider the huge stained-glass windows of a medieval cathedral in the same breath as a camp cabin made of bottles? The answer is a resounding yes, demonstrated by the fact that something as simple and honest as light shining through coloured glass can stop us in our tracks and fill our minds with wonder. It reminds us that great architecture and design result from an inspired mixture of material and motivation, giving revelation to form, no matter how down-to-earth. ca John Leroux is an architect and art historian living in Fredericton. His latest book, Glorious Light: The Stained Glass of Fredericton was recently published by Gaspereau Press. It is the first time in Canada that a fully illustrated history of a city’s stained glass has ever been published.
2012
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