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Canadian Architect

[REV]. -- Vol. 71, no. 1 (feb., 2026). -- , . -- . -- Canadian Architect

  Contenido parcial: Our first issue of 2026 opens with a tribute to the late Frank Owen Gehry (1929-2025). Larry Wayne Richards looks at how Frank’s legacy intersected with his hometown of Toronto, beyond the AGO and in-construction Forma towers.- My editorial parses the news that the Ontario Place Protectors case is heading to the Supreme Court. A coalition is challenging the provincial government’s ability to exempt the waterfront land from environmental and heritage requirements, and to broadly indemnify itself against civil litigation related to the development. In a larger sense, the case asks: what are the limits of government power when it comes to facilitating development? - This month’s cover story is the redevelopment of Toronto’s Union Station, a 14-year-long project led by NORR Architects & Engineers with heritage architect EVOQ Architecture. Pamela Young examines the comprehensive overhaul, which vastly increases and improves the public realm within Canada’s largest multi-modal transportation hub, equipping it to handle 130 million passengers annually.- Continuing the theme of infrastructure, Odile Hénault visits Vaudreuil-Dorion’s new Pôle municipal, a city hall and library complex that aims to be a civic centre for the suburb just west of Montreal island. And I tour Toronto’s Indigenous Hub, a development centred on an Indigenous community health centre and skills development facility. Designed by BDP Quadrangle, Stantec Architecture, Two Row Architect, and ERA Architects, the complex suggests how reconciliation can take physical form.- Turning to other forms of infrastructure, Brendan Stewart examines the work of plazaPOPS an organization that began by building one-off pop-up plazas, and is now moving towards creating a lasting community of practice. Mark Bessoudo reviews a photo book by Richard Johnson, and the legacy of Canada’s seasonal ice huts captured in Johnson’s images.- In this month’s RAIC Journal, President Jonathan Bisson reflects on the organization’s work over the past year, Chief Commercial Officer Giovanna Boniface shares insights from a comprehensive community engagement initiative, and Canadian Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute’s Brian J. Hall explains how the construction method can help solve Canada’s housing needs.- Capping off our issue, we offer our product picks from Feria Hábitat València, and review two books: a compendium on architecture and videogames, and a biography of prolific Canadian Gilded Age architect Frank Darling.
  ISSN: 00082872

  1. 
GEHRY, FRANK OWEN
; 2. 
PATRIMONIO ARQUITECTONICO
; 3. 
PATRIMONIO URBANO
; 4. 
AREAS COSTERAS
; 5. 
ZONIFICACION
; 6. 
IMPACTO AMBIENTAL

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Lam, Elsa
Canadian Architect [REV]. -- Vol. 71, no. 1 (feb., 2026). -- Ontario : Southam Magazine Group, 2026. -- Canadian Architect

Contenido parcial: Our first issue of 2026 opens with a tribute to the late Frank Owen Gehry (1929-2025). Larry Wayne Richards looks at how Frank’s legacy intersected with his hometown of Toronto, beyond the AGO and in-construction Forma towers.- My editorial parses the news that the Ontario Place Protectors case is heading to the Supreme Court. A coalition is challenging the provincial government’s ability to exempt the waterfront land from environmental and heritage requirements, and to broadly indemnify itself against civil litigation related to the development. In a larger sense, the case asks: what are the limits of government power when it comes to facilitating development? - This month’s cover story is the redevelopment of Toronto’s Union Station, a 14-year-long project led by NORR Architects & Engineers with heritage architect EVOQ Architecture. Pamela Young examines the comprehensive overhaul, which vastly increases and improves the public realm within Canada’s largest multi-modal transportation hub, equipping it to handle 130 million passengers annually.- Continuing the theme of infrastructure, Odile Hénault visits Vaudreuil-Dorion’s new Pôle municipal, a city hall and library complex that aims to be a civic centre for the suburb just west of Montreal island. And I tour Toronto’s Indigenous Hub, a development centred on an Indigenous community health centre and skills development facility. Designed by BDP Quadrangle, Stantec Architecture, Two Row Architect, and ERA Architects, the complex suggests how reconciliation can take physical form.- Turning to other forms of infrastructure, Brendan Stewart examines the work of plazaPOPS an organization that began by building one-off pop-up plazas, and is now moving towards creating a lasting community of practice. Mark Bessoudo reviews a photo book by Richard Johnson, and the legacy of Canada’s seasonal ice huts captured in Johnson’s images.- In this month’s RAIC Journal, President Jonathan Bisson reflects on the organization’s work over the past year, Chief Commercial Officer Giovanna Boniface shares insights from a comprehensive community engagement initiative, and Canadian Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute’s Brian J. Hall explains how the construction method can help solve Canada’s housing needs.- Capping off our issue, we offer our product picks from Feria Hábitat València, and review two books: a compendium on architecture and videogames, and a biography of prolific Canadian Gilded Age architect Frank Darling.
ISSN: 00082872

1. GEHRY, FRANK OWEN; 2. PATRIMONIO ARQUITECTONICO; 3. PATRIMONIO URBANO; 4. AREAS COSTERAS; 5. ZONIFICACION; 6. IMPACTO AMBIENTAL
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