* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Sesquicentennial Issue - Ontario Association of Architects
Architects' Alliance of Ireland wikipedia , lookup
Registration of architects in the United Kingdom wikipedia , lookup
Expressionist architecture wikipedia , lookup
Ottoman architecture wikipedia , lookup
Georgian architecture wikipedia , lookup
Constructivist architecture wikipedia , lookup
Structuralism (architecture) wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of the United Kingdom wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of the night wikipedia , lookup
Stalinist architecture wikipedia , lookup
Neoclassical architecture wikipedia , lookup
Bernhard Hoesli wikipedia , lookup
Russian neoclassical revival wikipedia , lookup
Architectural drawing wikipedia , lookup
Sacred architecture wikipedia , lookup
Russian architecture wikipedia , lookup
Postmodern architecture wikipedia , lookup
Korean architecture wikipedia , lookup
Spanish architecture wikipedia , lookup
Florestano Di Fausto wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of Germany wikipedia , lookup
Modern architecture wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of the Philippines wikipedia , lookup
International Style (architecture) wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of England wikipedia , lookup
Contemporary architecture wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of Italy wikipedia , lookup
Mathematics and architecture wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of the United States wikipedia , lookup
Architecture wikipedia , lookup
Professional requirements for architects wikipedia , lookup
OAA Perspectives The Journal of the Ontario Association of Architects Volume 24, Number 4 Winter 2016/17 $5.00 The Sesquicentennial Issue Leave a Lasting Impression Your projects say a lot about you. Your style. Your creative flair. Forterra Brick offers limitless design opportunities to express yourself. Explore our unique textures, colours and shapes. The only limit is your imagination. To find out more, visit forterrabrick.com. CANADA’S TOP Steel Building Manufacturer EXPORT AWARD WINNER OF THE YEAR BEHLEN Steel Buildings Are a Perfect Fit Our engineers collaborate with you on design to give your buildings the functionality you need and the aesthetic you want. From planning and problem solving to manufacturing and assembly, we are committed to helping you build success. GET YOUR PERFECT FIT. (888) 315 -1035 | www.behlen.ca © BEHLEN Industries LP 2016 Assiniboine Community College in Brandon MB. Developed in partnership by Cibinel Architects Ltd. and BEHLEN Industries Now you can. Stay-In-Place Formwork No Plywood Required • Installation is easy and safe, no temporary shoring required • Top chord bearing joist eliminates costly ledger connections • Works great with dry wall construction, especially ICF, LSF, and block/concrete • Large access holes to run services through • Great for in-floor heating installation with metal deck reflecting heat upwards [email protected] • Technical support and training provided • 2hr UL/ULC fire rated • High acoustic ratings Base (3" Slab) with Fiberglass Batts STC: 58 IIC: 37 iSPAN SYSTEMS LP 70 Brentwood Drive, P.O. BOX 442 Princeton, Ontario, Canada N0J 1V0 T 519-458-4222 F 519-458-4460 www.iSPANsystems.com iSPAN is a registered trademark of iSPAN Systems LP, patents apply and patents pending. iSPAN Systems LP is a business venture created by Walters Inc., Supreme Steel Inc. and BJI. The Sesquicentennial Issue EDITORIAL IN THIS ISSUE 6 PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE WHAT IS IT ABOUT A 150th anniversary that’s so exciting and engaging? Judging from the amount of enthusiasm and outpouring of emotion surrounding Canada’s sesquicentennial so far: not very much. But it’s a bit early to judge. As I write this, the beginning of the Sesqui Year is still three months away, and the anniversary date itself is another six months beyond that. But the countdown has already started. And, by the time you read this, the official festivities should be in full swing. When we asked our Committee members and regular contributors to jot down their thoughts on the significance of the sesquicentennial, responses were a little slow in coming. It seems that a centennial, a bicentennial, or even a millennial, is easy to comprehend: these are nice round numbers, and there’s usually a huge party. A sesquicentennial, on the other hand, is a difficult concept to appreciate. It’s halfway between two events, and the word itself—“ses-qui-cen-ten-ni-al”—even with its innate musicality (in poetic terms: dactylic dimeter), is not easy to love. Let’s consider for a moment what 150 years represents. Except for some biblical personalities, it’s longer than anyone has ever lived. Also, it’s longer than many countries have existed (yes, and a whole lot less than many others). The oldest animal in the world, Jonathan the tortoise, is 183 years old and still healthy. There is no report on his sesquicentennial birthday, but I bet his upcoming bi-centennial will be a blow-out occasion. The sesquicentennial celebration planned by our government will be a year-long extravaganza of activities and events, including art exhibits, orchestral performances, tall ships, science shows, travel and exploration. But nothing on the list is even vaguely architectural. So it looks like it’s up to us to pick up the slack. One thing you can do is enjoy our feature, which contains the reflections of several thoughtful writers on the subject of centennials, sesquicentennials and bicentennials. The other thing you can do, which will show your appreciation for our 150-year-old country and the important contribution of our profession is to attend this year’s RAIC Festival “Architecture 150,” which will be held in concert with the OAA Conference, in Ottawa, May 24–27, 2017. Attendance will go a long way toward keeping us connected with our heritage, our culture and our built environment. That’s when the celebration will really start. See you there. 12 OAA Perspectives is the official journal of the Ontario Association of Architects Published Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ©2016 EDITOR Gordon S. Grice ADVERTISING ENQUIRIES Kim Davies 800.665.2456, ext. 4423 ADMINISTRATOR, WEBSITE AND COMMUNICATIONS Tamara King www.oaa.on.ca 16 EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Ian Ellingham, Chair Toon Dreesen, Council Liaison Luke Andritsos, Bill Birdsell, Cathy Capes, Herb Klassen, Tom Leung, Vivian Lo, Rick Mateljan, Christopher Moise, Lucian Nan, Greg Reuter, Barbara Ross, Alexander Temporale, Javier Zeller PUBLISHED BY REGULAR CONTRIBUTORS Mary Ellen Lynch Comisso; Debbie Friesen; Errol Hugh; Evangelo Kalmantis; Renée Moise David Parker; Anthony Provenzano; Gary Pask PUBLISHER Robert Phillips 1630 Ness Avenue, Suite 300 Winnipeg, MB R3J 3X1 Tel: 204.947.0222 Toll-Free: 800.665.2456 www.naylor.com NAYLOR EDITOR Andrea Németh PROJECT MANAGER Kim Davies BOOK LEADER Amanda Rowluk President Toon Dreessen shares Gen X reflections on Expo 67. 9 RESPONSE Autographed buildings, highrise architecture in a dystopian future, Alfred Hitchcock as architect, and timely advice from 250 years ago. 12 FEATURE A compendium of reflections in celebration of Canada’s sesquicentennial. 31 FICTION Another piece of flash fiction from the OAA Perspectives Fiction Vault. 38 ONTARIO PLACES The Toronto Legacy Project celebrates the home of Eric Arthur. COVER IMAGE A PRISMACOLOR SKETCH BY PAUL STEVENSON OLES, DOYEN OF AMERICAN ARCHITECTURAL ILLUSTRATORS, COMMISSIONED BY PETER CHERMAYEFF, DEPICTING THE PROPOSED INTERIOR OF THE US PAVILION AT EXPO 67. 38 GROUP PUBLISHER Angela Caroyannis SALES REPRESENTATIVES Candace Bremner, Anook Commandeur, Kristine Dudar, David S Evans, Meaghen Foden, Tracy Goltsman, Robyn Mourant, Cheryll Oland, Norma Walchuk LAYOUT & DESIGN Emma Law Articles from OAA Perspectives may be reproduced with appropriate credit and written permission. The OAA does not verify, endorse or take responsibility for claims made by advertisers. Ontario Association of Architects is an open and responsive professional association of members which regulates, supports, represents and promotes the practice and appreciation of architecture in the interest of all Ontarians. The Association was founded in 1889 and its primary role is to serve and protect the public interest through administration of the Architects Act, and through leadership of the profession in Ontario. For further information, contact the Administrator, Website and Communications, Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) 111 Moatfield Drive Toronto, Ontario M3B 3L6 Tel: 416.449.6898 Fax: 416.449.5756 e‑mail: [email protected] www.oaa.on.ca Publication Mail Agreement #40064978 DECEMBER 2016/ OAA-Q0416/3888 5 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 PRE S ID EN T ’ S ME S S AGE Time Flies TIME FLIES. THERE IS NO time like the present. A good time was had by all. Ahead of one’s time. Big time. Closing time. The year 2017 marks a major milestone in Canadian history. It is the 150 th anniversary of Confederation and the 50 th anniversary of Expo 67, the seminal World Expo that put Canada on the world stage. Arguably, it was a defining moment for Canadian architects. In the early 1960s, the Right Honorable John Diefenbaker said, In a few short years, this nation will be celebrating its Centennial…I ask that you, the members of this profession, should play a most important part, and I ask you…to present to the Centennial Committee as soon as possible your views and suggestions for that celebration… — quoted in Architecture and National Identity / Architecture et identité national: The Centennial Projects 50 Years On / Les projets du centenaire 50 ans plus tard catalogue by Marco Polo and Colin Ripley. Halifax: TUNS Press, 2014. This call to action resonates as much today as it did then. To me, it looks like we still have this challenge before us: to show why architecture matters. It has been said that the Centennial Projects can be seen as a de facto attempt to build a national identity through architecture. Unfortunately, I missed the Centennial. As a Gen X-er, I was born after this great celebration, and came into a world with great architecture built by and for the boomers who came before me. I have been part of the generation of cynics—the disenfranchised and educated professionals who have been raised on mobility of employment, the internet, CAD and fee-based competitions for work. I’ve never known a fee schedule “like the good old days.” I listen to elder statesmen talk wistfully of the spirit of the ’60s. Sure, it was a time of rampant sprawl, carcentric culture, urban renewal projects that destroyed historic neighbourhoods and unfettered use of fossil fuels to heat, cool and build our cities. It was also a time when our profession seemed to peak with creative passion, a time when we were valued by society and commanded fees that we can only dream of today. This was a time when identities, reputations and ideals were forged. Today, I know that much of our mid-century modern built form needs renewal; that deep energy retrofits and adaptive reuse projects are meant to revitalize these buildings because this architecture has become part of our cultural fabric. Stripping out asbestos, reconfiguring brutalist buildings and TOON DREESSEN, ARCHITECT OAA, FRAIC, AIA, LEED AP PRESIDENT 6 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 making them more energy-efficient helps preserve their value to the public. But how do we preserve our value to the public? How do we recapture that spirit of the ’60s? For this Gen X-er, running a firm of millennials that is built on the legacy of founding partners who established the firm on their successes in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, I’m eager to help forge a new Canadian architectural identity—one that’s built on the ideals of our profession, that embraces new technology, that resets the conversation with First Nations people and the environment. I dream of a future in which architects are valued members of society in a culture where a healthy built environment performs at the highest levels and elevates the human spirit. The time is now. POST SCRIPT: This is my final President’s Message. By the time of publication, a new OAA President will have been elected. I can’t begin to thank all those who have been a part of the past two years— members of Council, committees and staff—thank you for your patience and support. To my partners and staff, thank you for putting up with long absences; to my family, thank you, simply, for everything. Most of all, to the members, thank you for attending conferences, meetings, society tours; for sharing your input and ideas, for working together to raise the profile of architecture in Ontario, and abroad. Thank you for raising your voice. z M A S O N RY PR O D U C T S C L AY B R I C K | S TO N E | A R C H I T E C T U R A L MA S O N RY P R O D U C T S BramptonBrick.com | 1.800.GO.BRICK (462-7425) Multifamily Acoustics Sound and Vibration Isolation It’s not magic, it’s engineering.™ GenieMat™ FF GenieClip™ Type RST GenieMat™ ISS GenieMat™ Fit Learn more at www.pliteq.com 805435_Pliteq.indd 1 QUITE SIMPLY SUPERIOR • 60KSi steel piles fully galvanized to protect the tubes as well as the heads and helixes against physical deterioration; GenieMat™ RST Innovative by design, simple to install, GenieClip™ and GenieMat™ are the trusted brands of architects, builders and acoustical consultants worldwide. GenieClip™ Mount GenieMat™ TMIP For more information on our company, products and expertise please call 416-449-0049 or email us at [email protected]. 2016 GenieClip™ Type LB We are a team of experienced engineers focused on developing KLJKSHUIRUPLQJFRVWH̆HFWLYH acoustical products to ensure building code is met for sound transmission (STC/IIC). Platinum Sponsor 4/13/16 11:42 PM FOUNDATION FOUNDA SOLUTIO SOLUTION FOR ANY TY TYPE OF INSTALLA INSTALLATION • Tube filled with polyurethane; • Exclusive nut-fastening system that securely attaches the mounting head to the pile to prevent uplift; • GoliathConnect system allowing piles to be extended without reducing their rigidity; • Helices larger than those of the competition. 1. 