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View Poll Results: What is your favourite Block 2 design?
Zeidler/David Chipperfield 3 5.08%
Diamond Schmitt, Bjarke Ingels, KWC, ERA 16 27.12%
Provencher Roy + Associés Architectes Inc. 16 27.12%
Watson MacEwen Teramura / Behnisch 8 13.56%
Wilkinson Eyre/ IDEA Inc. 7 11.86%
NEUF Architects/ Renzo Piano Building Workshop 2 3.39%
None of the above (reset the process) 7 11.86%
Voters: 59. You may not vote on this poll

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  #181  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 1:00 AM
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Sir David Alan Chipperfield CH Receives the 2023 Pritzker Architecture Prize

Chicago, IL (March 7, 2023) – Civic architect, urban planner and activist, Sir David Alan Chipperfield CH has been selected as the 2023 Laureate of The Pritzker Architecture Prize, the award that is regarded internationally as architecture’s highest honor.

Subtle yet powerful, subdued yet elegant, he is a prolific architect who is radical in his restraint, demonstrating his reverence for history and culture while honoring the preexisting built and natural environments, as he reimagines functionality and accessibility of new buildings, renovations and restorations through timeless modern design that confronts climate urgencies, transforms social relationships and reinvigorates cities.

“I am so overwhelmed to receive this extraordinary honour and to be associated with the previous recipients who have all given so much inspiration to the profession,” remarks Chipperfield. “I take this award as an encouragement to continue to direct my attention not only to the substance of architecture and its meaning but also to the contribution that we can make as architects to address the existential challenges of climate change and societal inequality. We know that, as architects, we can have a more prominent and engaged role in creating not only a more beautiful world but a fairer and more sustainable one too. We must rise to this challenge and help inspire the next generation to embrace this responsibility with vision and courage.”

His built works, spanning over four decades, are expansive in typology and geography, including over one hundred works ranging from civic, cultural and academic buildings to residences and urban masterplanning throughout Asia, Europe and North America.

The 2023 Jury Citation of the Laureate, states, in part, “This commitment to an architecture of understated but transformative civic presence and the definition—even through private commissions—of the public realm, is done always with austerity, avoiding unnecessary moves and steering clear of trends and fashions, all of which is a most relevant message to our contemporary society. Such a capacity to distill and perform meditated design operations is a dimension of sustainability that has not been obvious in recent years: sustainability as pertinence, not only eliminates the superfluous but is also the first step to creating structures able to last, physically and culturally.”

Chipperfield calculates the environmental and historical impacts of permanence, embracing the preexisting, designing and intervening in dialogue with time and place to adopt and refresh the architectural language of each locale. James-Simon-Galerie (Berlin, Germany, 2018) situated on a narrow island along the Kupfergraben canal and accessible by the Schlossbrücke bridge, serves as the gateway to Museum Island. Commanding, though discreet, colonnades with grand scale enclose a terrace, a wide expansive staircase and a manifold of open spaces allow abundant light into the large entryway of the building. The design enables generous views from within and beyond, even through to adjacent buildings and the surrounding urban landscape.

“He is assured without hubris, consistently avoiding trendiness to confront and sustain the connections between tradition and innovation, serving history and humanity,” comments Tom Pritzker, Chairman of the Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award. “While his works are elegantly masterful, he measures the achievements of his designs by social and environmental welfare to enhance the quality of life for all of civilization.”

In renovative works, his precision is imbued with historical acumen, informing his vision to invariably redeem original design and structure rather than supplant it wholly with modern architecture. The Laureate reflects, “As an architect, I’m in a way the guardian of meaning, memory, and heritage. Cities are historical records, and architecture after a certain moment is a historical record. Cities are dynamic, so they don’t just sit there, they evolve. And in that evolution, we take buildings away and we replace them with others. We choose ourselves, and the concept of only protecting the best is not enough. It’s also a matter of protecting character and qualities that reflect the richness of the evolution of a city.”

