5468796 Architecture is a design studio established in 2007 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on Treaty 1 territory.
266 mcdermot ave
winnipeg, MB, CA. R3B 0S8
t. 204.480.8421
5468796 Architecture is a design studio established in 2007 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on Treaty 1 territory.
266 mcdermot ave
winnipeg, MB, CA. R3B 0S8
t. 204.480.8421
Ainsley Johnston
comms & sp projects
ainsley @ 5468796.ca
Anika Thorsten
junior designer
anika @ 5468796.ca
Ben Greenwood
architectural intern
ben @ 5468796.ca
Colin Neufeld
partner
colin @ 5468796.ca
Donna Evans
finance
accounts @ 5468796.ca
Emeil Alvarez
designer
emeil @ 5468796.ca
Jeff Kachkan
architect
jeff @ 5468796.ca
Johanna Hurme
partner
johanna @ 5468796.ca
Jordy Craddock
architect
jordy @ 5468796.ca
Juan Rivera
junior designer
juan @ 5468796.ca
Kelsey McMahon
architect
kelsey @ 5468796.ca
Ken Borton
associate
ken @ 5468796.ca
Lydia Rosenthal
architectural intern
lydia @ 5468796.ca
Nabanita Saha
junior designer
nabanita @ 5468796.ca
Nick Cabelli
architectural intern
nick @ 5468796.ca
Pablo Batista
architect
pablo @ 5468796.ca
Ralph Gutierrez
architectural intern
ralph @ 5468796.ca
Sasa Radulovic
partner
sasa @ 5468796.ca
Shannon Wiebe
architect
shannon @ 5468796.ca
selected awards
[project-specific awards listed per project]
Firm recognition
2024 | Architizer A+ Awards Finalist, Medium Firm Size
2023 | UM Distinguished Alumni
2020 | DOMUS “Best Architectural Firms in 2020”
2015 | The Globe and Mail Canadian Artist of the Year
2013 | Rice Design Alliance Spotlight Prize
2013 | WAN 21 Architects for the 21st Century
2013 | RAIC Emerging Architectural Practice Award
2013 | Professional Prix de Rome in Architecture
2012 | Architectural League Emerging Voices
2012 | Venice Biennale of Architecture
2011 | Architectural Record Design Vanguard
2011 | Arthur Erickson Memorial Award
Governor General’s Medal in Architecture
2024 | Pumphouse
2018 | Parallelogram House
2014 | OMS stage
2012 | Bloc_10
Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize
2024 | Pumphouse | MCHAP outstanding project
2014 | OMS Stage | MCHAP.emerge outstanding project
2012 | OZ Condominiums | MCHAP.emerge outstanding project
World Architecture Festival
2023 | Veil House | Villas | Winner
2022 | 17th Avenue Clinic | Health | Winner
2022 | Parkade of the Future | Transport | Shortlist
2021 | 90/100 Alexander | Future Project | Shortlist
2021 | Pumphouse | Future Project | Shortlist
2016 | Arthur Residence | Future House | Winner
2014 | Bond Tower | Offices | Shortlist
2011 | OMS Stage | Culture | Shortlist
The PLAN Awards
2023 | Veil House | Villa | Winner
2022 | Parkade of the Future | Transport | Winner
RAIC Awards
2019 | Ken Borton | Young Architect Award
2013 | Bloc_10 | Award of Excellence
2011 | OMS Stage | Award of Excellence
Canadian Architect Awards
2020 | 90/100 Alexander | Award of Merit
2019 | IW09 | Award of Merit
2018 | Pumphouse | Award of Merit
2016 | Brewery at the Forks | Award of Merit
2014 | Arthur Residence | Award of Excellence
2011 | Bond Tower | Award of Merit
2010 | Bloc_10 | Award of Excellence
2009 | youCUBE | Award of Merit
AZ Awards
2024 | Pumphouse | Built Development | Jury Winner + People’s Choice Winner
2024 | Pumphouse | Adaptive Re-Use | Award of Merit
2023 | Parkade of the Future | Urban Design Infrastructure | Award of Merit
2019 | 62M | Multi-family Residential | Award of Merit
2011 | OMS Stage | People’s Choice
Prairie Design Awards
2022 | 17th Avenue Clinic | Award of Excellence
2022 | Parkade of the Future | Award of Merit
2021 | 62M | Award of Merit
2016 | Bloc_10 | Award of Excellence
2014 | The Avenue | Award of Excellence
2014 | Manitoba Start | Award of Merit
2012 | OMS Stage | Award of Excellence
2012 | youCUBE | Award of Merit
2012 | Webster Cottage | Award of Merit
2010 | Bohemier Residence | Award of Merit
2024
Pumphouse | C3 | Sept
Pumphouse | The Plan | Aug
Pumphouse | Globe & Mail | Aug
Pumphouse | Canadian Architect | Aug
Parkade | ULI | Aug
Veil House | Arkitera | Aug
Pumphouse | ArchDaily | Jul
Pumphouse | Centro Urbano | Jul
Pumphouse | Architektura | Jul
Pumphouse | Archello | Jul
Veil House | Architizer | Jul
Pumphouse | ConstructConnect | Jun
Pumphouse | REMI Network | Jun