855.74 3.4777 WWW. GO L I AT H T E C H P I L E S .COM 8 820231_GoliathTech.indd 1 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 07/07/16 4:15 am RE SP ONSE LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT HELLO, I just read your “President’s Message” in the OAA Perspectives Magazine! I enjoyed it and liked the reference of “pages and pages of supplementary conditions” for RFP’s, lol. It’s a headache to even look at them and I am not even preparing the proposal… don’t know how you guys do it! Regards, Sonia Allaham, Quality Assurance & Customer Service Manager, Ottawa NEW RULE Some of you will certainly be aware of the new Toronto city planning policy that architects will henceforth be obliged to “sign” their buildings, in the same way that authors, painters and sculptors sign their work. As reported in Metro News, Great works of art carry the artist’s signature, and now new Toronto buildings will do the same. A new policy prepared by city planners will ensure new buildings over 1,000 square metres include a prominent credit to the architect near the main entrance or on the main facade. 1 The initiative was first proposed by MPP (and former architect) Peter Milczyn, but has now been formalized. In keeping with the theme “Architecture Matters,” the hope is to raise the level of discussion of design in the province. “Historically, laying the corner stone of a building was very important,” said Toon Dreessen, President of the Ontario Association of Architects. “We’re hoping this initiative continues that tradition.”2 HIGHRISE The name JG Ballard has appeared on the pages of this magazine as a writer with distinctly architectural sensibilities. Now, one of his more architectural novels has been made www.oaa.on.ca into a movie, with director Ben Wheatley (2015). As with many Ballard stories, this one takes place in an imagined future that is initially utopian, but ultimately dystopian. According to the promotional material, an ambitious doctor, Rober Laing, played by Tom (The Night Manager) Hiddleston, takes up residence in a luxury highrise apartment complex, “the epitome of chic, modern living.”3 Among the “eccentric tenants” is Anthony Royal, the building’s “enigmatic architect,” played by Jeremy Irons. Life seems like paradise to the solitude-seeking Laing. But as power outages become more frequent and building flaws emerge, particularly on the lower floors, the regimented social strata begins to crumble and the building becomes a battlefield in a literal class war. 4 Like some other Ballard stories, this one establishes its setting as determinant in the story’s outcome. To the old warning “be careful what you wish for,” the novel and the movie add the corollary: “be careful what you build for.” THE WRONG HOUSE: THE ARCHITECTURE OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK by Steven Jacobs, Rotterdam: nai010, 2007 On the same theme—architects and architecture in the movies—the jacket copy for this book begins with the statement: “Alfred Hitchcock is an architect.” The book describes the role that architecture plays in Hitchcock’s films. Having been a set designer before becoming a director, Hitchcock maintained an involvement with the design of his sets and paid special attention to spaces and details (a stair or a window) that could generate drama and emotional responses in his characters and his audience. Discussing how Hitchcock’s cinematic spaces are connected with the OAA PERSPECTIVES ADVICE COLUMN Our guest advisor for this issue is Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield. Advice has been taken from his letters to his son, never intended to be published, but published nonetheless in 1774.5 Some of his advice is extremely practical: “To play a good game of billiards is the sign of a well-rounded education, but to play too good a game of billiards is the sign of a mis-spent youth.” Other pieces of advice, such as the following, excerpted from Letter XXXVI, point out how much our world has changed in 250 years. DEAR BOY, Bath, October the eighth, O. S. 1748. Tell stories very seldom, and absolutely never but where they are very apt and very short. Omit every circumstance that is not material, and beware of digressions. To have frequent recourse to narrative betrays great want of imagination…(p. 82) Loud laughter is the mirth of the mob, who are only pleased with silly things; for true Wit or good Sense never excited a laugh since the creation of the world. A man of parts and fashion is therefore only seen to smile, but never heard to laugh. (p. 88) narrative, the characters, and the mise-en-scène of his films, Jacobs also situates these fictitious buildings in the history and theory of architecture. NOTES: 1. “ARCHITECTS ORDERED TO ADD THEIR NAMES TO TORONTO BUILDINGS: CREDITS ON BUILDINGS COULD UP THE ANTE FOR DESIGN, EXPERT SAYS,” CHRIS BATEMAN, METRO, JUNE 21, 2016 WWW.METRONEWS.CA/NEWS/TORONTO/2016/ 06/21/ARCHITECTS-ORDERED-TO-ADD-TAGS-TOTORONTO-BUILDINGS.HTML 2. IBID. 3. WWW.WIKIWAND.COM/EN/HIGH-RISE_(FILM) 4. WWW.IMDB.COM/TITLE/TT0462335/ 5. FROM: LETTERS WRITTEN BY LORD CHESTERFIELD TO HIS SON, SELECTED BY CHARLES SAYLE. LONDON AND NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE: THE W. SCOTT PUBLISHING CO., LTD. HTTPS://ARCHIVE. ORG/STREAM/LETTERSWRITTENBY00CHESUOFT/ LETTERSWRITTENBY00CHESUOFT_DJVU.TXT 9 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 World’s leading brand of Manufactured Stone Veneers R AISING T HE S TANDARDS FOR ALL STONE VENEERS Premium brand of Natural Stone Veneers Why Wh y settle? ?S Specify pec ecif ify y on one e of o our ur iindustry nd dust stry ry le leading eadi ding stone ve veneer eneer brands on y your next residential or commercial project and d se sett yo your ur p project roje ro ject ct apart apa part rt from fro rom m the the rest. rest re st. For additional info about our Manufactured & Natural Stone products contact Canadian Stone Industries – Raising the standard one stone veneer at a time! www.AllThingsStone.com 800.977.8663 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL IN CELEBRATION OF QUI SES BY GORDON S. GRICE OA A, FR AIC 150th anniversary is certainly something worth celebrating. The question is: how, exactly? Canada’s 1967 Centennial celebration was a year-long affair, including transitory celebrations and permanent mementos—buildings, books, parks and memorials—right across the country. The Canadian and provincial governments spent more than 88 million (1967) dollars, which equates to roughly 630 million dollars in 2016 currency. As journalist Joseph Hall has said, in 1967, and the years surrounding it, “the country was awash in architectural exuberance.” 1 This would be a tough act to follow, under any circumstances, but so far, the Sesquicentennial Canada 150 Fund has anted up only 210 million (2016) dollars. In attempts to understand the nature of a sesquicentennial, our contributors to this feature discuss the range of centennial-type celebrations, including semi-centennial, sesqui-centennial, and bi-centennial. Our first two contributors have spent the past half-century as architects, having graduated from the University of Toronto School of Architecture (as it then was) in the Centennial year—a time of prosperity and unbounded optimism. In 1967, the profession was well-defined and job security was ABOVE PROCLAMATION OF CANADIAN CONFEDERATION. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, VOYAGER, 20 DECEMBER, 2007 BELOW CANADA OTTAWA PANORAMA. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, BY G. BARANSKI, MAY, 2009 12 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 assured. At least, that’s how it seemed. Our writers share with us the experience of having practiced for 50 years and, in both cases, continuing to be active in the profession. It all goes to confirm that an architectural education truly begins after graduation. Our next two contributors share their experiences as visitors to Expo 67 in Montreal. CANADA’S CENTENNIAL As they both observe, it lived up to the tradition of other Worlds Fairs, in that it was a conspicuous celebration of architecture. But it was also a celebration of nationhood and of life in general. The connection between architecture and culture was evident and undisputed—a connection that is much less obvious, 50 years later. The next pair of contributions deal with the written word. The first essay is a review of a book written by the father of one of Canada’s best-loved actors, who also happens to have been a planner of Canada’s centennial celebrations. The author recommends 10 rules for planning a centennial celebration—we’ve got 50 years to put them in place. The second essay www.oaa.on.ca reveals, among other things, the little-known fact that Canadian architectural journalism is only two years shy of celebrating its own sesquicentennial. It’s instructive to compare the experiences described in the “Story of an Architect,”—written by an architect towards the end of his career, 100 years ago—with the stories of our 1967 graduates. Things may change, but circumstances, don’t. Two more of our contributors look ahead to the next 50 years. What can we expect? Both writers believe that the profession will not only survive, but prevail. One suggests that this will be accomplished by adapting. The other suggests that tradition will see us through. This writer believes that it will require a lot of both. In attempts to understand the nature of a sesquicentennial, our contributors to this feature discuss the range of centennial-type celebrations, including semi-centennial, sesqui-centennial, and bi-centennial. GORDON S. GRICE is editor of OAA Perspectives. NOTES 1. “SAFDIE, MORIYAMA AND CANADA’S BIG ARCHITECTURAL DREAMS,” IN THE STAR, JULY 1, 2016. 13 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL MY CAREER: 50 YEARS AND COUNTING BY PAUL ROTH OA A , FR A I C, CL AS S O F 6T7 fter working for Victor Heinrichs (a 50-year practitioner this past year), I set up a firm with John Knibb: Roth Knibb Architects—no Inc. at that time. We practiced architecture, although I sometimes think that we didn’t really know what we were doing. I can remember graduating and thinking “This is it? I thought I would be prepared to be an architect when I graduated.” However, we survived, somewhat under the OAA radar, and eventually learned by experience, and without the aid of lawsuits. That firm was wound down in 2012 after 40 years. I remember being intimidated by the spectre of the OAA during those early years, knowing that we were probably not doing things right. It was not until Chuck Greenberg asked me to join the Practice Committee, despite my protestations of ignorance, that I connected with the wider architectural world. That experience, which included 10 years as chair, was very educational. It convinced me that all architects should serve some time on committees for their own professional benefit as well as the good of the profession. 14 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 My life as an architect is probably as unique as that of every other architect. I remember, while getting my “internship” points, sitting in on a lecture by a fastidious spec writer from a large firm. It almost convinced me to walk away from the profession. His approach was that every contractor was out to get you and the only way to survive was to nail him to the wall with the specifications. I can’t argue that this is not a useful way to work. It’s just not the way that I wanted to work. As a result, our firm operated on a much more cooperative model. I realize that this was possible because we were a small boutique firm (approximately 10 people) doing small projects. Contractors were chosen on the basis of their willingness to work as a team, as well as on the basis of price and quality of work. I also emphasized that I was not superior to the contractor and I was willing to work as an equal. I credit this approach to the low tension level I experienced during the construction phase and the avoidance of litigation throughout my career. Having wound down Roth Knibb Architects Inc. in 2012, I decided to maintain my license and continue practicing as Paul Roth Architect Inc. The idea was that I would take on the odd small project, if it appeared, to keep me from watching the afternoon soaps on TV. I must confess that the motivation was based in part on “self-identifying” as an architect, a life I have enjoyed. The result has been non-stop work from morning to night, and frequently turning down potential projects due to work load. For the production of contract documents, I also collaborate with some members of my former staff. I’m glad I fell into architecture, despite the remuneration level. As almost all architects know, this profession is not a source of great wealth. Perhaps this is due to our actually liking what we do, and therefore competing for the work without commensurate attention to the financial return. At this point in my career, I’m comfortable based on outside investments and purchasing a building on Queen Street West, when it was a slum. Had I relied solely on fees, my financial comfort level would not be nearly as good. Had I to do it all over again, I would gladly choose the smaller projects that many architects reject. They provide an opportunity LOOKING BACK ON 50 YEARS BY JOHN HACKETT OA A, FR AIC, CLASS OF 6T7 I SKETCH BY PAUL ROTH to have fun in a way that some larger projects do not, particularly when the owner has an emotional as well as a purely financial investment in the project. I look back at our archived hand-drawn drawings with admiration for the skill and craft involved in their production. When the digital world became a reality, my partner John Knibb and I decided that we would be the guinea pigs for CAD. Unlike any other firm I know, we learned CAD (ArchiCAD) first, before buying licences for the staff. So in the early 1990s we began to work in 3-D. In hindsight, this was a very wise (lucky?) decision. To this day, I design starting with bubble diagrams which very soon morph into simple digital models. These are of the same nature and complexity as the venerable cardboard models. As the design progresses, these models grow in detail and complexity while providing opportunities for the client to sit beside me and walk through and around the developing design. Visualizing the emerging design in three dimensions is still as important as it has always been. PAUL ROTH is a Toronto architect. www.oaa.on.ca am grateful to be able to look back on 50 years in architecture, but confess I am less optimistic about the future of our profession today than I was 50 years ago. Fifty years ago, Expo 67 had put architecture and architects on the front pages everywhere. It was part of our country’s celebration of reaching adulthood. It was also, among other things, a celebration of architecture. By comparison, this year the Ministry of Tourism for the Province managed to exclude architecture from its Cultural Strategy. The OAA attempted to get architecture added by petition, but reportedly got no response. Regardless of the outcome, the oversight is in telling contrast to 1967. Today, too many client organizations see the need to protect themselves from the perceived limitations of architects. Again, the Province has shown its lack of affection for the profession by enthusiastically deciding not to engage directly with architects for major public buildings, preferring instead to resort to a “P3” or a Design-Build approach, avoiding the need to deal with an architect. The public service sees this as progress/risk management perhaps. It certainly makes for unengaged users of our capabilities. Fifty years ago, a “standard” contract or client-architect agreement was accepted as the norm—by both architects and clients. Today the opposite applies, and architects cannot keep up with the endless variations of contracts they are being required to sign in order to practice their profession (and perhaps get paid). And few architects seem to care or be prepared to say “No!” The need for work (at any cost) trumps any other consideration. (Remember when “trump” was an acceptable word?) The central character in the 1976 movie “Network,” played by Peter Finch, started a populist movement based on his rant: “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!” Times were different then; today he might be an architect.