The Neues Museum (Berlin, Germany, 2009), originally constructed in the mid-19th century and left devastated and inhabitable during World War II, demonstrates Chipperfield’s discernment between preservation, reconstruction and addition. The novel is in conversation with the old, as architecture of the past is brought to the foreground, yielding moments of modernity such as a striking new main stairwell flanked by walls revealing traces of original frescoes and repurposed materials, even those that were marred by wartime blemishes. Generous outdoor space makes it a connector for all, even for those who never enter the galleries.

Alejandro Aravena, Jury Chair and 2016 Pritzker Prize Laureate, elaborates, “In a world where many architects view a commission as an opportunity to add to their own portfolio, he responds to each project with specific tools that he has selected with preciseness and great care. Sometimes it requires a gesture that is strong and monumental, while other times, it requires him to almost disappear. But his buildings will always stand the test of time because the ultimate goal of his operation is to serve the greater good. The avoidance of what’s fashionable has allowed him to remain permanent.”

His restoration and reinvention of the Procuratie Vecchie (Venice, Italy, 2022), which dates back to the 16th century, redefined the civic ability of this building within the heart of the city to allow general access for the first time. He elevates partnership through his processes, upholding his belief that architecture and craft are intertwined. He called upon traditional craftsmen to revive original frescoes, terrazzo and pastellone flooring and plasterworks, uncovering layers of history, while incorporating local artisan and building techniques to produce modern correlative interventions such as a vertical circulation. The restored building now enables views from above and within, revealing rooftop terraces, exhibition and event spaces, an auditorium and an enfilade of arches that diverge into galleries.

Every work becomes a civic undertaking serving society, such as the America’s Cup Building ‘Veles e Vents’ (Valencia, Spain, 2006), intended primarily as a temporary hospitality venue for offshore teams and sponsors. Exterior space exceeds interior and the cantilevered viewing decks are miradors, generous in size, some spanning 15 meters in width around the perimeter of each overlapping level. Chipperfield infuses a program for the public, through first-floor retail spaces and an accessible deck that offers unrestricted views of the canal and city below. A ramp from this level creates a direct pathway to a park just north of the site. His restoration and addition of Morland Mixité Capitale (Paris, France, 2022) revitalizes the neighborhood with affordable and luxury housing, retail and restaurant venues, a hotel and youth hostel, an installation space and an urban rooftop garden. By raising the new volumes on vaulted load-bearing arcades which continue along at the base of the original building, the architect creates a space to gather, inviting those to pass by or pass through the new visual and physical passageway to the Seine River from the Boulevard Morland.

Whether through public or private buildings, he bestows unto society the opportunity for coexistence and communion, protecting individuality while fostering a societal sense of belonging. The headquarters for Amorepacific (Seoul, Republic of Korea, 2017) harmonize the individual and the collective, the private and the public, work and respite. Vertical aluminum fins across the glass façade provide solar shading to aid thermal conditions and natural ventilation, and create a translucency, encouraging a rapport between the building’s occupants, its neighbors and observers. Office space is equipoised by a public atrium, museum, library, auditorium and restaurants. A central courtyard allows views through to nearby buildings and hanging gardens further engage the community inside with the elements outside. At the Inagawa Cemetery Chapel and Visitor Center (Hyogo, Japan, 2017), situated in the Hokusetsu Mountains, the physical and spiritual coexist, with places of solitude and gathering, for peace and seeking. These interconnected expressions are mirrored in the earth-toned monolithic buildings, stairs and pathways residing amidst the sloped terrain, and the secluded non-denominational chapel and visitor center that are juxtaposed diagonal from one another.

“We do not see an instantly recognizable David Chipperfield building in different cities, but different David Chipperfield buildings designed specifically for each circumstance. Each asserts its presence even as his buildings create new connections with the neighbourhood,” continues the 2023 Citation. “His architectural language balances consistency with the fundamental design principles and flexibility towards the local cultures…The work of David Chipperfield unifies European classicism, the complex nature of Britain, and even the delicateness of Japan. It is the fruition of cultural diversity.”

