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Canadian Architect

[REV]. -- Vol. 70, no. 8 (nov., 2025). -- , . -- . -- Canadian Architect

  Contenido parcial: Claire Lubell visits Place des Montréalaises, a plaza led by architecture firm Lemay, artist Angela Silver, and engineers AtkinsRealis. - Travelling to the West Coast, we take a look at Simon Fraser University’s Gibson Art Museum, designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects with Iredale Architecture. - The revamp of the University of Toronto’s central green is another instance of architecture and landscape design working in tight coordination. The Landmark Project by KPMB Architects and Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA) removed the traffic circle that long dominated the front campus. - On a larger scale, MVVA also recently completed Toronto’s Biidaasige, a 50-acre park on Toronto’s waterfront. The park is part of a masterplan by MVVA that builds a new, naturalized mouth for the Don River, and protects 174 hectares of land in the Port Lands and eastern waterfront from flooding, unlocking space for future mixed-use neighbourhoods. - Architecture-trained Bill Pechet, who also trained in geography and visual arts, is the subject of two pieces in this month’s pages. Leslie Van Duzer’s recent monograph on Pechet’s wide-spanning work from houses and commercial interiors to playgrounds, plazas, and urban lighting is reviewed. - At Winnipeg’s Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art, Witthöft & LaTourelle’s Betonwaves installation uses rubble to tell a powerful story of reconciliation. - This issue also includes the November RAIC Journal, with reports on the RAIC’s 2025 Intern Survey, key takeaways from the RAIC Fees and Procurement Working Group session at this year’s Conference. - Finally, we pay tribute to Dr. Kongjian Yu, founder of Chinese landscape firm Turenscape, who died in a plane crash in Brazil. Yu pioneered the Sponge Cities concept for water resilience in urban environments, which became Chinese national policy in 2013, and has taken hold in cities and countries around the world.
  ISSN: 00082872

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Lam, Elsa
Canadian Architect [REV]. -- Vol. 70, no. 8 (nov., 2025). -- Ontario : Southam Magazine Group, 2025. -- Canadian Architect

Contenido parcial: Claire Lubell visits Place des Montréalaises, a plaza led by architecture firm Lemay, artist Angela Silver, and engineers AtkinsRealis. - Travelling to the West Coast, we take a look at Simon Fraser University’s Gibson Art Museum, designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects with Iredale Architecture. - The revamp of the University of Toronto’s central green is another instance of architecture and landscape design working in tight coordination. The Landmark Project by KPMB Architects and Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA) removed the traffic circle that long dominated the front campus. - On a larger scale, MVVA also recently completed Toronto’s Biidaasige, a 50-acre park on Toronto’s waterfront. The park is part of a masterplan by MVVA that builds a new, naturalized mouth for the Don River, and protects 174 hectares of land in the Port Lands and eastern waterfront from flooding, unlocking space for future mixed-use neighbourhoods. - Architecture-trained Bill Pechet, who also trained in geography and visual arts, is the subject of two pieces in this month’s pages. Leslie Van Duzer’s recent monograph on Pechet’s wide-spanning work from houses and commercial interiors to playgrounds, plazas, and urban lighting is reviewed. - At Winnipeg’s Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art, Witthöft & LaTourelle’s Betonwaves installation uses rubble to tell a powerful story of reconciliation. - This issue also includes the November RAIC Journal, with reports on the RAIC’s 2025 Intern Survey, key takeaways from the RAIC Fees and Procurement Working Group session at this year’s Conference. - Finally, we pay tribute to Dr. Kongjian Yu, founder of Chinese landscape firm Turenscape, who died in a plane crash in Brazil. Yu pioneered the Sponge Cities concept for water resilience in urban environments, which became Chinese national policy in 2013, and has taken hold in cities and countries around the world.
ISSN: 00082872

1. ARQUITECTOS CANADIENSES
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