* From distant memory, I recall that we may have been better prepared for some of the realities of practice (thanks to Professional Practice courses, Gerry Raymore, Frank Helyar and others), a full three weeks of OAA courses over several years as part of the licensing requirements, with three sets of exams that had to be passed in order to add “MRAIC” after our name, MRAIC being automatic for OAA licensees. Fifty years ago, they hadn’t invented the “air barrier,” or “rainscreen” design, or other elements that are now mandatory for delivering a code compliant wall. Pre-OPEC, air and energy transmission through uninsulated walls helped dry out any moisture that had inevitably managed to get inside. Today, we get petri dishes in walls instead. Architects today need to know more about what they don’t know, and know how to fill in the gaps— and they need the resources to pay for the extra advice. And back then, we expected that employment meant we were actually employees, and might expect to have a career with a practice. I managed it, more or less, and am grateful to the clients and colleagues who made it possible, but I don’t think that is a normal expectation today. My mother kept tabs on the reported rankings of the earnings of various professions, and took comfort in the fact that architects seemed to be on a par with doctors throughout the 1950s, when I started to show an interest in architecture. But that was before I graduated. I must have brought the average down when I started to practice. *Another memorable and perhaps prophetic line in the same movie, at least for the writer, was “Tell Hackett to go to Hell” (or words to that effect). JOHN HACKETT is Vice-President, Practice Risk Management for Pro-Demnity Insurance Company. 15 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 MY 1967 TRIP TO MAN AND HIS WORLD BY BILL BIRDSELL OA A, FR AIC MONTREAL: HABITAT 67. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, WLADYSLAW, 15 SEPTEMBER, 2008 A GERMAN POSTAGE STAMP DEPICTING THE GERMAN PAVILION AND SOME EXPO 67 PASSPORT STAMPS. PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR 16 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 M y memories of Expo 67 are those of a child experiencing an amazing event that was designed to entertain adults, but to a child, it was a spectacle filled with larger-thanlife robots and amazing exhibits. I look back on that visit with a mixture of pride and nostalgia. It was truly a world exhibition, a catalogue of displays on a massive scale. I’ve come to learn since that the whole thing was designed to reflect the primacy given to human values. The theme was “Man and His World.” I remember vividly the sound that Montreal subway cars made as they sped down the line on rubber tires, and then the experience of arriving at the station and bursting out into the bright sunshine of a July afternoon. I recall a large plaza filled with people from around the world dancing to music, enjoying the sights and all-round having fun. With my Expo passport pressed into my hands, I couldn’t wait to collect stamps from every country and province. First to catch my eye was the Great Britain spire, topped with a ’60s-style threedimensional Union Jack. Inside, the “cave of history” was filled with the moving images of kings and armies past, and above it, the light of the “Genius of Britain” extolled the country’s recent accomplishments. The structure representing France was wrapped in shimmering aluminum fins. The interior gave way to a presentation of atomic reactors and museum pieces. The City of From the top edge walkway, I had a spectacular view across the islands, and from atop the viewing platform, I could see Habitat 67 off in the distance across the water—every apartment a house in the sky, with multiple views, ventilation and a garden, achieving an uneasy balance between concrete and nature. THE CANADIAN PAVILION, EXPO 67, MONTREAL. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, LAURENT BÉLANGER, 24 JAN., 2014 Paris had its own special spot of honour. The neighbouring pavilions of France and Quebec remain today in the form of the Casino de Montréal. A complex soaring roof floated above a raised platform of 12,292 tons of Precambrian rubble in the Ontario Pavilion. A multitude of Ontario exhibits populated the remainder of the space. I remember riding the mini-rail as it snaked its way in and around the small mountain range of triangular shapes of the roof. Water was everywhere in this palette of movement and fun. The giant inverted pyramid of Katimavik dominated the Canada pavilion. The interior featured a Haida mask, adjacent to the “People Tree” portrait of Canadians at work and play. Of course, there were the theme exhibits: Man the Explorer, Man the Creator, Man the Producer and so on. The overriding goal was a celebration of the present and an optimistic view of a future filled with fun. Canada’s population was a mere 20 million but, through the course of the exposition, over 50 million people from over 60 countries came to participate—over half a million in just one day. From the top edge walkway, I had a spectacular view across the islands, and from atop the viewing platform, I could see Habitat 67 off in the distance across the water—every apartment a house in the sky, with multiple views, ventilation and a garden, achieving an uneasy balance between concrete and nature. The comparisons to the Japanese architecture movement, Metabolism, would come much later in my life. As a small child, I had no idea about its utopian aspirations. To me it was www.oaa.on.ca just a monochromatic jumble of Lego on the horizon that paled in comparison with all the colour and life below and around me. Below me, there was a series of small pavilions, food courts and canals, with people seeming to dance to the environmental music as they explored it all. This gave way to the immense wing of the roof of the Soviet Union Pavilion—huge and white against the blue sky—hovering over the silver-gray rectangle of its exhibition halls. I did not notice or understand the dates 1917–1967, marking 50 years of the USSR. The Soviet interpretation of Man and his World was “Man, for the good of Man.” I recall the large and small models describing the accomplishments of the Soviet way of life in science and engineering. This idealized view of a world was lost on me, but was understood by my mother, who had Ukrainian roots. The huge German tent structure perched over its site on a number of raked masts. By day, it was lit by sunlight filtering through the mesh. By night it just glowed. Miles of cable made up the mesh, all anchored to the earth. Statistics like that were everywhere at Expo: millions of nuts and bolts here, thousands of cubes there. Across another canal loomed the great United States Pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter, three-quarter-geodesic dome, set in a garden. During the day it glistened like a huge bubble in the sky and at night it gave way to the multicoloured hues of the interior. Fifty flags flapped in the forecourt entrance, one for each state (Hawaii and Alaska had achieved statehood just eight years earlier). There were small shallow concrete fishponds as well, or maybe that was the Soviet pavilion. All I remember are large bumpy sturgeon in the water. Inside we went past the marines in their dress uniforms and up the world’s tallest escalator to the Space Observation Deck. There were more displays on the other levels. The exhibit designers had decided to demonstrate the craftsmanship, inventiveness and creativity of the American People. Modern paintings hung alongside movie star pictures and a wooden sculpture of a baseball player. Raggedy Ann dolls and Elvis’s guitar could be found among spacecraft and artifacts representing the American dream. My visit to Expo 67 was quite brief, but remarkably memorable. I’m amazed how time stretches to hold such brief but intense childhood memories—a great contrast to idle rural summers of the remainder of my youth. Gone with time are all the memorabilia of that trip: The metal trays and glassware emblazoned with images of what I had seen. Today I am left with memories of a miraculous time in my life, one that still fills me with unexpected emotion. It inspired me to become an architect—a goal that I achieved despite the fact that I had never met an architect and did not even know what they did. This vacuum would be filled by an education that would begin a decade after my trip to Expo 67. BILL BIRDSELL is a Guelph architect, OAA Perspectives Committee member and OAA Past President. 17 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL EXPO REMINISCENCES BY ROCCO MAR AGNA OA A, MR AIC O n Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day 2015, I found myself beside the St. Lawrence River. Behind me was Habitat, that architectural and historical landmark, and in front, Île Notre-Dame and Île Sainte- Hélène, with the Biosphere, like a beauty mark, on the horizon. I had come to Montreal to attend various meetings on the subject of migration, and from there, make my way to Milan for Expo 2015, “Feeding the Planet.” So I ventured to the shore of the St. Lawrence River, hoping to tease my memory of almost 50 years ago, when I visited Expo 67, “Man and his World.” While watching the rolling and whirling water of the great river, my mind wandered back to the decade of the ’60s. In a flash, it all started coming back to me: the cold war and nuclear shelters; JFK’s election and assassination; Star Trek and travels into space and to the moon; the new Toronto City Hall and the truncated Spadina Expressway; the adoption of the Maple Leaf Flag and Quebec’s “Quiet Revolution”; Beatlemania and Trudeaumania; the Vietnam war and “draft exiles”; the first heart transplant and the DNA genetic code; the flooding of Florence and “Acqua Alta” in Venice; the growth of performing arts architecture and celebrating Canada’s Centenary; Bilingualism and Multiculturalism; Woodstock and 2001: A Space Odyssey; fading Taliesin and “Space Age” Arcosanti. It was a time of fear and optimism, of implied danger and imagined desires; of shedding pragmatic disciplines and discovering new cultural capabilities. 18 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 ABOVE AN ILLUSTRATION OF THE US PAVILION INTERIOR, BY PS OLES. BELOW MONTREAL BIOSPHERE. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA I was a young immigrant then, navigating an endless labyrinthine territory, full of unknown obstacles: a different language in an alien setting; a piazza-less urbanscape, fraught with prejudice. At every turn, there was a temporary respite for having made it, until the next barrier appeared. The inescapable allure of the new and possible was everywhere, offering a yearning to belong and asserting a post-adolescent freedom. This was made partly possible by a technical education which landed me, at a very early age, in Ron Thom’s office, located at 47 Colborne Street. This address was an incubator of artistic encounters with the likes of John Andrews, Roger duToit, Morden Yolles, and many others whose faces I can see, but whose names escape me. It was here that I came across fresh thinking that deconstructed the traces of mediaeval culture that had been inculcated in me during my childhood years in the village of Vittorito. The creative impulse of the summers was tamed by the didactic offerings at the School of Architecture by that long-forgotten Pied Piper director, whose tenets were mainly focused on the anti-space axonometrics, floating in isolation, signifying the anonymity of the last vestiges of the Modern Movement. At 47 Colborne, a world of forms, rhythms, materials and colours unfolded before my eyes, working with T-square, set-square and H/2H pencils, and yes, I did learn to sharpen pencils like Ron. It was these simple yet essential tools and his artistic capabilities that designed projects such as Expo 67’s Polymer Pavilion on Île Sainte-Hélène—a “Polymeric Molecule” that resembled a faceted diamond at ground level, but from the air, it was suggestive of a spiral galaxy. On this summer day in 2015, I had returned to the Expo site to remember, as best I could, that magical summer, nearly 50 years ago, when the two islands that made up Expo 67 served as a testing ground for the future—the potential technological advances, innovative design and a staging ground for things to come. However, this grand operatic work lacked the process of fit and linkages with the reality prevailing on COMMONS, PHILIPP HEINSTORFER, 16 OCTOBER, 2007 the terra firma, and in time proved to be neither in balance with the past, nor suggestive of the future, except for Parc Jean-Drapeau. Today, except for Habitat and Bucky’s dome, there is little evidence of the great event, unless one happens to catch a screening of Robert Altman’s Quintet, filmed on the battered rusted Man the Explorer pavilion on the Expo site. By the end of the ’60s, I had begun to realize that to be Canadian is an expression of both being and wanting, resulting in a feeling of belonging: I to the place, and the place to me. For me and others who had recently arrived in this country, the centennial year was a good time to be a Canadian—even for a “new Canadian,” or an “Italian-Canadian,” as we were then called. This sense of belonging was reinforced as I stood near the “Tree of Life” or what looked more like a model of a wormhole, at Expo 2015 in Milan. What will remain of the energy that went into creating this place and its pavilions? Will the wormhole swallow them? Or will Italian ingenuity see this as the launch pad of a new Renaissance as Canadians did half a century ago? It is said that the 2015 site will be turned into an urban park, like the islands on the St. Lawrence. I hope so. However, I worry that it will become sprinklings of green between a frenzy of gray, indiscernible in the dense Milan fog. Expo 1967 and 2015 span the Millennium with their common theme of humanity and the ever-increasing condition of migration. Whereas the dreamlike Pavilions dissipate into nothingness, humans remain and apply their knowledge to realize their dreams. I have learned a lot during the past half-century; Canada has allowed me to keep that which has been, value that which is and aspire for that which can be. This Canadian achievement could well be the theme for a future Expo somewhere across this nation of ours. ROCCO MARGNA is Principal of Maragana Architect Inc., in Toronto. REVIEW BY HERB KLASSEN OA A The Anniversary Compulsion: Canada’s Centennial Celebrations, A Model Mega-Anniversary. By Peter H. Aykroyd Dundurn Press Toronto and Oxford 1992 HABITAT 67 COMPLEX. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, NORA VASS AND GERGELY VASS, 15 APRIL, 2006 A fascinating, and rare, insight into the motivation behind anniversary celebrations in general and Canada’s celebrations in particular. P eter H. Aykroyd was the director of special projects from 1963 to 1968 for the Centennial Commission, the Canadian government organization responsible for staging the country’s mega-anniversary celebration in 1967. He was also a member of the Commission’s Management Committee, which included John Fisher (Mr. Canada), Robbins Elliot, Claude Gauthier, Robert Choquette, and Jean-Pierre Houle. As part of this team, Mr. Aykroyd was closely involved in the planning, development and implementation of how Canada’s Centennial of Confederation would be celebrated. The question of why it was being done was not really posed at the time. “It was a categorical imperative. You just did it. That’s all.” In this book, published in 1992, Mr. Aykroyd reflects back on his experience of the process of putting on such a large-scale celebration and comes up with both insights into what such events mean to a society, and a wonderfully personal account of what actually happened. The insights are explored in Chapter 1, “The Anniversary Compulsion,” and come from asking the questions: Why are such events important to a society, and what motivates people to acknowledge them? They are partly ritual (a rite of passage) and partly celebration to mark the passage of time. Though in his analysis, he suggests that Canada was ready for more than just a ritual response to the Centennial and was ready for a celebration. In fact, from his analysis of the events leading up to and during the Centennial celebration, Mr. Aykroyd, has developed a set of principles—a framework for anniversary planners. He calls this framework The Anniversary Axiomatique: 1 Reinforce the identity of the organism: in doing this, spend lots of www.oaa.on.ca time understanding all the dimensions of that identity. 2 Provide continuity and restatement, reminding people of the past that shapes the present: reassure the people of the value and worth of shared history by recognizing achievement and growth. 3 Seek out and accentuate unifying elements: symbols, songs and all things that are held in common, and have bonding potential. 4 Analyze destructive forces that may be present: thoughtfully plan how to aggressively oppose them. 5 Focus some part of the program on the future: give people confidence and determination to continue the voyage. 6 Encourage personal and community improvement: similar to when a special visitor is expected in the home, and everyone wants to do their best and look their best. 7 Build monuments and memorials: these are tangible statements of achievement and strong elements of a sense of continuity. 8 Give gifts: not commodities that have only commercial value but gifts that keep on giving, gifts that have expanding worth. 9 Set up performances and public events and encourage participation: it is in sharing with others at the same time and place the experience of large-scale spectacles that one feels warmth, and pride and cohesion. 10 Make sure it’s fun, but also allow for dignity and emotion: it is healthy to release the spirit through noise, through laughter, through tears and through awe. And, according to Mr. Aykroyd, if one follows these “precepts,” it is “axiomatic” that the response to the anniversary compulsion will be “positive, evolutionary, benevolent and full of pleasant memories.” From this reviewer’s point of view, applying many of these precepts to situations which involve people working together on projects or a team could very easily lead to similar results. Most of the book after the first chapter is a wonderful sharing of the history of events and anecdotes of what occurred between 1963 at the start of the centennial celebration process and 1968 when the celebration ended. Mr. Aykroyd points out in Chapter 12, “Expo 67,” the Centennial events organized by the Centennial Commission were completely separate from Expo 67—The World’s Fair— which was held in Montreal. The planning, development and implementation of Expo 67 was under the direction of a Crown Corporation created by an Act of Parliament in 1962. The cost to the Canadian government for Expo 67 was $561 million (1992 dollars) as opposed to the over 2300 large and small projects spread across the country that were sponsored by the Centennial Commission at a cost to the Canadian government of about $360 million (1992 dollars). Mr. Aykroyd provides an interesting statistic regarding the geographic origin of attendees at Expo ’67. They were as follows: •Montreal 26.9% • Quebec (outside Montreal) 4.8% • Canada (outside Quebec) 19.8% • United States 44.8% • Other Countries 3.7% He notes that “the Expo 67 celebration was good for Canada. It was fabulous for Quebec.” As an aside, it should be noted that Mr. Aykroyd is a retired Government of Canada Senior Executive. He served in the Privy Council office with the rank of assistant secretary to the Cabinet and was assistant deputy minister of Research and Development at Transport Canada. In addition to The Anniversary Compulsion (1992), Mr. Aykroyd has authored two other books—A Sense of Place (2003) and A History of Ghosts: The True Story of Séances, Mediums, Ghosts, and Ghostbusters (2009)—and, yes, he is the father of Dan Aykroyd the actor and ultimate Ghostbuster. HERB KLASSEN is a professor in the Foundations in Art & Design and Fine Arts programs at Durham College in Oshawa. 19 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL SOME NOTES REGARDING THE 148TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARCHITECTURAL JOURNALISM IN CANADA BY GORDON S. GRICE OA A, FR AIC I n 1867, the British Isles suffered through an unusually cold snowy winter. Spirits were a little low, and upper lips were particularly stiff. But on Wednesday, May 22 of that year, Queen Victoria (not yet empress of India) had an extremely cheerful proclamation to make: Whereas by an act of Parliament, passed on the twenty-ninth day of March, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-seven, in the thirtieth year of Our reign, intituled, “An Act for the Union of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and for the Government thereof and for the purposes connected therewith,” after divers recitals, it is enacted that “it shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with the advice of Her Majesty’s Most Honourable Privy Council, to declare, by Proclamation, that on and after a day therein appointed, not being six months after the passing of this Act, the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, shall form and be One Dominion under the name of Canada. … As florid and “Victorian” as the language was, the intent was clear: a new country was about to be born. Accordingly, on Monday, July 1, 1867, our founders proclaimed into law The British North America Act, and the Dominion of Canada A DAMAGED COPY OF THE CANADIAN ARCHITECT AND BUILDER, JANUARY, 1901. PHOTO FROM THE OAA PERSPECTIVES LIBRARY. 20 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 came into being. The year 2017 marks our country’s 150th birthday. The successions of meetings and conferences that led to the formation of Canada had been going on for some time, as part of a general trend, during the latter half of the nineteenth century, toward forming ties and alliances. The American Civil war having just ended, the remaining North American colonies now faced a large, autonomous, powerful southern neighbour, that had no qualms about exercising cultural dominance, even if not political dominance, over the North American continent. Canadian architects, like other professionals at the time, felt a similar need to form associations that would define their expertise, establish written codes of conduct, and create professional and educational standards. Just as important, such associations would provide them with a formal means of exchanging ideas and information. The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), chartered in 1837, and the American Institute of Architects (AIA), founded in 1857, provided excellent models. So, in 1887, the Canadian Society of Civil Engineers was formed. Architects quickly followed suit: on March 1, 1889, the Architectural Guild of Toronto (formed October 3, 1887) was transformed into the Ontario Association of Architects (OAA). Architectural associations were formed in Québec in 1890 and British Columbia in 1892 and, on June 6, 1908, the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) was incorporated. Without too much fanfare, another professional institution was also being established—one that had already helped to guide the formation of architectural associations, and would continue to fulfil some of the important associations’ functions, such as establishing a regional identity, providing a vehicle for sharing ORIGINAL CENTRE BLOCK ON PARLIAMENT HILL, OTTAWA. PHOTO WIKIMEDIA COMMONS, CA. 1910S, BIBLIOTÈQUE ET ARCHIVES NATIONALES DU QUÉBEC, REF. NO. P133, S5, D23. information, and maintaining an esprit de corps, among the members of the profession. This useful, unheralded institution was architectural journalism. JOURNALS In 1867, architectural journalism was in its very infancy, the first periodical with “Architectural” in its name (The Building News and Architectural Review ) having appeared only seven years earlier, in Great Britain, but the role that these journals played was critical to the development of architecture in Canada. As professor Geoffrey Simmins points out, For those unable to travel, professional journals arrived here [from England] after a time-lag of only a few weeks. Such journals…illustrated the latest work being done in the metropolitan capitals and they frequently contained articles that discussed issues of ethical and stylistic propriety. Many architects here evinced a strong interest in what we would call architectural theory, then dominated by English writers.1,2 Over the course of their history, architectural journals continued to provide a forum for the discussion and development of architectural theory, practice, education and technology, and coverage of significant events. The following is a short list of early journals (pre-Second World War), beginning with British titles. Descriptions and quotations have been taken from online sources, where more information may be found. The Builder, first issue, December 1842, renamed Building, in 1966, “has reported on all aspects of the construction industry.” Pre-20th-century, the journal was “particularly well illustrated with examples of architecture.”3 The RIBA Journal, the magazine of the www.oaa.on.ca Royal Institute of British Architects, first issue (third series), November, 1893. It reported on news at the institute and trends, with analysis of topical issues in architecture and features on architectural practices.4 The Builders’ Journal, first issue, 12 February, 1895, after several name changes, becoming Architects’ Journal (AJ), in 1919. “Each week the AJ includes detailed building studies and the latest news on the built environment.”5 Architectural Review (AR), first issue, November, 1896, intended originally as “a magazine for the artist, archaeologist, designer and craftsman,” evolved into its current form, as a “visually-led magazine [that] covers current issues in architecture and features in-depth building studies.”6 Architectural Design and Construction, first issue, 1930, renamed Architectural Design (AD), 2001.7 It’s remarkable that, in an industry like magazine publishing, constantly threatened with extinction, these British journals have adapted and survived for well over a century and show no signs of succumbing. In part, this reflects the history of architecture itself: constantly concerned with maintaining relevance, but adapting and surviving. American journals followed suit, with a more informal approach and a concerted focus on graphics, but with a less impressive survival rate. The American Architect and Building News, first issue, January 1, 1876, renamed The American Architect, in 1909, published as The American Architect and the Architectural Review between 1921 and 1925, after which it reverted to The American Architect, until being absorbed by Architectural Record in 1938. The inaugural issue invited contributors to submit “items of local interest” and vowed “our journal will have its own opinions and will express them when it sees occasion; but it is prepared to respect those of other people, and to give them a courteous welcome…though they should differ from its own.” 8 The Brickbuilder, first issue, 1892, later renamed Architectural Forum, absorbing Architect’s World in 1938, ceasing publication in 1974. It was dedicated to architecture and the homebuilding industry. A sample issue in the writer’s collection, May 1925, contained 83 pages of editorial, sandwiched between 198 pages of advertising. Content included AIA convention reports, book reviews and building reviews, focusing on residential architecture.9 Architecture, first issue, January 15, 1900, was “lavishly illustrated with photographs and architectural drawings”; it ceased publication in May, 1936.10 Journal of the American Institute of Architects, first issue, June, 1913, underwent various name changes, before ceasing publication, in 2006, as Architecture: The AIA Journal. The first issue “published the minutes of the Board of Directors, reproduced superb graphics, and carried provocative articles, all with a point of view…Along the way, dreamy photographs of New York and New Orleans, drawings and photographs of colonial mansions, and news of current events made their way into the magazine.”11 Pencil Points, 1920, known as New Pencil Points 1942–1943, renamed Progressive Architecture, 1945, ceased publication in 1995. The journal “defined the contemporary debates in architectural theory. It was an arena for the proponents of modernism. It published the debates and presented the new architecture; 21 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL concerns in the first half of the twentieth century reflect those of today in the twenty-first century.” 