Significant works also include the River and Rowing Museum (Henley-on-Thames, United Kingdom, 1997), BBC Scotland headquarters (Glasgow, United Kingdom, 2007), Turner Contemporary (Margate, United Kingdom, 2011), Campus Saint Louis Art Museum (Missouri, United States of America, 2013), Campus Joachimstraße (Berlin, Germany, 2013), Museo Jumex (Mexico City, Mexico, 2013), One Pancras Square (London, United Kingdom, 2013), Royal Academy of Arts masterplan (London, United Kingdom, 2018), Hoxton Press (London, United Kingdom, 2018) and Kunsthaus Zürich (Zurich, Switzerland, 2020).

Chipperfield is the 52nd Laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize. He resides in London and leads additional offices in Berlin, Milan, Shanghai and Santiago de Compostela. The 2023 Pritzker Prize ceremony will be held in Athens, Greece this May.

https://www.pritzkerprize.com/laurea...eate-page-2506
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  #182  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 1:29 AM
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‘I faked it at the beginning!’: David Chipperfield on his rise from shop designer to starchitect

Oliver Wainwright, The Guardian
Tue 7 Mar 2023 15.16 GMT | Last modified on Tue 7 Mar 2023 16.46 GMT


He almost failed architecture school. Now he’s netted the profession’s top prize, the Pritzker. Britain’s modernist master talks about the building that changed everything – and running a bar in Spain.

Sometimes, it takes a trip abroad to make you realise what you have at home. When David Cameron visited German chancellor Angela Merkel in 2013, she introduced the then British PM to “one of our most famous German architects”. The designer in question? The London-born and -based Sir David Chipperfield, who had built several museums in Germany, as well as law courts in Barcelona and a library in Des Moines, Iowa, all while being relatively overlooked in his native Britain.

Ten years on, Chipperfield has just been announced as the winner of the 2023 Pritzker prize, architecture’s highest international accolade. And he has become a bit better known back home. “It’s a great honour,” he says, speaking from his second home in Galicia, northwest Spain, where he spent much of the pandemic. “And also a slight relief.”

Although Chipperfield is firmly part of the architectural establishment, having won countless international competitions, curated the Venice Biennale and been awarded the Riba gold medal, he has always felt like an outsider. “As a young architect in England in the 1980s, you had no chance,” he says. “We had Margaret Thatcher and Prince Charles, the twin towers of negativity towards the architectural profession. I did my first three buildings in Japan, followed by competitions in Italy and Germany. To be honest, it hasn’t really changed. I’ve been on the road ever since.”

While recent decades have seen globe-trotting celebrity “starchitects” competing with ever more novel forms and contorted structural gymnastics, Chipperfield has been a voice of sobriety. While others conjured flashy icons, he pursued an austere form of modernism exuding solemn gravitas. As the Pritzker citation puts it, his buildings are “always characterised by elegance, restraint, a sense of permanence and refined detailing”, adding: “in an era of excessive commercialisation, over-designing, and over-exaggeration, he can always achieve balance.”

Chipperfield’s brand of austerity can be too sterile for some: his projects in Germany have been accused of being too close to the country’s fascist past. But he is at his masterful best when working with existing structures – particularly those with fraught histories. His career-defining project remains the beguiling reconstruction of the Neues Museum in Berlin, which had been bombed by the RAF during the second world war. Completed in 2009, the project eschewed both historical re-enactment and the cliched juxtaposition of ruins with a modern extension. Instead, Chipperfield developed a poetic archaeological approach, with conservation architect Julian Harrap, fusing fragments of the existing fabric with bold new insertions, sometimes making it hard to tell whose hand was at work.

“It was life-changing for me and my team,” says Chipperfield. “It was a PhD in process and how to truly collaborate. My generation has always been about the product, but I believe more than anything now that we need to focus on the process.”

Born in London in 1953, David Alan Chipperfield grew up on a farm in Devon and spent his childhood dreaming of becoming a vet. He attended Wellington boarding school, where he says he was “fairly hopeless academically” but excelled at sports and art. He couldn’t get into university so he went to Kingston School of Art in London, followed by the Architectural Association, a hotbed of avant-garde ideas at the time – which he reacted firmly against. “At Kingston,” he says, “I was quite experimental and tried to break out. But given the freedom of the AA, I became very conservative. They tried to fail me, but thankfully Zaha Hadid stood up for me.”

