architecture news letter from canada 0
2010-12-16 10:11
The Marc Boutin Architectural Collective: Wrap House, Calgary Boutin has designed this home for a single male, and with this in mind, the spaces within are flexible in nature to adapt to changes in lifestyle over time. The plan is ‘eroded’ along the south elevation to create an interior-exterior courtyard space that becomes the main feature of the home. Light floods the interior spaces from the courtyard, which also creates a spatially complex interconnectivity between spaces on a very compact footprint. www.mb-architect.ca
人们经常听到加拿大建筑师对他们的客户和整个国家在设计方面的保守性质表示失望。而且,关于加拿大的陈词滥调通常在某个时候涉及到“无聊”这个词。
然而,一个快速的游览这个巨大的国家表明,虽然建筑可能有点保守,它也可以很好地考虑设计:瑞士和芬兰建筑美学的元素混合在一个恶劣的气候和独特的地理条件出生的白话。他们拥挤的城市或无尽的旷野。
包括必应·托姆(Bing Thom)、希姆·萨克利夫(Shim Sutcliffe)和库瓦巴拉·佩恩·麦肯纳·布隆伯格(Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg)等著名从业者在内的一代从业人员,都认真地发展了这种严谨而克制的风格,使大型企业客户远离了20世纪80年代的建筑风格,并说服
那些受到这些大型实践教育的人现在开始在加拿大的建筑舞台上留下他们的印记。加拿大现代主义又一次被提炼出来。
The Marc Boutin Architectural Collective: Wrap House, Calgary Boutin has designed this home for a single male, and with this in mind, the spaces within are flexible in nature to adapt to changes in lifestyle over time. The plan is ‘eroded’ along the south elevation to create an interior-exterior courtyard space that becomes the main feature of the home. Light floods the interior spaces from the courtyard, which also creates a spatially complex interconnectivity between spaces on a very compact footprint. www.mb-architect.ca
Superkül Inc: The Junior Academy, Toronto Squeezed into this tight urban site, The Junior Academy – a new elementary school – features a gymnasium that has been sunk 7.6 m into the ground. Supported by steel trusses that span the width of the gym, the building appears to hover over the clerestory windows that light the semi-buried space. The red brick façade is in-keeping with neighbouring residential properties but stack-bonded brickwork and seemingly random windows create a playful architectural spectacle. www.superkul.ca
Superkül Inc: The Junior Academy, Toronto Squeezed into this tight urban site, The Junior Academy – a new elementary school – features a gymnasium that has been sunk 7.6 m into the ground. Supported by steel trusses that span the width of the gym, the building appears to hover over the clerestory windows that light the semi-buried space. The red brick façade is in-keeping with neighbouring residential properties but stack-bonded brickwork and seemingly random windows create a playful architectural spectacle. www.superkul.ca
Paul Raff Studio: Cascade House, Toronto Cascade House is a playful design with strong environmental credentials. Perched on a gently sloping site, the house is oriented on a strict Cartesian axis, designed to maximize its potential for natural light. The home combines a high-performance building envelope with passive solar design. However, the vertical stacked glass screen at the front of the house is designed for its beauty rather than performance, looking like a cascading waterfall from within. www.paulraffstudio.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
Paul Raff Studio: Cascade House, Toronto Cascade House is a playful design with strong environmental credentials. Perched on a gently sloping site, the house is oriented on a strict Cartesian axis, designed to maximize its potential for natural light. The home combines a high-performance building envelope with passive solar design. However, the vertical stacked glass screen at the front of the house is designed for its beauty rather than performance, looking like a cascading waterfall from within. www.paulraffstudio.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
Nature Humaine: St Hubert Residence, Montreal The client’s wish to enlarge this Montreal bungalow by adding a second floor proved impossible due to poor ground conditions. Instead, Nature Humaine developed an imaginative solution that extended the home into the backyard. The architect reorganised internal spaces on numerous split-levels, brought in more natural light and created a stunning double height dining room. The project is modest but exciting at the same time; an example of what can be achieved on a relatively small budget. www.naturehumaine.com
Nature Humaine: St Hubert Residence, Montreal The client’s wish to enlarge this Montreal bungalow by adding a second floor proved impossible due to poor ground conditions. Instead, Nature Humaine developed an imaginative solution that extended the home into the backyard. The architect reorganised internal spaces on numerous split-levels, brought in more natural light and created a stunning double height dining room. The project is modest but exciting at the same time; an example of what can be achieved on a relatively small budget. www.naturehumaine.com
Moriyama & Teshima: Waterloo Regional Museum, Kitchener Recent recipients of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, Moriyama & Teshima has built extensively in Canada, predominantly in the educational and cultural sectors. This museum in southern Ontario takes reference from the Mennonite heritage of the area, including such contemporary quirks as the coloured ‘quilt’ façade and using timbers from razed barns as interior wall finishes. www.mtarch.com
Moriyama & Teshima: Waterloo Regional Museum, Kitchener Recent recipients of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, Moriyama & Teshima has built extensively in Canada, predominantly in the educational and cultural sectors. This museum in southern Ontario takes reference from the Mennonite heritage of the area, including such contemporary quirks as the coloured ‘quilt’ façade and using timbers from razed barns as interior wall finishes. www.mtarch.com