12 CANADIAN JOURNALS Like their American and British counterparts, Canadian journals discussed professional matters and events. And like the American journals in particular, they were never shy about asking their readers to submit items of interest for publication. The Canadian Builder and Mechanics Magazine, 1869–70, succeeded by The Canadian Architect and Builder: A Journal of Modern Construction Methods, first issue, January, 1888, ceased publication in 1908. “The only professional architectural journal published in Canada before World War I. Beautifully filled with photographs, drawings, advertisements and valuable articles, today, CAB provides a wealth of information on the state of architecture and building in Canada during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.”13, 14 The Journal, Royal Architectural Institute of Canada, first issue, 1924; it ceased publication in 1973. It featured building reviews, items of professional interest and news of the RAIC and provincial associations.15 The Canadian Architect, 1955, renamed Canadian Architect in 1995. The monthly magazine “documents significant architecture and design from across the country and features articles on current practice, building technology, and social issues affecting architecture.” CA sponsors an annual national awards program.16 Less typical of architectural journals, then and now, Pencil Points included personal accounts of architectural life—often lighthearted and ironic. It’s no secret that a degree of inspiration for OAA Perspectives is derived from this publication. 22 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADIAN ARCHITECT AND BUILDER To date, CAB remains one of the most important primary research sources for architects, conservation architects, building technologists, architectural historians and social historians.17 In his book Architecture in Transition, Carleton professor Kelly Crossman notes the important role the early architectural journals played in the rise of architectural associations in Canada. “In the 1880s, some American architectural journals…had begun to cover architectural developments in Canada, on a regular basis,” he writes. However, these journals showed little interest in publishing Canadian commentary or contributions.18 In an attempt to remedy this, architect and surveyor Thomas Winning Dyas introduced The Canadian Builder and Mechanics Magazine in 1869, just two years after Confederation. Unfortunately, the publication folded in the following year. It wasn’t until nearly two decades later, when the idea of forming an Ontario architectural society was beginning to take root, that publisher C.H. Mortimer introduced The Canadian Architect and Builder, in January, 1888. It was intended as a document of this country’s unique architectural developments and a forum for news and events submitted by Canadian architects and builders. But more than that, it helped to pave the way for the growth of a distinctly Canadian architectural profession, and encouraged the founding of the OAA, on March 21, 1889. As historian Stephen A. Otto writes, The founding of the Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) was complemented by the appearance of a monthly journal, The Canadian Architect and Builder, in 1888. For the next twenty years, it reported fully on things of interest to the members of the profession.19 In 1901, CAB began publishing the proceedings of the OAA. The first of these reports, in January, 1901, discussed the educational work that the OAA had recently undertaken: “The work this winter will to a considerable extent be experimental. The suitability of various systems and methods will be tested.” Among the features deemed particularly valuable were the proposed visits to factories where “building materials and appliance are produced.” In the February issue, CAB reported that “the Annual Convention of the Ontario Association of Architects, held in Toronto last month, the proceedings of which are printed in this number, was one of the most interesting in the history of that organization.” In the same issue, an article on an exhibition of architectural drawings at the Toronto Architectural Eighteen Club pointed out “our own architects have not made a study of rendering, as was evident from many of their exhibited works,” and asked: “But is it well to enquire how far the art of making attractive drawings is helpful to the art of architecture?” In subsequent 1901 and 1902 issues, CAB continued to publish useful technical information, as well as discussions about architectural education and design theory. It also published interesting tidbits of information from around the world. We learn, for instance, that a lack of competent stonemasons for the construction of the Aswan Dam in Egypt (1898–1902), home of some of the finest stonework ever constructed, made it necessary to import masons from Italy. We also learn that the English monarch Alfred the Great (871–899) was, among other things, an architect, and that prior to American administration of Alaska (1867), human foundation sacrifices were common. Closer to home, one writer reported “The erection of the Royal Muskoka Hotel has brought luxury to Muskoka at last…Hitherto, Muskoka had been the poor man’s paradise.”( The hotel was, unfortunately destroyed by fire in 1952.) Another item describes an illconceived proposal to cut away part of Goat Island in the Niagara River, to connect the American and Canadian falls into “one grand torrent of water.” The November issue tells us that “The weekly luncheons in the [OAA] rooms every Tuesday have been successfully continued throughout the summer.” The August 1901 issue contained a remarkable account of the raucous spring entrance exams for the École des BeauxArts in Paris, adding more information about the origins of the word “charrette,” a topic that we have frequently discussed in this magazine.20 The writer describes a group of frenzied candidates, working by candlelight trying to finish their work before their deadline. When a party of visitors make their [sic] appearance at the door of this loge, the busy one would call out “Charette!” [sic] And this would be respected, for it means “I am in a hurry; need all my time. Don’t bother me.” At eight the guardians collected the drawings, most of which were completed. As Kelly Crossman has suggested, CAB offers a fascinating account of the growth of the Canadian architectural profession during a critical period of its, and the country’s, history. The OAA Perspectives library contains the 24 issues published between January, 1901 and December, 1902, as described above. Full text is available online 21 With the demise of CAB, the Canadian architectural publishing industry appears to have gone into hibernation until the appearance of the RAIC Journal, in 1924. For the next three decades, and through the Second World War, the Journal existed as the only Canadian architectural magazine. In 1955, The Canadian Architect began publication and, later, provincial journals entered the market. Notable among these are: ARQ: Architecture/ Québec, in 198122; Nouvelles OAQ, in 1983 (ceased publication, 1984)23; Perspectives, in 198724; Esquisses, in April 1990.25 More recently, a number of Canadian magazines that include architectural content have established themselves. Examples are: The Site Magazine, Azure and Arabella. In addition, there is a growing number of online journals, blogs and e-zines, many of which are based in Canada and reflect Canadian content. PENCIL POINTS Turning our attention once again to architectural journalism south of the border, one publication stands out. The American monthly journal Pencil Points, which began publication in 1920, was important for a number of reasons. For the very first time, it established the architectural office, and architects themselves, as subjects worthy of discussion. Typical of American journals, its pages were filled with excellent photos and illustrations. Less typical of architectural journals, then and now, it included personal accounts of architectural life—often lighthearted and ironic. It’s no secret that a degree of inspiration for OAA Perspectives is derived from this publication. www.oaa.on.ca SOME COPIES OF THE RAIC JOURNAL, 1941 AND 1943. PHOTO FROM THE OAA PERSPECTIVES LIBRARY. That Pencil Points has a large following is witnessed by number of websites dedicated to its memory (it ceased publication in 1943). In 2004, the Princeton Architectural Press released a comprehensive book, edited by George Hartman, that featured and discussed excerpts from the journal’s 23 years of publication.25 The following discussion is based mainly on the contents of this book, with some recourse to the small number of original journals in the OAA Perspectives library. Pencil Points appeared in 1920 as a monthly journal for the drafting room. It emphasized drawing, drafting, camaraderie in the studio and with clients, and the relationship of the draftsman to the architect. During the first decade of Pencil Points, architecture was seen as an attitude and a way of life, with its own language and traditions. By 1943, when the journal merged with Progressive Architecture, it had become a magazine of urbanism and planning.27 In an early issue of the journal, it established, as one of its goals, the exploration of the “human side” of practice. All the interests of life have their human side—to lose sight of that fact is fatal to the progress and happiness of the individual…In order to meet the requirements of its readers, Pencil Points is endeavouring to give due attention to the human side of the drafting room, atelier, and school. Personal items, accounts of entertainments, dances, etc., anything about the fellows has a legitimate and important place in the scheme of this journal.28 For 23 years, the journal was true to its word, being unique in the world of architectural publishing, by telling the stories and revealing the feelings and motivations of architects and draftsmen. “Pencil Points,” the editors wrote in their very first issue, is to be edited with our readers as well as for them, and the cooperation of the entire field is sought in order that we may produce a journal of the greatest interest and value to those it seeks to serve.29 In addition to fulfilling this mandate, the journal also traced the course of architectural thought, education, stylistic preoccupations and practice, during this period of profound change. The period from 1920 to 1943 witnessed both the great depression and the Second World War, times when the architectural profession, like most others, suffered from chronic unemployment. More than ever, readers of Pencil Points needed 23 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL professional information and ideas, but they also needed a little relief from the hardships they faced. Pencil Points filled the journalistic gap by providing light-hearted, often fictional accounts of professional life. A few of these—“The Story of an Architect,” and “The Cultural Advantages of Unemployment”— transcend national boundaries and have become classics. By the midway point of American involvement in WWII, the editorial content of the journal had begun to focus on the more serious aspects of architecture, especially building critique, professional opportunities and the finer points of architectural practice. It was, after all, time to get the profession back on its feet. In 1943, the magazine was folded into Progressive Architecture, which pursued this same editorial course until its demise in 1999. “THE STORY OF AN ARCHITECT”30 1930 was not a prosperous year, the Stock market having crashed a few months earlier. To soothe its readers, Pencil Points reprinted an honest and mostly uplifting architectural story that had been published 13 years earlier, and which had already earned a following. Interestingly, an underlying message is that, even during the best of times, architects are woefully underpaid. Hartman explains that the story was: originally published in Century Magazine to explain to the layperson how the architectural profession and its practitioners worked. Perhaps Pencil Points reprinted the story thirteen years later for the same reason the editors of this contemporary Reader have selected the story for republication eighty-five years hence—to remind readers that even a “successful architect in 1917—as well as in 1930 and 2002—would be humbled by a modest income and modest public acclaim. It’s noteworthy that there are themes in the story that strongly resonate, 100 years later. And reminiscent of sentiments that OAA Perspectives has expressed many times, the Pencil Points editors expressed their hope that the story would encourage readers to send in their own stories for publication. They report that the story was read and appreciated by many people and “helped to establish in the lay mind a better understanding of the architectural profession and of its individual practitioners.” The story begins with the writer, as a small child, building sand castles on the beach with the help of a friendly stranger who turns out to be an architect. This marks his discovery of the profession. Many years later, he is fortunate to earn a grant for entry into the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, which at that time accepted only 20 foreigners per year. But the financial burden and dislocation proved too difficult, so instead, he studied Fine Arts at an American University. He secured a job for $8 per week with a New York architectural firm. Although the office was not a happy place, he found “what I have always found in every office since, that the draftsmen were more than willing to help the beginner.” His next job was in a much more pleasant and better-paying office in Boston, where PHOTO FROM THE OAA PERSPECTIVES LIBRARY Everybody was hard working, earnest, and enthusiastic; there was no time-clock; the men appeared to come and go pretty much at will, and yet I think there wasn’t one of them who did not spend at least his full forty hours a week in the office, and most of them habitually put in half an hour or so more every day. 24 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 When he joined an École atelier, his real architectural education began. He soon graduated to the position of clerk of the works and his salary crept up to 20 dollars a week—still not enough to convince his future father-in-law that he had sufficient prospects to marry his daughter. In his third office, he found that the boss was ready to take credit for the good work that his staff did, but quick to blame them if anything went wrong. It seemed like the time had come to lay the foundation for his professional independence. I was married in the first house I ever designed…I got a two weeks’ vacation, the first I had had since I began work. Most of this vacation was spent in making drawings for our own house…One of the upper rooms I made into a little office for myself, and as I continued to get small jobs from time to time, it was there on nights and Sundays and early in the mornings that all of the drawings were made. I am in a way a successful architect, I might almost say a very successful architect; yet I have not been able to live in comfort and put away money. In fact, my reason for writing this story is that I may add something to the little surplus which would be available for the support of my family, should I receive the commission for which I have applied and be called to the front [serving American forces in World War I]. Nevertheless, I wouldn’t change professions with any one I know. One has always the feeling that one is creating something of permanent beauty. The story finished with the author saying that one of the most enjoyable things about the profession, and one not frequently discussed, is the rewarding relationships between the architect and the client. Architects of today can’t help but empathize with this anonymous architect of a century ago, whose life contained many of the rewards and challenges that professionals face today. 