Chipperfield spent formative years working with Richard Rogers and Norman Foster, where he “learned to make things more important than they might need to be,” he says. “In both those offices, they were quite obsessive about doing more than you’re asked to do.” Obsessive attention to detail – sometimes in the face of clients’ wishes and the budgets’ limits – would become one of his defining traits.

Launching his own practice in 1985, Chipperfield caught the eye of fashion designer Issey Miyake, whose Sloane Street store would be his first commission, leading to 18 months in Japan doing “some quite mediocre shop fit-outs in department stores”. But Miyake’s connections led to bigger commissions, including a stark concrete museum and a bunker-like office for Toyota. “I fabricated the beginning of my career in a rather fake manner,” Chipperfield admits. “With shop interiors, the projects in Japan and some competition entries, you could magic up the idea – with sleight of hand – that I had a real office.”

It was enough to convince the Italian authorities, who awarded him three major public competitions, for a cemetery in Venice, a museum in Milan, and law courts in Salerno – “which we’re still finishing, 22 years later”. It was also enough for Berlin to add him to the shortlist for the Neues Museum (“a competition that was totally set up for Frank Gehry to win,” he says.)

While that 16-year endeavour made him a German national hero, a parallel experience in the UK speaks volumes about the difference in procurement culture. Chipperfield was appointed to design the BBC Scotland HQ in 2001, only to be pushed aside in favour of “executive architects” Keppie, leading to a lumpen, coarser design. Still, he got a chance to further flex his muscles elsewhere in the UK, with more enlightened clients: 2011 saw the opening of his Turner Contemporary in Margate, which stands on the coast like a sharply hewn iceberg, as well as the Hepworth Wakefield, rising from the waters of the River Calder as a chiselled cluster of concrete towers, riffing off the local post-industrial context.

Museums in Missouri and Mexico City followed, along with a gigantic cubic office block in Seoul, while back in London he turned his surgical skills to unpicking the labyrinthine maze of the Royal Academy. Chipperfield now has around 250 staff spread between offices in London, Berlin, Milan and Shanghai, but it seems his heart is really in Corrubedo – a small fishing village in the northwest of Spain where he owns several properties and runs a bar.

“I’ve been trying to set up a different kind of public office here,” he tells me, referring to the Fundación RIA, a non-profit he founded in 2017 that was recently appointed by the Galician government to oversee the regional development plan. The foundation is transforming a large building in Santiago de Compostela into a centre for research, exhibitions, events and student accommodation, due to open in October. “I’m at a different point in my career now,” says Chipperfield. “It’s easy for me to leverage my position, and leverage my privilege, to make another kind of value out of it.”

And the local reaction to his latest gong? “I don’t think people in the bar are going to be that excited when I tell them about the Pritzker prize,” he jokes. “I don’t think it’s going to be a wild night. When I was awarded Galician of the Year in 2019 – now that was a different matter!”

@ollywainwright

https://www.theguardian.com/artandde...to-starchitect
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  #183  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 2:40 AM
bartlebooth bartlebooth is offline
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Interesting news. Whenever Block 2 gets built, it'll be the second building by a Pritzker Prize winning architect in Ottawa.
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  #184  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 9:58 PM
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Interesting news. Whenever Block 2 gets built, it'll be the second building by a Pritzker Prize winning architect in Ottawa.
the first being?
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  #185  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 10:53 PM
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the first being?
Delegation of the Ismaili Imamat on Sussex. It was designed by Fumihiko Maki (in collab with Moriyama & Teshima). Maki won the Pritzker in 1993.
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  #186  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2023, 11:39 PM
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Delegation of the Ismaili Imamat on Sussex. It was designed by Fumihiko Maki (in collab with Moriyama & Teshima). Maki won the Pritzker in 1993.
Very cool! One of my favourite buildings in Ottawa, I have visited it on Doors Open.
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  #187  
Old Posted Mar 9, 2023, 4:12 PM
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Very cool! One of my favourite buildings in Ottawa, I have visited it on Doors Open.
It's really great how we lined Sussex with buildings that have awful street interactions, but with great internal architecture that you might get to see once a year during Doors Open, or maybe if you have embassy business.
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  #188  
Old Posted Mar 10, 2023, 2:12 AM
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Very cool! One of my favourite buildings in Ottawa, I have visited it on Doors Open.
Yeah, it's a great building. One of the best things built in this city in the last 20 years.

