X Marks The Spot

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X marks the spot A meticulously crafted inn adds to the visionary projects already established on remote Fogo Island.

Fogo Island Inn, Fogo Island, Newfoundland Saunders Architecture with Sheppard Case Architects Inc (architect of record) Text Michael Carroll Photos Alex Fradkin unless otherwise noted Project

Situated on the windswept Back Western Shore of Joe Batt’s Arm, the Fogo Island Inn’s craggy, layered volumes echo the forms of nearby sea-worn rock formations.

Above

Architects

It is an interesting fact that Fogo Island, once deemed to be one of the four corners of the world by the Flat Earth Society, is the location of an ambitious series of architectural projects whose stated objective is to resist the “flattening” of our shared cultural landscape. The newest addition to the roster is the Fogo Island Inn. The projects on Fogo Island (CA, September 2010 and June 2012) began with a vision for the community by Zita Cobb, who together with her brothers created the Shorefast Foundation. The non-profit envisaged a sustainable future for Fogo Island through developing the area as 42 canadian architect 11/13

an art and eco-tourism destination. Although the Fogo Island Inn opened this summer, its design began seven years previous. That’s when Todd Saunders, the Newfoundlandborn architect based in Bergen, Norway was hired by Cobb and Shorefast to design a series of artists’ studios, followed by the inn. The process was intense. From his office in Bergen, Saunders produced what he remembers to be at least a thousand floor plans that explored a range of design options. Schemes presented via internet with Shorefast every Wednesday were met with lengthy discussion and incisive questioning.

With an area of 40,000 square feet, the Fogo Island Inn is the largest project that Saunders has designed to date. Unlike the smaller art studios with their minimal program, the inn was driven more strongly by its internal dynamics. In the end, what prevailed was the response to a basic question: “What makes a good hotel?” The answer hinged on two essential ingredients— the bed and the breakfast. A good bed meant that it be positioned with a panoramic view of the Atlantic, while a good breakfast translated into a dining room that was at once both generous and intimate. The complexity of the pro-

gram and the simplicity of the architectural parti are captured in the basic configuration of the plan, shaped as an asymmetrical X. Both the plan and the fractured form of the inn seem to echo the remarkable geometric patterns that naturally occur in the island’s rock formations. The leg of the plan running parallel to the shoreline contains all of the inn’s 29 rooms. This elongated four-storey volume, which measures about 320 feet in length, is designed as a single-loaded corridor, ensuring that each room has an ocean view. The rooms vary in size from a tidy 350 square feet to 1,000-square-foot

double-height loft-styled suites. All rooms on the third and fourth floors have wood-burning stoves. Several suites feature sleeping alcoves, mezzanines, large corner windows, freestanding bathtubs and generous walk-in showers. The other leg of the plan, measuring about 200 feet long, is a two-storey volume aligned on the east-west axis of the site. It contains all the “public” amenities of the inn: meeting rooms, a gallery curated by Fogo Island Arts, a library featuring books selected by former Memorial University president Dr. Leslie Harris, and an e-cinema run in partnership with the National

Film Board of Canada. At the western end of this section is a double-height dining room where the morning breakfast, lunch, midafternoon tea and evening supper are served. From this vantage point, about 60 feet above sea level, large corner windows overlook the horizon of the North Atlantic, a line occasionally interrupted by the dramatic profile of an iceberg or the fin of a humpback whale. Both the Fogo Island artists’ studios and the inn are highly invested in addressing issues of economic, cultural and environmental sustainability. It thus comes as no surprise that the 11/13­ canadian architect

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