31 www.oaa.on.ca PHOTO FROM THE OAA PERSPECTIVES LIBRARY The hours were long, and the pay was poor: “The salaries they get are below those of the bricklayers and carpenters who execute the work from the drawings they make.” In his fourth office, there was little discipline, to the point that a few of the draftsmen set up a target at one end of the drafting room and practised their pistol marksmanship. Finally, in order to get some relief from the punishing work schedule, with maybe a little time off, and with his own client list growing, he set up his own practice and quickly gained 35 pounds. Years later, the author wrote: “THE CULTURAL ADVANTAGES OF UNEMPLOYMENT”31 As in indication of how bad things were in 1931, the editors of Pencil Points printed an advisory to architects all over the country “that New York is as hard up as the rest of the country and that travelling here for a chance to get a job is useless.” This was hardly the kind of encouraging material that the journal wanted to publish, but, apparently, it was necessary. To lighten things up a little bit, the February, 1932 issue carried a fictitious story about the “advantages” of being unemployed. The story takes the form of the rambling thoughts and observations of an out-ofwork architect strolling the streets of New York. He consoles himself that since “twothirds of a draftsman’s life is spent griping and complaining or in pulling the work of contemporary architects to pieces…there seems to be no reason why a business depression should have any serious effect on him.” He adds, “For the first time perhaps in his life, for the better expression of his critical faculties, he can move around and see what’s what.” He meets an acquaintance and together, they engage in a critique of New York planning, an evaluation of the aesthetics of the 179th Street Bridge, a castigation of engineering in general, focused on the “new elevated highway” [presumably the FDR expressway, not completed until much later], which threatens to destroy views of the river. Bidding his companion a farewell, the architect states, with more than a little irony, that “the cultural advantages of 25 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL CONCLUSIONS In the half-century since the Canadian centennial, the profession has seen the demise of several good architectural magazines—the AIA Journal, Progressive Architecture, Architectural Forum, the RAIC journal—and the remarkable survival of many others. The British publication Building, along with its precursor The Builder have been in continuous publication for 173 years, Architectural Journal and Architectural Record, for 79 and 80 years, respectively. In Canada, a country whose tradition of architectural journalism is nearly as old as the country itself, the approach has been a very Canadian one: to adopt and adapt—to model publications after those in other countries, particularly the UK and the US, but with Canadian content, and then gradually develop a distinct national (or provincial) voice. In their mission statements, most professional journals include a commitment to “inform and entertain” its readers. But the definitions for both these words are ambiguous and fluid. What might inform and entertain Americans will not necessarily work for Canadians, and what was effective in 1867 will certainly have lost its impact by 2017. Much has changed in our profession, particularly in the way it is practiced and the technology that supports it. A nineteenth-century draughting room would be a quaint alien environment to a young architect today. And changes in education, theory and culture of architecture have changed dramatically. Neo-classical, Gothic revival, art and crafts, art deco, modernism, brutalism, and postmodernism are all officially dead. Long live neomodern, neo-eclectic and new classical! But, as the saying goes, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Looking through the early journals, today’s reader will recognize many familiar themes and sentiments: architects are underpaid and underappreciated, but wouldn’t be happy doing anything else; along the same lines, architects love to complain (let’s call it “pointing out deficiencies in the hope of rectification”); architectural education doesn’t prepare its graduates for the real world; architects seem prone to working overtime, and labouring on projects right up to the eleventh hour; the difficulty with architecture is it’s an art as well as a science; etc. Journalism has also undergone many significant changes: high-resolution television, digital radio, internet distribution, digital photography, online publishing, blogs, digital diaries, e-zines, Google search, Microsoft Word, the many functions of the run-of-the-mill smartphone, etc. As you can easily appreciate by reading the older journals, even the language that we speak has changed noticeably. The list of changes and indisputable improvements in journalistic practice may in fact be endless. But the function of journalism hasn’t changed at all: to inform and entertain. In architectural journalism, as in any other, the reader comes first. NOTES: 1. SEE JOHN RUSKIN, SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE, PUBLISHED 1849 2. GEOFFREY SIMMINS. THE ONTARIO ASSOCIATION OF ARCHITECTS, A CENTENNIAL HISTORY, 1889–1989. TORONTO: OAA, 1989, 11–12 3.HTTPS://BOOKS.GOOGLE.CA/BOOKS?ID= NXFLAQAAMAAJ&PRINTSEC=FRONTCOVER&SOURCE= GBS_GE_SUMMARY_R&CAD=0#V=ONEPAGE&Q&F=FALSE 4.HTTPS://BOOKS.GOOGLE.CA/BOOKS?ID= NXFLAQAAMAAJ&PRINTSEC=FRONTCOVER&SOURCE= GBS_GE_SUMMARY_R&CAD=0#V=ONEPAGE&Q&F=FALSE 5.WWW.ARCHITECTURE.COM/IMAGE-LIBRARY/RIBAPIX/ IMAGE-INFORMATION/POSTER/BUILDERS-JOURNAL1895-FEBRUARY-12-PAGE-1-THE-OPENING-PAGE-OFTHE-FIRST-ISSUE-OF-THE-JOURNAL/POSTERID/ RIBA105403.HTML 6.WWW.ARCHITECTURAL-REVIEW.COM/TODAY/ CONTACT-US 7.WWW.WIKIWAND.COM/EN/ARCHITECTURAL_DESIGN 8.HTTPS://BOOKS.GOOGLE.CA/BOOKS?ID= NXFLAQAAMAAJ&PRINTSEC=FRONTCOVER&SOURCE= GBS_GE_SUMMARY_R&CAD=0#V=ONEPAGE&Q&F=FALSE 9.HTTPS://ARCHIVE.ORG/DETAILS/BUB_GB_J1EIAQAAMAAJ; WWW.WIKIWAND.COM/EN/ARCHITECTURAL_FORUM 10. WWW.WIKIWAND.COM/EN/ARCHITECTURE_ (MAGAZINE,_1900–1936) 11. HTTP://ONLINEBOOKS.LIBRARY.UPENN.EDU/ WEBBIN/SERIAL?ID=JAIA 12.GEORGE E. HARTMAN & JAN CIGLIANO, EDS., PENCIL POINTS READER: A JOURNAL FOR THE DRAFTING ROOM, 1920 – 1943. NEW YORK: PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS, 2004, XIII 13. HTTPS://ARCHIVE.ORG/STREAM/ CANADIANARCHITEC04ONTA/ CANADIANARCHITEC04ONTA_DJVU.TXT. 14. HTTP://SEXTONDIGITAL.LIBRARY.DAL.CA/RAIC/ 15. WWW.DEXIGNER.COM/DIRECTORY/CAT/ARCHITECTURE/ MAGAZINES 16. HTTP://DIGITAL.LIBRARY.MCGILL.CA/CAB/ABOUT.HTM 17. KELLY CROSSMAN. ARCHITECTURE IN TRANSITION: FROM ART TO PRACTICE, 1885–1906. KINGSTON AND MONTREAL: MCGILL-QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1987. 18.ERIC ARTHUR, REVISED BY STEPHEN A. OTTO. TORONTO: NO MEAN CITY. TORONTO: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 2003 19. OAA PERSPECTIVES, SUMMER 1989, FALL 1993, WINTER 2003, SPRING 2004 AND SPRING 2005. 20. HTTPS://ARCHIVE.ORG/STREAM/ CANADIANARCHITEC04ONTA/ CANADIANARCHITEC04ONTA_DJVU.TXT 21. WWW.WORLDCAT.ORG/TITLE/ARQARCHITECTUREQUEBEC/OCLC/8332585/ EDITIONS?EDITIONSVIEW=TRUE&REFERER=BR NOTE: “ARQ IS NOT A CONSUMER MAGAZINE. IT’S WRITTEN IN ‘ARCHITECTURESE,’ A SPECIAL LINGO UNDERSTOOD BY ARCHITECTS.” 22. WWW.VIRTUALREFERENCELIBRARY.CA/DETAIL. JSP?ENTT=RDM1056575&R=1056575 23. PERSPECTIVES, FIRST ISSUE JULY, 1987, RENAMED OAA PERSPECTIVES IN FALL, 2011. THE FIRST ISSUE STATED, “ONE OF OUR PRIME OBJECTIVES … IS TO PROVIDE A FORUM FOR THE MEMBERS. WE WILL PUBLISH A SELECTION OF LETTERS AND ARTICLES WRITTEN BY MEMBERS.” AS OAA PERSPECTIVES, THE FOCUS EVOLVED TO THE EXPLORATION OF VARIOUS FORMS OF ARCHITECTURAL WRITING BY AND FOR THE MEMBERS. WWW.OAA.ON.CA/NEWS%20&%20EVENTS/ PERSPECTIVES%20MAGAZINE 24.WWW.OAQ.COM/ESQUISSES/DESIGN_ACTIF.HTML 25.GEORGE E. HARTMAN & JAN CIGLIANO, EDS. PENCIL POINTS READER: A JOURNAL FOR THE DRAFTING ROOM, 1920 – 1943. NEW YORK: PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS, 2004. 26. IBID., XIII 27. IBID. NOVEMBER 1920, 9 28.IBID. JUNE, 1920, 4 29.IBID., MARCH 1930, 258. REPRINTED IN PENCIL POINTS BY PERMISSION FROM THE CENTURY MAGAZINE FOR DECEMBER, 1917. THE AUTHOR IS ANONYMOUS. 30.THE ENTIRE STORY IS ACCESSIBLE ONLINE (SEPTEMBER 8, 2016) AT: HTTPS://BOOKS.GOOGLE.CA/BOOKS?ID= LIUBOOTVSJKC&PG=PA225&LPG=PA225&DQ=THE +STORY+OF+AN+ARCHITECT+CENTURY+MAGAZI NE&SOURCE=BL&OTS=LOEYYJJEDF&SIG=GKN-PLF TTZ0FKMBZL1D4KNMLAV4&HL=EN&SA=X&REDIR_ ESC=Y#V=ONEPAGE&Q=THE%20STORY%20OF%20AN%20 ARCHITECT%20CENTURY%20MAGAZINE&F=FALSE 31. HARTMAN, OP. CIT., 302. WRITTEN BY WILLIAM WILLIAMS, THE STORY APPEARED IN FEBRUARY 1932. THE PENCIL POINTS EDITORS POINT OUT: “THE MAN WHO WROTE THIS ARTICLE IS A REAL DRAFTSMAN REALLY OUT OF WORK.” walking about town are enormous. And it’s lots of fun. I wouldn’t take a job before next Monday if it were offered to me.” The Pencil Points editors were fairly brave to have published this story at a time when few architects found humour in the situation. In the brief introduction to the story, they state that they are not trying to make light of a serious situation, and that the story should be read “in the spirit in which it was written.” It’s an excellent piece of fiction of the sort not often seen in professional journals that are mostly devoted to facts. If nothing else, it illuminates a very important point: that architecture is, at root, an optimistic profession. 26 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 Contributions of value to the persons in whose interest this journal is published are cordially invited. Subscribers are also requested to forward newspaper clippings or written items of interest from their respective localities. The Canadian Architect and Builder, Vol. XII, no. 1, January, 1899 INTO THE MILLENNIAL: WHY WEIRDOS WILL CHANGE THE WORLD BY JAMIE K WAN, M.D.M. I t’s another long weekend, three days away from the architectural grind, and all I see on my Twitter and Facebook feeds are announcements of my friends’ travels, both far and near. As I write this, I’m sitting in seat 43K on my flight to Vancouver. The Millennial generation is a unique set of humans. One of our distinguishing characteristics is the way we travel. My parents, both considered Boomers, have a very different perspective on trips and holidays. (Why spend money on travel when you can spend some quality time at home, in the backyard on a late summer’s cool evening?) And when they travel (plans are usually made way in advance), it’s to escape from daily life—just to go somewhere else. Millennials, on the other hand, are constantly monitoring digital alerts for last-minute flight deals, as we frantically try to arrange a holiday, to visit friends all around the world whose couches we can sleep on at a moment’s notice. We’re a connected generation, and want to experience everything first-hand. As a millennial myself, I can safely say that the impact of globalization is far different for us than for any previous generation. And it’s largely due to our upbringing. I’m part of a generation that grew up having supercomputers in our pockets and on our wrists before we turned 25. During our formative years, we had unprecedented access to information, any time we needed it. We crave learning about and experiencing diverse cultures and outlooks, fearlessly forming our own opinions and sharing them with an internet audience (three billion, give or take). We want to learn about everything, and we have the means to do it very quickly. If you need proof, just glance at a millennial’s Facebook feed, and you’ll see how connected to information we really are. The architectural profession is at an interesting place as we approach Canada’s 150th birthday. With Boomers soon retiring, and Millennials (which some refer to as “Echo Boomers”) just entering the field, we’re experiencing a transformative time within every profession, as the concept of “doing meaningful, passionate, significant work” is vastly changing. Predicting what the next 50 years might be like for architecture is a daunting, impossible task. But that’s what Millennials do best: embrace moments, and embrace ambiguity. We welcome differences and uniqueness far more than any other generation, and we question why the world is the way it is. We entered higher education on a path toward a well-defined profession, but we often ended up doing something completely different, as a career or on the side. I always wanted to be an architect, but I discovered my passion for designing with digital media, and have returned to working in an architectural office in a very different role. We might be defined by a job title, but most importantly, we’re embracing the fact that we are what creative recruiter Maria Scillepi refers to as “wonderful weirdos.” With our constant access to information, we haven’t necessarily become experts in everything, but we’ve come pretty close to knowing a lot about a diverse range of