I agree with Uhuniau though. The way buildings interact with streets in this city is crap. Sussex in particular is horrible.
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  #189  
Old Posted Mar 10, 2023, 3:10 PM
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Chipperfield didn't do well in the poll above. I think this will be a case of the finished product being far better than the initial concept and renderings.

I posted about the Centre de Commerce mondial de Montréal a few days ago. Chipperfield's atrium (and overall concept) has some similarities (atrium, heritage preservation). I doubt it will have a publicly accessible component, however.
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  #190  
Old Posted Aug 31, 2023, 12:56 PM
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Was unable to find a link, but CBC Ottawa quickly mentioned on the news this week that request for bids are out for construction of Block 2.
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  #191  
Old Posted Aug 31, 2023, 1:09 PM
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https://www.canada.ca/en/public-serv...struction.html

Early 2030's! Many this city is ridiculous
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  #192  
Old Posted Sep 14, 2023, 6:41 PM
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https://www.canada.ca/en/public-serv...struction.html

Early 2030's! Man this city is ridiculous
Ahead of Block 2 you have the Supreme Court, waiting on Justice to complete (which will require significant ongoing swing space, including centre block refugees (and what's up with east block, are they done?) despite what the government says about work-from-home), and then you have to renovate and rotate people all around the rest of the buildings on that block for years on end, carefully balance everything while you drive new footings, and then carefully dismantle and integrate everything, with just $700M in change orders (my estimate, lets see if it's true). 2030 is only SEVEN years from now, to nest an entire new building into an entire block of existing buildings. Seems actually not that bad. Maybe 2 years too slow. But it'll also take 10 years to complete. Mark my words Maybe 10 years and a billion in extras, I'm increasing my estimate already! lol
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  #193  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2023, 2:11 AM
goodcitywhenfinished goodcitywhenfinished is offline
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Ahead of Block 2 you have the Supreme Court, waiting on Justice to complete (which will require significant ongoing swing space, including centre block refugees (and what's up with east block, are they done?) despite what the government says about work-from-home), and then you have to renovate and rotate people all around the rest of the buildings on that block for years on end, carefully balance everything while you drive new footings, and then carefully dismantle and integrate everything, with just $700M in change orders (my estimate, lets see if it's true). 2030 is only SEVEN years from now, to nest an entire new building into an entire block of existing buildings. Seems actually not that bad. Maybe 2 years too slow. But it'll also take 10 years to complete. Mark my words Maybe 10 years and a billion in extras, I'm increasing my estimate already! lol
Do you know if the Supreme Court rehabilitation includes any of the landscaping on the property? Really hoping they get rid of the surface parking and improve the public realm. Current state is Embarrassing for such an important building.
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  #194  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2023, 12:43 PM
OTownandDown OTownandDown is offline
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Do you know if the Supreme Court rehabilitation includes any of the landscaping on the property? Really hoping they get rid of the surface parking and improve the public realm. Current state is Embarrassing for such an important building.
I always thought that the Supreme Court was swinging over to Justice when it was complete, kind of like the Senate did with the train station, and I figured it'd be a complete overhaul. If they DON'T do the landscaping, it would be a complete miss. (Including the tiny park on the northwest corner)
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  #195  
Old Posted Jan 24, 2024, 5:49 PM
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Government of Canada announces contract award to help redevelop Canada’s Parliamentary Precinct

Selection marks another milestone in redevelopment project

January 24, 2024 - Ottawa, Ontario - Public Services and Procurement Canada

Today, the Honourable Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Public Services and Procurement, announced that Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) has awarded Pomerleau Inc. a $2.8-million construction management services contract for the first phase of the Block 2 Redevelopment Project. This redevelopment will transform aging buildings into an innovative complex that creates a new fourth wall to parliament square, in a way that respects our past and embraces our future.