Gow Hastings Architects: Humber College, Centre for Justice Leadership, Toronto The renovation of a 1980s car showroom, transforming it into a venue to teach crime scene investigation techniques, prompted Gow Hastings to propose a bold reworking of the façade. The result is a perforated aluminium mesh cloak that wraps the building reducing views inside from the street while retaining good natural light ingress. Planting behind the façade will grow up and through the mesh to further disguise the original building. www.gowhastings.com
Gow Hastings Architects: Humber College, Centre for Justice Leadership, Toronto The renovation of a 1980s car showroom, transforming it into a venue to teach crime scene investigation techniques, prompted Gow Hastings to propose a bold reworking of the façade. The result is a perforated aluminium mesh cloak that wraps the building reducing views inside from the street while retaining good natural light ingress. Planting behind the façade will grow up and through the mesh to further disguise the original building. www.gowhastings.com
gh3: Photographer’s studio over a boat house, Stoney Lake Transparent, to afford an uninterrupted flow of natural light into the space, this photographer’s studio is the epitome of the Modernist glass box. It is indicative of gh3’s designs and a refreshing departure from the more traditional stone and wood palette of its neighbours. The studio sits at the water’s edge on a granite plinth. The granite’s thermal mass exploits the abundant sunshine, eliminating the need for active heating systems on fine winter days, while the lakefront site also allows the use of a deep-water heat exchange system to warm and cool the building. www.gh3.ca Photography: Larry Williams
gh3: Photographer’s studio over a boat house, Stoney Lake Transparent, to afford an uninterrupted flow of natural light into the space, this photographer’s studio is the epitome of the Modernist glass box. It is indicative of gh3’s designs and a refreshing departure from the more traditional stone and wood palette of its neighbours. The studio sits at the water’s edge on a granite plinth. The granite’s thermal mass exploits the abundant sunshine, eliminating the need for active heating systems on fine winter days, while the lakefront site also allows the use of a deep-water heat exchange system to warm and cool the building. www.gh3.ca Photography: Larry Williams
Dubbeldam Design Architects: 411 Offset: A Room at the Gladstone Hotel, Toronto Collaborating with Tania Ursomarzo, Heather Dubbeldam has created an installation that takes the form of two wrapping architectural expressions, which formalize the elements of a hotel room. Skeletal timber fins echo the structural framework of the room and create a vertical plane wrapping around the space, supporting the bed, side tables and desk. Another plane wraps horizontally around the walls replacing a solid portion of the window wall with a continuous strip of light. Combined, these two wraps form a ‘room within a room’ floating within the existing Victorian shell. www.dubbeldamarchitects.com Photography: Heather Dubbeldam, Tom Arban
Dubbeldam Design Architects: 411 Offset: A Room at the Gladstone Hotel, Toronto Collaborating with Tania Ursomarzo, Heather Dubbeldam has created an installation that takes the form of two wrapping architectural expressions, which formalize the elements of a hotel room. Skeletal timber fins echo the structural framework of the room and create a vertical plane wrapping around the space, supporting the bed, side tables and desk. Another plane wraps horizontally around the walls replacing a solid portion of the window wall with a continuous strip of light. Combined, these two wraps form a ‘room within a room’ floating within the existing Victorian shell. www.dubbeldamarchitects.com Photography: Heather Dubbeldam, Tom Arban
Donald Chong Studio: Galley House, Toronto At just 3.65 m wide, Galley House is probably Canada’s slimmest home. Chong has reinvigorated a derelict and difficult urban site to create a home that is potentially more desirable than its larger neighbours. Every aspect of the design is first and foremost about maximising space – from the wrap around staircase with specially made space-saving brackets to a double height kitchen with a glazed façade that opens onto an outdoor ‘dining room’. www.donaldchongstudio.com
Donald Chong Studio: Galley House, Toronto At just 3.65 m wide, Galley House is probably Canada’s slimmest home. Chong has reinvigorated a derelict and difficult urban site to create a home that is potentially more desirable than its larger neighbours. Every aspect of the design is first and foremost about maximising space – from the wrap around staircase with specially made space-saving brackets to a double height kitchen with a glazed façade that opens onto an outdoor ‘dining room’. www.donaldchongstudio.com
Cindy Rendely Architexture: Beth Torah Congregation Synagogue, Toronto This renovation and expansion of a 1960s synagogue responds both to Jewish law and contemporary architectural values. Rendely has distilled the design down to pure geometries, natural materials, careful manipulation of light and space, with detailing to encourage the thoughts, activities and emotions of users within. One long wall extends from the front all the way through the building, creating a generous passageway that strings together the chapel, the sanctuary and the social hall. www.crarchitexture.com