topics. We’ve gained an ability to communicate, understand, and collaborate with other kinds of people with other kinds of interests. That’s not to say we’re the only group that’s eager to learn. However, Millennials have become the generation of “weirdos” because we have such a wide range of interests that affect our outlook on the industry and on our career paths. What do the next 50 years hold for the architectural profession? As with any other industry, I think there’s going to be an embrace of us wonderful weirdos, and a generation of new leaders who know how to collaborate with diverse groups will emerge: technologists working in city planning, biologists working in architecture, even play and toy designers working in urban design. Architects will no longer just be architects. Interests will bring a unique spin to every single “master builder,” and unconventional interdisciplinary practices will become, well, conventional, resulting in more inclusive, more accessible, and more valued architecture. In the short time I’ve been in this profession, I’ve already worked with groups (artists, scientists, educators, “wonderful weirdos”) who impact architecture and cities, but whose creative activities and education lie far from the profession. That said, if we define creativity as the ability to connect disconnected things, then we’re definitely going to start to achieve a new level of creativity. Next time you talk to a Millennial, ask them honestly what are they passionate about outside their careers. What do they want to do with their lives? You might hear an answer you weren’t expecting, and you might even get a glimpse of the future. JAMIE KWAN is an interdisciplinary experience designer working with FORREC in Toronto. A generation of new leaders who know how to collaborate with diverse groups will emerge: technologists working in city planning, biologists working in architecture, even play and toy designers working in urban design. Architects will no longer just be architects. www.oaa.on.ca 27 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 CANADA’S SESQUICENTENNIAL THE BICENTENNIAL ISSUE BY IAN ELLINGH AM PH.D. OA A , FR A IC T he chair of the OAA Perspectives committee walked slowly down the stairs after a typically exhausting, fascinating, stimulating, yet baffling meeting. The committee was planning the bicentennial issue, scheduled to come out in the spring, and it was already mid-2066. The issue would involve quite a bit of looking back, in particular to the great Montreal exhibition of 1967, but also some looking ahead. The centennial year had been a time of great architectural excitement—domes, tensile structures, monorails and space-frames had all been featured as ways to the future. That forecast had clearly not materialized, but the century had seen many changes, even though geodesic domes were as rare now as they had been then. People in 2066 didn’t live in radical buildings (just the opposite in fact), planes still took six-and-a-half hours to cross the Atlantic, although it was now easier to get to and from airports, on trains that still ran on two tracks (not one). Scientists still claimed that controlled fusion was only 20 or 30 years away, but that seemed less important now that orbiting solar collectors beamed power down to the earth’s surface. What had really changed were human attitudes. This unexpected reversal had led to a developing demand for real, authentic, buildings. The strange thing was that not only did people like to use real buildings, but they wanted to go out and build them. 28 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 From the beginning, living creatures had struggled just to survive and pass on their genetic blueprints (“blueprints”—strange how some terms just refused to disappear). That struggle was nearing an end, with a world of plenty for all within grasp. Indeed, few people toiled for more than a few hours a week. The big question was: once mere survival was not the objective, what was it all about? What did people actually want? What were you supposed to do in all that non-working time? Or, to use the language of a hundred years ago, what is the meaning of life? All of this had been reflected in the world of architecture, a discipline which had almost died. In the earlier part of the 21st century, there had been a vast explosion of virtual reality technologies, which meant that, without leaving home, an individual could access a myriad of possible environments—real and imagined—with full sensory stimuli. One result was that buildings were constructed as mere faceless warehouses. Another result was a massive reduction in tourism; after all, anyone could now stroll by Niagara Falls, and when, five minutes later, that became boring, they could flip over to Amsterdam and muse canal-side. With a good system, you could even get that distinctive Amsterdam smell. Virtual food was on the technological horizon. Yet something else had happened. It was those pesky human attitudes. Virtual experiences were proving to be somehow unsatisfying. Over the past few years, something had been happening that was actually beneficial to architects. Somehow authenticity was becoming important. It was not just enough to be adequately nourished with great-tasting (and durable) food, but more people were actually growing it—in real dirt. Sailing and golf had reappeared too. Despite the great simulators, people felt it was still not quite the same thing as really getting cold and wet. In addition, it seemed no longer enough to believe you were walking around Paris, or relaxing on the Adriatic Coast; people increasingly felt the need to actually go to those places, and interact with the place and the people— and not just virtually. This unexpected reversal had led to a developing demand for real, authentic, buildings. The strange thing was that not only did people like to use real buildings, but they wanted to go out and build them. Unbelievably, tours were offering to take you to Italy to heave stones about on a construction site—surely a quaint and unnecessary activity now that one could 3-D print an entire Italian villa, down to the smallest detail. But people were ascribing value to the real stone and the real setting, and most bizarrely, the labour to make them. Where would it all lead? Was there a limit to this? The final straw was when a committee member’s firm had been asked to build something that had apparently disappeared a couple of decades ago—a theme park. It seemed that there was now a demand for an authentically contrived experience as well. Was this the final destiny of humanity—to be endlessly seeking this weird thing: the authentic experience? Walking across the OAA parking lot to his car, he reflected: it was curious that even after almost a century of meetings, and with all the technological change that had occurred over that period, the ever-evolving OAA Perspectives team still met eight times a year, talked about architects and architecture to create a paper magazine, and notes were still taken using a pen and paper. And there were still never enough desserts for lunch. z IAN ELLINGHAM is Chair of the OAA Perspectives Committee. FAST-TRACK YOUR BEST IDEAS MUROX THE PREFABRICATED BUILDING ENVELOPE SYSTEM THAT SETS YOUR IMAGINATION FREE Take design-build to a whole new level with Murox, the fast-track construction solution that accelerates your projects without compromising your creative vision. Our prefabricated wall panels are factory-built to your exact specifications and delivered construction-ready to your worksite. Coupled with our BuildMaster approach, Murox reduces commercial, industrial, and institutional build times by up to 50%. So forget your prefab preconceptions and experience Murox. You’ll never look back. canam-construction.com 1-866-466-8769 ROOFS FOUNDATIONS WALLS COLPLY project, Toronto GREEN ROOFS PARKING DECKS Les Terrasses Cap-à-L’Aigle, La Malbaie WATERPROOFING INSULATION Marine Gateway, Vancouver BRIDGES Charles-de-Gaulle Bridge, Montreal BALCONIES AND PLAZA DECKS FOUNTAINS AND PONDS Château Bellevue, Quebec R VEGETATIVE SOUNDPROOFING SOLUTIONS ACCESSORY PRODUCTS SOPREMA is an international manufacturer specializing in the production of waterproofing and insulation products, as well as vegetative and soundproofing solutions, for the building and civil engineering sectors. SOPREMA.CA 1.877.MAMMOUTH 832580_Soprema.indd 1 22/09/16 2:58 AM 828844_ABC.indd 1 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 9/29/16 2:00 AM 30 T HE F IC T ION PAGE ACCOMMODATION BY GORDON S. GRICE DR. GRUBER WAS SITTING MOTIONLESS as we entered his office. His face and clasped hands, silhouetted by the glaring curtain wall, were reflected in the polished surface of his massive desk. He was already staring in our direction. “I’m glad you decided to come and see me,” he said. It hadn’t been an easy decision. The Gruber Method was unorthodox and untested, but we had tried other kinds of therapy and none of them seemed to key into the nature of our particular problem. “My therapy is innovative,” he explained. “Lots of couples and families find themselves in your situation, but it takes an open and creative mindset to benefit from my approach. First, I will want to visit your house while you’re not there, just to get a sense of its personality. Then, we can all meet there to sort through the issues. If we all work together, I am certain we can find a solution.” I should mention that our house is exceptional. That’s not just our opinion, either; it’s what the design magazines have called it, as well as “contextually adventurous,” a “Meisterstück,” a “watershed creation” of the brilliant young architect we had hired to design it. It was everything we wanted. But somehow, we weren’t contented there. We started bickering and spending time apart. We even started to feel alienated from our extraordinary house. We tried several kinds of couples’ therapy. One of our therapists recommended that we consider renovating the house, so that it would feel more comfortable and maybe better suited to our admittedly middleclass lifestyle. Then a friend of ours referred us to Dr. Gruber, M.Arch, Ph.D., CAT (Certified Architectural Therapist). Our next appointment with Dr. Gruber was in our “Being Space”—a sort of leftover area between the Reception Area and the Cooking Centre. The Doctor had reached some conclusions about our treatment. www.oaa.on.ca He looked at us with kindness and concern, like a grandmother preparing to apply a bandage to a child’s wounded knee. “I know you’ve given a lot of thought to your personal relationship,” he said, patiently and earnestly. “But have you thought for even a minute how your house might feel?” This jarred us both, a little. “In any relationship, it’s important to consider the role of all parties,” he continued. “The thing is that architecture—buildings— are eternal. Sure they can be altered, renovated, redecorated, repurposed. But that’s expensive and time consuming and in the end you still have the same old building, just tinkered with, and this can be very upsetting to a house. People, on the other hand are able to change very easily. Look, you go camping, you live in a little tent for a week and cook on a wood fire; you go on a cruise ship, you feel sick for a week, drink too much, eat too much, spend a couple of months recovering. We adapt. Think of how far humans have come. We used to live in caves, now we live in highrise condos. It’s amazing what people can become accustomed to.” Now, assuming a more professorial air, he went on, “It’s really just a question of moulding your lifestyle to accommodate your surroundings—a sort of Darwinian adjustment, if you like. I think that if we can just narrow the gap between you and the house, you and your house will be much happier.” Dr. Gruber’s assistant helped us make the necessary arrangements. We didn’t make all of the lifestyle alterations at once. Like Darwin said, adaptation takes time. Finding new friends was easy. Most of our neighbours had avoided us since we built the house, anyway. It was out of sync with the neighbourhood and, evidently, we were too. Our new friends seemed to really like the house. They said all the right things: “It has really engaging spaces…it re-contextualizes the streetscape…it’s iconic.” We had to look some of these words up. It was easier than you might think. We started going out—theatres, galleries, documentary cinema—we got new clothes, a sleek European car, and even new hobbies. Why hadn’t we thought of this before? We started reading books and magazines—Dwell, Architectural Digest, OAA Perspectives, New York Review of Books. We joined a book club and a couple of art galleries. We took architectural tours. Most important, we started to really feel like we belonged in our house—not comfortable, necessarily, but much better accommodated. z Versetta Stone ® The beauty of stone, the simplicity of siding™ Versetta Stone® is mortarless, cement-based, mechanically fastened, panelized stone veneer which allows you to recreate the beauty and craftsmanship of authentic stone masonry using nails or screws. www.AllThingsStone.com 800.977.8663 31 812156_Canadian.indd 1 18/06/16 3:56 am OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 PRODUCTS & SERVICES GALLERY Azon Saves Energy Daylighting systems produced with Azon structural thermal barrier technologies—the MLP™ or Dual Cavity—for aluminum windows and curtain wall, along with high performance glazing components for insulating glass, will yield a fenestration system capable of upholding the highest efficiency and sustainability standards. Contact us to learn about the role of Azon thermal barriers in energy conservation. 1-800-788-5942 | www.azonintl.com 20/04/16 12:13 810757_Baillargeon.indd am 1 808264_Azon.indd 1 IRON EAGLE Industries Inc. 06/05/16 11:37 PM Get the Brick Colours You Want With the Sizes and Shapes You Need! • Clay Facebrick & Thin-Brick Manufacturers of Ornamental Iron Fence Systems, the fence preferred by Canadian Architects since 1989. • “Genuine Clay” Paving Brick Iron Eagle offers over 62 unique designs for Commercial, Industrial and Residential applications - all are available in thousands of variations of colour, texture and size. • Cast Stone & Architectural Concrete Masonry Units • CAD drawings available on our website • Catalogues and samples are available on request. 