The renewal of Block 2 is part of the Government of Canada’s efforts to restore and modernize Canada’s Parliamentary Precinct. Extensive work is underway within the Parliamentary Precinct to meet the needs of a 21st-century parliamentary democracy and to provide engaging spaces for all Canadians.

Block 2 is the city block immediately south of Parliament Hill in downtown Ottawa. It faces the Centre Block and Peace Tower to the north. The block is bounded by Metcalfe, Wellington, O’Connor and Sparks streets.

The construction management contract was awarded through a competitive process. PSPC issued a Request for Proposal (RFP) for construction management on August 8, 2023. The RFP closed in October 2023.

Quotes
“The selection of a construction manager for Block 2 is a key step in bringing our collective vision to reality to ensure the Parliamentary Precinct is a space that works for and inspires not just Parliamentarians, but all Canadians for many generations to come.”

The Honourable Jean-Yves Duclos
Minister of Public Services and Procurement

“Selection of a construction manager is a step forward on the progress of Block 2. This exciting project will complete the parliamentary square and will contribute to the revitalization of our downtown core. With an innovative concept, people-first spaces, and sustainable features, this project will bring a renewed vibrancy to Wellington Street and the Parliamentary Precinct.”

Yasir Naqvi
Member of Parliament, Ottawa-Centre

Quick facts
The construction manager is responsible for the overall construction delivery of the Block 2 project. The scope of the contract includes advisory services, as well as services for pre-construction, construction and post-construction.

The construction work includes decommissioning of old building systems, demolition and abatement of hazardous material, heritage protection and restoration, excavation, structural reinforcement and seismic upgrades of existing buildings, new building construction, including new building envelopes, new mechanical and electrical systems and landscape work.
The redesigned Block 2 will provide office space for the Senate and the House of Commons and will allow for the future consolidation of parliamentary accommodations, including space for the Library of Parliament. It will also include renovated retail space in the Sparks Street Mall.

Of the 11 buildings in Block 2, 2 buildings and an infill space in between have been dedicated for the development of an Indigenous Peoples’ Space.

On May 5, 2023, following an international design competition, PSPC awarded the Architectural & Engineering Services contract to the winning design team of Zeidler Architecture Inc. (Toronto, Canada), in association with David Chipperfield Architects (London, United Kingdom).

https://www.canada.ca/en/public-serv...-precinct.html
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  #196  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2024, 12:48 PM
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Decade-long plan to modernize ‘key part’ of Parliamentary Precinct to start this fall, feds say

David Sali, OBJ
March 14, 2024


The federal government plans to start work later this year on a project to restore and modernize a prominent collection of historic buildings near Parliament Hill.

Public Services and Procurement Canada says construction work on the block facing Parliament Hill bounded by Wellington, Sparks, Metcalfe and O’Connor streets ​– known as “Block 2” ​– is expected to begin this fall.

In an email to OBJ this week, PSPC called the Block 2 redevelopment project “a “key part” of the federal government’s efforts “to restore and modernize” the Parliamentary Precinct.

“The project will transform a mix of aging buildings and vacant lots into an innovative complex to meet the needs of a modern Parliament today and into the future,” a department spokesperson said.

The two-and-a-half-acre site includes 11 buildings – several of which are designated heritage buildings – as well as two parcels of vacant land. The feds say the redesigned buildings will provide space for the Senate, the House of Commons and the Library of Parliament and will also include renovated retail space on the Sparks Street Mall.

The PSPC spokesperson said the department and its partners are still finalizing the project’s budget and scope, “as well as design, pre-construction and investigation activities, with construction work expected to start in fall of 2024.”

“The project will transform a mix of aging buildings and vacant lots into an innovative complex to meet the needs of a modern Parliament today and into the future,” a department spokesperson said.

