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Canadian Architect

[REV]. -- Vol. 70, no. 5 (ago., 2025). -- , . -- . -- Canadian Architect

  Contenido parcial: Our August issue looks at new civic landmarks in three cities of different scales and characters: Toronto, Mississauga, and Péribonka, Quebec.- Starting in downtown Toronto, the St. Lawrence Market North building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSHP) with Adamson Associates is a much-welcome public hub that combines courtrooms, court services administrative space, and a market hall. It’s a project long in the making the design competition took place 15 years ago. Regardless, writes Pamela Young, in pure design terms, it’s a building that gets a lot right even if it took some value engineering hits during its long realization.- In nearby Mississauga, RDHA’s Hazel McCallion Central Library is a case study in radically remaking a postmodern building on a tight budget. For just $250/square foot, RDHA has profoundly transformed the library, opening up the plan, updating the interior, and topping the whole with a new glass-box reading room.- Peter Sealy reports on how contemporary architecture makes an impact in the small community of Péribonka, Quebec. Designed by Les Maîtres d’Oeuvre Architectes (MDO), Péribonka’s new civic hub combines a museum, library, exhibition spaces, and municipal offices. The result, writes Sealy, is a beautiful illustration of architecture’s capacity to shape the public realm, provide a symbol for municipal pride, protect regional patrimony, and elevate prosaic everyday activities.- We also travel to Venice, where Lawrence Bird reviews Picoplanktonics, which fills the Canadian Pavilion with monsters: bio-printed armatures supporting micro-organisms that transform carbon dioxide into coral-like stone. Canadians are also present in a dozen other exhibitions at he Biennale, including one that showcases Atelier Pierre Thibault site-sensitive work on Quebec’s Île Verte.- Canadian design diplomacy also happens on our home turf. We take a look at 1×1 architecture’s design for the G7 meeting spaces at Kananaskis, Alberta—a showcase of Canadian talent.- Rounding out our issue, Juliette Cook and Rashmi Sirkar of Ha/f Climate Design examine how deconstructing and reusing construction materials used to be the norm, and ask: how can we return to circular practices? We also review a new go-to guidebook for Winnipeg architecture, and a monograph/memoir by Perkins+Will principal Andrew Frontini.
  ISSN: 00082872

  1. 
ARQUITECTOS CANADIENSES

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Lam, Elsa
Canadian Architect [REV]. -- Vol. 70, no. 5 (ago., 2025). -- Ontario : Southam Magazine Group, 2025. -- Canadian Architect

Contenido parcial: Our August issue looks at new civic landmarks in three cities of different scales and characters: Toronto, Mississauga, and Péribonka, Quebec.- Starting in downtown Toronto, the St. Lawrence Market North building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSHP) with Adamson Associates is a much-welcome public hub that combines courtrooms, court services administrative space, and a market hall. It’s a project long in the making the design competition took place 15 years ago. Regardless, writes Pamela Young, in pure design terms, it’s a building that gets a lot right even if it took some value engineering hits during its long realization.- In nearby Mississauga, RDHA’s Hazel McCallion Central Library is a case study in radically remaking a postmodern building on a tight budget. For just $250/square foot, RDHA has profoundly transformed the library, opening up the plan, updating the interior, and topping the whole with a new glass-box reading room.- Peter Sealy reports on how contemporary architecture makes an impact in the small community of Péribonka, Quebec. Designed by Les Maîtres d’Oeuvre Architectes (MDO), Péribonka’s new civic hub combines a museum, library, exhibition spaces, and municipal offices. The result, writes Sealy, is a beautiful illustration of architecture’s capacity to shape the public realm, provide a symbol for municipal pride, protect regional patrimony, and elevate prosaic everyday activities.- We also travel to Venice, where Lawrence Bird reviews Picoplanktonics, which fills the Canadian Pavilion with monsters: bio-printed armatures supporting micro-organisms that transform carbon dioxide into coral-like stone. Canadians are also present in a dozen other exhibitions at he Biennale, including one that showcases Atelier Pierre Thibault site-sensitive work on Quebec’s Île Verte.- Canadian design diplomacy also happens on our home turf. We take a look at 1×1 architecture’s design for the G7 meeting spaces at Kananaskis, Alberta—a showcase of Canadian talent.- Rounding out our issue, Juliette Cook and Rashmi Sirkar of Ha/f Climate Design examine how deconstructing and reusing construction materials used to be the norm, and ask: how can we return to circular practices? We also review a new go-to guidebook for Winnipeg architecture, and a monograph/memoir by Perkins+Will principal Andrew Frontini.
ISSN: 00082872

1. ARQUITECTOS CANADIENSES
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