1256 Cardiff Blvd. Mississauga, ON L5S 1R1 Tel.: (905) 670-2558 • Fax: (905) 670-2841 www.ironeagleind.com • e-mail: [email protected] 32 461908_IronEagle.indd 1 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 #9 - 5115 Harvester Rd., Burlington, ON L7L 0A3 Phone: (905) 637-6997 | Toll Free: (800) 567-5800 Email: [email protected] | www.ThamesValleyBrick.com 1/20/10 11:08:58 713576_Thames.indd AM 1 10/16/14 2:52 PM Lindab R Rainline TM The steel rainwater system Hot dipped galvanized Steel for strength. Polyester coating for durable and elegant finish. EPDM Rubber seals eliminate sealants or solder joins for worry free and eco friendly installation. www.europeangutters.ca 820577_Concrete.indd 1 04/07/16 9:24 621036_Precision.indd pm 1 834676_Acorn.indd 1 www.oaa.on.ca 10/7/16 12:41 815465_GRASS.indd AM 1 07/02/13 12:42 AM 33 6/2/16 1:29 PM OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 Let a professional handle your document management and printing. Every time. Canada’s oldest and foremost distributor of Acoustic Ceilings, Grid Systems, Wall Panels, Metal Ceilings and Specialty Products Make sure your provider is a member of the 139 Bentworth Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M6A 1P6 Tel: (416) 787-0271 • Fax: (416) 787-5421 www.oasinc.ca • [email protected] A USG COMPANY Find a member near you today at APDSP.org 596772_OAS.indd 1 09/08/12 10:59 828485_International.indd PM 1 09/09/16 11:38 PM Legal Advice You Can Build On We have been providing innovative legal counsel to the design and construction industries for over 25 years. Bernie McGarva | &HUWLÀHG6SHFLDOLVWLQ&RQVWUXFWLRQ/DZ [email protected] | 416.865.7765 airdberlis.com 783261_Aird.indd 1 09/12/15 9:53 pm > Architectural Acoustics > Building Noise & Vibration Control 905-826-4546 [email protected] www.hgcengineering.com 34 685647_CCI.indd 1 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 15/03/14 12:31 HGC_601617.indd AM 1 15/08/12 11:18 AM QUITE SIMPLY SUPERIOR From design to installation, GoliathTech combines engineering and innovation to guarantee a solid foundation that surpasses the highest industry standards. Photo: Stéphane Groleau Mechanical Electrical BETTER BUILDING SOLUTIONS Energy Review Canam-Buildings is an industryleading fabricator of steel joists, girders, steel deck, and also designs, manufactures and installs the Reveal Series decking system, Murox prefabricated building system, and Hambro composite floor systems. Code Consulting The BuildMaster approach, Canam’s advance planning, design and improved steel delivery features, can be combined to any of our construction solutions. Commercial High Rise Residential 1-866-466-8769 | canam-construction.com 1.855.743.4777 Retail WWW. GOLIATHTECHPILES .COM New Construction 820291_Canam.indd 1 13/07/16 2:35 820242_GoliathTech.indd am 1 12/07/16 9:10 pm Retrofit Design Tenant Design GenieMat™ RST advanced underlayment for superior sound and vibration reduction Perfect for high-rises, multi-family housing and commercial buildings where sound reduction is essential 6TFEJSFDUMZVOEFSIBSETVSGBDFnPPS mOJTIFTJODMVEJOHEJSFDUBEIFSFE tile, stone, wood and vinyl Installs easily over concrete and wood-frame construction For more information please call 416-449-0049 or email us at [email protected] Learn more at www.pliteq.com 791239_Pliteq.indd 1 www.oaa.on.ca 15-year WARRANTY on LuxGuard options including hail breakage Cast light longer with the NEW VELUX Dynamic Dome! An innovative commercial skylight designed to harvest low angle light for up to two more hours, keeping the florescent lights off longer. In addition to delivering brighter diffused light midday it also creates a more consistent light level through the day. The revolutionary dome balances the structural demands of industry professionals with an architecturally progressive design. For more information visit velux.ca/commercial 1 800 888-3589 28/01/16 5:26 827558_Velux.indd PM 1 10/5/16 12:14 807161_ME.indd AM 1 35 4/14/16 12:14 AM OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS ACOUSTICAL DISTRIBUTORS OAS������������������������������������������������ 34 www.oasinc.ca ACOUSTICAL ENGINEERS HGC Engineering Ltd.���������������������� 34 www.acoustical-consultants.com ARCHITECTURAL CAST-IN-PLACE CONCRETE FORMS GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ ASSOCIATIONS International Reprographic Association���������������������������������� 34 www.apdsp.org/ BRICK MANUFACTURERS/SUPPLIERS Brampton Brick Limited�������������������� 7 www.bramptonbrick.com Forterra Building Products����������������� Inside Front Cover www.forterrabrick.com Thames Valley Brick & Tile���������������� 32 www.ThamesValleyBrick.com BUILDING CODE CONSULTANTS LMDG Building Code Consultants Ltd.�������������������������� 36 www.lmdg.com CLAY BRICK & MASONRY Forterra Building Products�������������� Inside Front Cover www.forterrabrick.com CLAY PAVING BRICKS Thames Valley Brick & Tile�������������� 32 www.ThamesValleyBrick.com CONCRETE FLOORING/FINISHING Concrete Flooring Association�������� 33 www.concretefloors.ca CONSTRUCTION LAW SERVICES Aird & Berlis, LLP���������������������������� 34 www.airdberlis.com CONSULTING ENGINEERS CCI Group Inc. �������������������������������� 34 www.ccigroupinc.ca M & E Engineering Ltd.����������������������35 www.me-eng.com EXTERIOR SIGNAGE GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ FLOORING Maple Flooring Manufacturers Association, Inc.�������������������������� 37 www.maplefloor.org FOUNDATION SUPPORT GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ SITE AMENITIES A.B.C. Recreation Ltd. �������������������� 30 www.abcrecreation.com GARAGE DOOR MANUFACTURERS Steel-Craft Door Products Ltd.������� Inside Back Cover www.steel-craft.ca SKYLIGHTS Velux Canada Inc.�����������������������11, 35 www.velux.ca GLASS BLOCK & GLASS FLOOR SYSTEMS Thames Valley Brick & Tile�������������� 32 www.ThamesValleyBrick.com SOFTWARE - BUILDING INFORMATION MODEL Graphisoft North America ������������Outside Back Cover www.graphisoft.com GUTTERS Precision Gutters Ltd.���������������������� 33 www.precisiongutters.com/home SOUND & VIBRATION CONTROL Pliteq Inc.������������������������������������ 8, 35 www.pliteq.com HARDWARE & ACCESSORIES GRASS Canada Inc.������������������������ 33 www.grasscanada.com SPECIALTY DOORS Baillargeon Doors Inc. �������������������� 32 www.baillargeondoors.com HELICAL SCREW PILES GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ STEEL FRAME BUILDINGS BEHLEN INDUSTRIES LP������������������ 3 www.behlen.ca INTERIOR WOOD DOOR FRAMES & JAMBS Baillargeon Doors Inc. �������������������� 32 www.baillargeondoors.com STONE MASONRY VENEERS Canadian Stone Industries���������10, 31 www.AllThingsStone.com JOIST SYSTEMS iSpan Systems LP ���������������������������� 4 www.totaljoist.com LUXURY PLUMBING Acorn Engineering�������������������������� 33 www.neo-metro.com MASONRY ANCHORAGE & REINFORCMENT GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ ONLINE CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS Ontario General Contractors Association���������������������������������� 36 www.ogca.ca ORNAMENTAL IRON FENCING Iron Eagle Industries Inc.���������������� 32 ironeagleind.com/ 588001_Can.indd 1 L M D G 16/05/12 1:26 PM Building Code Consultants Ltd Fire Protection & Life Safety Solutions 36 Head Office: 4th Floor - 780 Beatty Street Vancouver, BC V6B 2M1 Tel: (604) 682-7146 Fax: (604) 682-7149 www.LMDG.com Ontario Office: 300 North Queen Street Suite 206 Toronto, ON M9C 5K4 Tel: (416) 646-0162 Fax: (416) 646-0165 Emmanuel A. Domingo, P.Eng. James R. Ware, FPET 779232_LMDG.indd 1 OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 STRUCTURAL CONCRETE GoliathTech - Your Deck Co.�������� 8, 35 www.goliathtechpiles.com/ STRUCTURAL STEEL Canam Canada�������������������������� 29, 35 www.canam-construction.com TESTING SERVICES (LAB & FIELD) Can-Best���������������������������������������� 36 www.can-best.com WATERPROOFING Soprema Inc.���������������������������������� 30 www.soprema.ca WINDOWS Azon������������������������������������������������ 32 www.azonintl.com WOOD DOORS Baillargeon Doors Inc. �������������������� 32 www.baillargeondoors.com www.OrderConstruction DocumentsHere.ca Our online store can be your one stop shop: Order the CCA/CCDC documents you need and pay on line. Order today at: www.OrderConstructionDocumentsHere.ca A Service Provided By www.ogca.ca 11/15/15 4:01 552130_OGCA.indd PM 1 9/15/11 3:29:24 PM ON TAR IO PL ACE S continued from page 38 1574 Bathurst Street, Jane Jacobs to 69 Albany Avenue and Lester Pearson to 12 Admiral Road. Other notable honourees include Frederick Banting, Charles Best, Robertson Davies, Emma Goldman, Lorne Greene, Ned Hanlan, William Kurelek, Tom Longboat, Marshall McLuhan, Oscar Peterson, Johnny Wayne, Frank Shuster, Tuzo Wilson and the architects E. J. Lennox and Frank Darling. The plaques are intended to be permanent and their numbers will grow over time, as future Toronto Legacy Project members add new candidates to the list. More details of the Toronto Legacy Project can be found at the Heritage Toronto website: heritagetoronto.org. Architects have always been intrigued by the connections between a person, place and occasion. Can the design or quality of a place influence the actions of those who live in it, and can that provide benefits to our community? The locations of the plaques do not answer that question. However, they do serve to enrich the historical knowledge of our city. Where there are several possible plaque locations for a particular individual, the placement decision is influenced to some degree by where the most passersby will notice it. Now the people of Toronto and visitors can be reminded of where Milton Acorn wrote many of his poems, where Norman Bethune studied medicine, where mathematician Donald Coxeter wrote some of his famous books, where the actor Raymond Massey was raised, and where Harry Somers composed some of his music. A street you have travelled down many times may suddenly become much more meaningful once you know more about the lives of those who preceded you— that at this place, at this time, some cultural figure of note lived or achieved something memorable. As to Eric Arthur’s house, he designed it and moved in with his wife, Doris, and two children in 1955. It is in Lawrence Park, at the time a developing suburb of sturdy brick houses with Arts and Crafts detailing. Arthur’s house is unique and worth a visit. It is expressive of his design philosophy—modern in style, but respectful of its context with no historicist details. Of special interest is that the home has been owned and lived in for many years by another architect, who has taken pride in preserving the character of the place and was very supportive of the new plaque installed at the edge of the city sidewalk. z A PLAQUE MARKING THE LOCATION OF FREDERICK BANTING’S HOUSE AT 46 BEDFORD ROAD IN TORONTO, NOW THE SITE OF TADDLE CREEK PARK. BANTING BUILT THE HOUSE AFTER WINNING THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR THE DISCOVERY OF INSULIN. PHOTO COURTESY TORONTO LEGACY PROJECT PETER ORTVED is a principal in CS&P Architects Inc., in Toronto. The Blend of Art and 6FLHQFH. The human form was daVinci’s inspiration. The athletic floor is our inspiration. The relationship of technical standards and system design has led us to create uniform standards of performance IRUVSRUWVÁRRUVWKH0)0$3856WDQGDUGV For more information visit www.maplefloor.org. 811531_Maple.indd 1 www.oaa.on.ca Maple Flooring Manufacturers Association One Parkview Plaza, Suite 800 Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181 USA Phone +1-888-480-9138 Fax +1-847-686-2253 Web site www.maplefloor.org e-mail mfma@maplefloor.org 37 07/05/16 2:49 AM OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 ON TAR IO PL ACE S TORONTO LEGACY PROJECT BY PETER ORTVED OAA, FRAIC MOST READERS OF THIS MAGAZINE THE ERIC ARTHUR PLAQUE, IN CONTEXT AND CLOSE-UP 38 know who Eric Arthur was. Some may have been taught by him or will have consulted one of his excellent books on architecture. Some know of his role as Professional Advisor on the seminal New Toronto City Hall design competition. Many of us owe him a debt for his founding of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario. He left a remarkable record. There are likely few of us, however, who know the house he designed and lived in for 27 years at 41 Weybourne Crescent in North Toronto. A legacy is a gift from the past that enriches the lives of the present generation. The Toronto Legacy Project evolved to its present form from a volunteer group of individuals who first came together in 2002, led by poet Dennis Lee as founder and Grace Westcott as chair. The intent of the project is to raise awareness of the historical presence in Toronto of distinguished persons of the past and make the city a more attractive and interesting place to live, do business and visit. Since 2009, in partnership with Heritage Toronto, the Toronto Legacy Project has celebrated Toronto’s notable figures in all fields of endeavour—culture, thinking, OA A PER SPEC T IVES | WINTER 2016/17 THE ERIC ARTHUR RESIDENCE AT 41 WEYBOURNE CRESCENT. ALL PHOTOS COURTESY TORONTO LEGACY PROJECT sports, politics and more—by installing plaques on their homes or workplaces. The plaques, modelled on the famous London Blue Plaques, are elegantly designed in the form of an oval, in blue with white lettering, and include the coat of arms of the City of Toronto. As a former board member and chair of Heritage Toronto, I was pleased to join the committee several years ago, and the first project I took on was the Eric Arthur plaque. In the past six years, 38 plaques have been successfully installed, and another dozen are awaiting approvals and installation details. The list of those honoured to date includes an impressive roster of personalities, some long-time Toronto residents, some who were raised here or spent only a short time in the city. Without a plaque, few of us would have connected these famous people to the places where they lived or worked. Now anyone can link Amelia Earhart to 392 Sherbourne Street, Northrop Frye to continued on page 37 BEST DOOR ON THE BLOCK. Elite Series Steel-Craft’s Elite function. Available in a e Series in Walnut is the perfect blend of form and function rich walnut woodgrain, the Elite Series adds sophistication to any home without any of the maintenance issues. These garage doors have a low-maintenance finish that requires no staining or painting. And, unlike real wood, they won’t warp, shrink, peel or crack. Flush Series RanchCraft Series Elite Series Charcoal Elite Series Walnut THE DOOR WITH MORE. For a complete list of products and specs, visit Steel-Craft.ca CarriageCraft Series Esteem Series ARCHICAD is BIM on your terms GRAPHISOFT ARCHICAD and our value-priced SOLO are BIM Contact us today for more information: [email protected] or call 1 (800) 344-3468 www.tryarchicad.com GRAPHISOFT, ARCHICAD, BIMx, BIMcloud are registered trademarks of GRAPHISOFT SE. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners. *5$3+Ζ62)71257+$0(5Ζ&$ȏ:::GRAPHISOFTCOM