The two-and-a-half-acre site includes 11 buildings – several of which are designated heritage buildings – as well as two parcels of vacant land. The feds say the redesigned buildings will provide space for the Senate, the House of Commons and the Library of Parliament and will also include renovated retail space on the Sparks Street Mall.

The PSPC spokesperson said the department and its partners are still finalizing the project’s budget and scope, “as well as design, pre-construction and investigation activities, with construction work expected to start in fall of 2024.”

The entire redevelopment is expected to take nearly a decade to complete.

It’s the latest step in a process that began several years ago when PSPC invited architecture firms to enter a design competition for the project. The department said the work will include “a combination of new build components, restoration and refit while preserving the heritage character of the historic streets.”

A total of 12 firms qualified to bid on the project, including several locally based companies. In May 2022, a joint bid from Toronto’s Zeidler Architecture and U.K. firm David Chipperfield Architects was named the winner of the competition.

The firms were awarded an architectural and engineering contract for the project last May. In January, PSPC announced that Montreal-based construction firm Pomerleau would manage the first phase of the redevelopment.

Two of the 11 buildings on the block will be dedicated to an Indigenous people’s space and are not part of the design competition.

The nine buildings involved in the project are:
  • Union Bank Building, 128 Wellington St.
  • Victoria Building, 140 Wellington St.
  • Valour Building, 151 Sparks St.
  • Bank of Nova Scotia building, 125 Sparks St.
  • Fisher Building, 115 Sparks St.
  • Bate Building, 109 Sparks St.
  • Birks Building, 107 Sparks St.
  • Canada’s Four Corners building, 93 Sparks St.
  • Marshall Building, 14 Metcalfe St.

Downtown revitalization debate

The Block 2 redevelopment comes amid an ongoing debate over the future of two of the Parliamentary Precinct’s most prominent streets, Wellington and Sparks.

Last April, the stretch of Wellington Street in front of Parliament Hill reopened to vehicles after a 15-month closure that began in January 2022, when the area was overtaken by the Freedom Convoy protest.

In advance of the opening, former procurement minister Helena Jaczek wrote to Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, encouraging the city to keep the street closed. The city rejected the request.

Jaczek said the federal government wanted its jurisdiction to include both Wellington and Sparks streets as a way to address security issues and to create a vibrant public space. Such an ownership transfer, she wrote, would offer “a unique opportunity” to “reimagine this space as Canada’s preeminent civic forum.”

Local business leaders, however, criticized the proposal as impractical.

Sparks Street BIA executive director Kevin McHale, for example, told OBJ last April that turning the streets over to the feds would create a jurisdictional tug-of-war with the city and hamper efforts to revitalize the area.

Longtime commercial real estate broker Darren Fleming agreed.

“They’re not good stewards of real estate,” Fleming said of the federal government. “Most of the buildings are under-capitalized and in need of constant repair. I think giving (Wellington Street) over to them would be the worst.”

Meanwhile, a report tabled at the city’s transportation committee earlier this year concluded that the permanent closure of Wellington Street would divert traffic to other nearby arterial roads, creating “notable impacts” for commuters and causing an “overall increase in driver stress.”

Revitalizing Ottawa’s core, including the Parliamentary Precinct, has become a hot-button issue since the shift to remote work during the pandemic caused vacancy rates in many downtown office buildings to soar, resulting in a plunge in customer traffic for nearby merchants.

A task force examining the issue released its report in January, with recommendations that included converting aging government-owned office buildings such as L’Esplanade Laurier into residential and commercial spaces.

Meanwhile, the Ottawa Board of Trade is currently in the process of devising its own downtown action plan. The organization’s president and CEO, Sueling Ching, told OBJ last month the organization planned to release its report in March or April.

https://obj.ca/plan-to-modernize-par...art-this-fall/
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Old Posted Mar 15, 2024, 8:58 PM
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Business leaders divided on feds’ plan to modernize Parliamentary Precinct

David Sali, OBJ
March 15, 2024 4:41 PM ET


The federal government’s proposal to turn a two-and-a-half-acre site across from Parliament Hill into an office and retail complex is a “great start” toward revitalizing the Parliamentary Precinct, a prominent Ottawa real estate executive said Friday – but other business leaders say they’re not convinced the project will give struggling downtown merchants the boost they need.