Cindy Rendely Architexture: Beth Torah Congregation Synagogue, Toronto This renovation and expansion of a 1960s synagogue responds both to Jewish law and contemporary architectural values. Rendely has distilled the design down to pure geometries, natural materials, careful manipulation of light and space, with detailing to encourage the thoughts, activities and emotions of users within. One long wall extends from the front all the way through the building, creating a generous passageway that strings together the chapel, the sanctuary and the social hall. www.crarchitexture.com
Bing Thom Architects: SAIT Polytechnic Parkade, Calgary Sunk into the sloping site and covered with a sports field, this 35,400 sqm parking garage is almost completely invisible from the north side. Conversely, the exposed southern elevation has been treated as a canvas. Working with an artist, BTA has created a giant mural of cloudscape and prairie sky that seems to move as the sun plays across the punched metal screen. www.bingthomarchitects.com Photography Nic Lehoux, Courtesy of Bing Thom Architects
Bing Thom Architects: SAIT Polytechnic Parkade, Calgary Sunk into the sloping site and covered with a sports field, this 35,400 sqm parking garage is almost completely invisible from the north side. Conversely, the exposed southern elevation has been treated as a canvas. Working with an artist, BTA has created a giant mural of cloudscape and prairie sky that seems to move as the sun plays across the punched metal screen. www.bingthomarchitects.com Photography Nic Lehoux, Courtesy of Bing Thom Architects
ArchitectsAlliance with Behnisch Architekten: Terrence Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, Toronto Designed and built for the University of Toronto, the TDCCBR is an advanced research facility aimed at finding links between genes and disease. The transparent design of the building promotes collaborative research within flexible, loft-style laboratories. A planted multi-story atrium connects the centre to an adjacent heritage campus building. Above, winter gardens and staff lounges punctuate a system of open corridors and stairwells between lab floors, encouraging informal, interdisciplinary contact as scientists move around the building. www.architectsalliance.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
ArchitectsAlliance with Behnisch Architekten: Terrence Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, Toronto Designed and built for the University of Toronto, the TDCCBR is an advanced research facility aimed at finding links between genes and disease. The transparent design of the building promotes collaborative research within flexible, loft-style laboratories. A planted multi-story atrium connects the centre to an adjacent heritage campus building. Above, winter gardens and staff lounges punctuate a system of open corridors and stairwells between lab floors, encouraging informal, interdisciplinary contact as scientists move around the building. www.architectsalliance.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
Levitt Goodman Architects: Evergreen Brickworks Welcome Hut, Toronto Far smaller than the majority of Levitt Goodman’s work, the Evergreen Brickworks Welcome Hut is a temporary structure for this community environmental centre in Toronto. It is built primarily from refuse materials: a derelict shipping container embellished with salvage from the historic brickyards including a graffiti door that now leads to a deck, sheets of slate used as chalkboards and an electrical panel and factory lamps that hang from the ceiling as an artful light fixture. www.levittgoodmanarchitects.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
Levitt Goodman Architects: Evergreen Brickworks Welcome Hut, Toronto Far smaller than the majority of Levitt Goodman’s work, the Evergreen Brickworks Welcome Hut is a temporary structure for this community environmental centre in Toronto. It is built primarily from refuse materials: a derelict shipping container embellished with salvage from the historic brickyards including a graffiti door that now leads to a deck, sheets of slate used as chalkboards and an electrical panel and factory lamps that hang from the ceiling as an artful light fixture. www.levittgoodmanarchitects.com Photography by Ben Rahn/A-Frame Inc www.aframestudio.com
AgaThom Co: Molly's Cabin, Georgian Bay Set on an island, in the windswept environs of Georgian Bay, Molly's Cabin is a contemporary take on the traditional Canadian vacation cottage. Used as a holiday home, the cabin is built entirely of timber, much of which has been rescued from dilapidated barns in the area. AgaThom’s clever use of the over-sailing roof shades the interior while presenting a striking architectural presence on this exposed location. www.agathom.com
AgaThom Co: Molly's Cabin, Georgian Bay Set on an island, in the windswept environs of Georgian Bay, Molly's Cabin is a contemporary take on the traditional Canadian vacation cottage. Used as a holiday home, the cabin is built entirely of timber, much of which has been rescued from dilapidated barns in the area. AgaThom’s clever use of the over-sailing roof shades the interior while presenting a striking architectural presence on this exposed location. www.agathom.com
在设计方面,加拿大建筑师经常听到他们的客户和整个国家的保守本性失望。而且,关于加拿大的典型的嘲弄通常涉及到“无聊”这个词。
呵。。。
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