Michael Church, the managing director of Avison Young’s Ottawa office, said Public Services and Procurement Canada’s plan to restore and modernize nearly a dozen buildings on a block bounded by Wellington, Sparks, Metcalfe and O’Connor streets shows the feds are “committed” to bringing new life to an area that’s currently filled with decaying, half-empty buildings and vacant storefronts.

“I applaud it,” Church said of the restoration project, which is expected to get underway later this year and is slated to take nearly a decade to complete.

“The feds often take a bit of a (bad) rap, but they do take the long-term view of things … and I understand what they’re trying to do in creating a destination.”

PSPC says the work will include “a combination of new build components, restoration and refit while preserving the heritage character of the historic streets.”

The redesigned buildings will provide space for the Senate, the House of Commons and the Library of Parliament and will also include renovated retail space on the Sparks Street Mall.

Toronto’s Zeidler Architecture and U.K. firm David Chipperfield Architects will oversee the redesign process. Montreal-based Pomerleau will manage construction of the first phase, which is expected to begin this fall.

Church, who is also part of the Ottawa Board of Trade’s push to craft a downtown action plan that is expected to be released next month, said projects like the one proposed by PSPC will work only if the whole community is involved in the process.

“We need to be collaborative, and I think this is a great start,” he said. “We need some innovative thinking. We need support of not only the feds, but the province and quite frankly the business community.”

Acknowledging the hot-button related issue of closing Wellington Street to vehicular traffic, Church suggested Ottawa could find inspiration in tourist meccas such as Florence, Italy, that restrict vehicles from entering certain parts of the city at specific times of day.

“There’s all sorts of ways to get creative on that,” he added. “That’s part of that thinking that you have to have at getting all the stakeholders at the table. You can’t do this in isolation.”

However, Scott May, who owns Bar Robo at Queen St. Fare, just south of the redevelopment zone, said the feds’ modernization plan doesn’t offer anything that would entice visitors on Parliament Hill to hang around and check out nearby establishments like his.

“I don’t know how much of an impact it’s going to have downtown, frankly,” said May, who was one of the driving forces behind last year’s campaign to brand the area south of Parliament Hill as a go-to entertainment destination called “SoPa.”

Tourists “want to see the Parliament Buildings,” he noted. But May argues there is nothing else on nearby streets to capture their interest, and he said the new project won’t change that.

“(Visitors) come down and look at (Parliament) and realize quickly there’s not much else to do on Wellington,” he said. “Where do they go? They’re not hanging around downtown anymore, that’s for sure.”

Sparks Street BIA executive director Kevin McHale has had several discussions with federal and municipal officials about the project.

While he’s all in favour of sprucing up the Parliamentary Precinct, McHale wants to ensure that disruptions to merchants on his street are kept to a minimum as construction on the decade-long project ramps up.

“We don’t want Sparks to just become a thoroughfare of dump trucks and garbage removal and equipment dropoff,” he said. “We’re trying to mitigate a lot of that.”

Still, McHale said it’s going to require some nimble thinking to work around such a massive undertaking.

For example, Sparks Street hosts a number of major events, including well-known attractions such as the Ottawa International Buskerfest and Ottawa Ribfest as well as parts of Winterlude. McHale said those events will likely have to be relocated or reconfigured to accommodate the ongoing construction.

“It’s a lot bigger than, say, a normal building reconstruction project,” he noted. “We’ll have to adjust how we do programming on the street for the next decade.”

Church said he believes the project will benefit downtown businesses in the long run. But he said planners have to “cut through” the “analysis paralysis” that often sets in on projects that involve multiple layers of government if it is ultimately to be a success.

“We all live here, so let’s all figure it out together,” Church said. “We’ve got to take the long-term view of things. The capital is going to be around a lot longer than all of us, so let’s figure out a way to move it forward.”

https://obj.ca/business-leaders-divi...precinct-plan/
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