Pumphouse | University of Manitoba News | Jun
Pumphouse | Bustler | Jun
Pumphouse | The Globe and Mail | Jun
Pumphouse | Azure | Jun
Pumphouse | Canadian Architect | Jun
Pumphouse | Architectural Record | May
Pumphouse | Canadian Architect | Apr
Veil House | Archiscene | Apr
Veil House | ADPro | Feb
Veil House | Magazine Ligne | Feb
Veil House | Toronto Star | Feb
Veil House | Archello | Jan
Veil House | Metalocus | Jan
Veil House | Construction Canada | Jan
Veil House | World Architecture | Jan
Lectures | Azure | Jan
2023
Veil House | Architectural Record | Dec
5468796 [housing] | ArchDaily | Dec
Veil House | National Post | Dec
Veil House | Financial Times | Oct
Veil House | STIRworld | Sept
Boom Town | WFP | Aug
Veil House | ArchDaily | Aug
Veil House| Premier Construction | Aug
Veil House | The Globe & Mail | Jul
Boom Town | Canadian Architect | Jun
Parkade of the Future| AZ Awards 2023 | Jun
5468796| UM Today | Jun
Veil House | Dezeen | Jun
Boom Town | The Bentway | Jun
90/100 Alexander | WFP | May
Parkade of the Future | Handbook 3 | May
Parkade of the Future | METALOCUS | May
Veil House | Wallpaper* | Apr
62M | DETAIL | Mar
Veil House | AZURE | Jan
2022
James Ave Pumping Station | Canadian Interiors | Nov
Parkade of the Future, 62M | Journal of Commerce | Oct
Parkade of the Future, 62M | Canadian Architect | Oct
Parkade of the Future | Macleans | Oct
Parkade of the Future | DETAIL | Oct
Parkade of the Future | Gray Magazine | Oct
62M | The Winnipeg Free Press | Sept
Parkade of the Future | Global Design News | Sept
17th Avenue Clinic | Canadian Architect | Aug
17th Avenue Clinic | Architect | Aug
Parkade of the Future | The Plan International Panorama | Vol. 2
Parkade of the Future | AZURE | Aug
Parkade of the Future | The Plan | Jul
Parkade of the Future | Canadian Architect | Jun
Parkade of the Future | Avontuura | Jun
Parkade of the Future | Brandon Donnelly | May
Parkade of the Future | Architectural Record | May
62M | STIRworld | Apr
62M | Contemporist | Mar
62M | Architect | Mar
Boom Town | CBC | Mar
Boom Town | Bentway | Mar
Windter Socks | CBC | Febr
Boom Town | Daily Hive, Urbanized | Jan
Boom Town | Urban Toronto | Jan
Boom Town | BUILDING | Jan
Boom Town | Daily Commercial News | Jan
Boom Town | BlogTO | Jan
Boom Town | Canadian Architect | Jan
2021
62M | Winnipeg Free Press | Dec
Boom Town | Construction Canada | Nov
ReTree Winnipeg | La Liberté | Sept
17th Avenue Clinic | AZURE | Jul
Johanna Hurme | Madame Architect | Jul
62M | Divisare | Jul
Parkade of the Future | The Globe and Mail | Jul
17th Avenue Clinic | Architectural Record | Jul
62M | Avontuura | May
62M | Globe and Mail | Apr
62M | Arquine | Apr
17th Avenue Clinic | The Globe & Mail | Apr
62M | Wallpaper* | Feb
2020
90 Alexander | Canadian Architect | Dec
James Ave Pumping Station | Construct Connect | Nov
Pandemic Pulse | Canadian Architect | Nov
Parkade of the Future | Calgary Sun | Aug
Parkade of the Future | CMLC | Summer
Parkade of the Future | LiveWire Calgary | Jul
5468796 | Nimble Urbanism | Azure | Jul
5468796 | 360 Degree City Podcast | May
5468796 | Canadian Architect | DOMUS | Mar
5468796 | DOMUS Guide 2020 | top 50 firms | Mar
Welcome Place | Architectural Digest | Jan
IW09 | Calgary Herald | Jan
Johanna Hurme | Daily Commercial News | Jan
2019
62M | AZURE | 10 Projects that Defined a Decade | Dec
RNDSQR Block | IW09 | Canadian Architect | Dec
The Forks Sauna, Changeroom | WFP | Nov
LIFE MUDA Awards | Journal of Commerce | Nov
CY33 | The Globe and Mail | Nov
LIFE MUDA Awards | City of Calgary | Oct
Bloc_10 | Canadian Modern Architecture, 1967 to the present | Oct
90 Alexander | WFP | Oct
Ken Borton | Young Architect Award | Canadian Architect | Oct
CY33 | Salt Wire | September
Innovative Solutions for Creating Sustainable Cities | Cambridge Scholars | Sept
Parallelogram House | Dwell | Jul
CY33 | Beta Canada | Jul
Pumphouse | WAF Finalists | Jul
Railside at The Forks | Canadian Architect | July
62m | Azure Magazine Awards | Jun
Ken Borton | Young Architect Award | Canadian Architect | Jun
Ken Borton | Young Architect Award | WFP | Jun
Pumphouse | Skyrise Cities | May
Pumphouse | WFP | Apr
Parkade of the Future | Parker Magazine | Apr
Warehouse 1885 | WFP | Apr
Parkade of the Future | Architectural Record | Mar
Pumphouse | Journal of Commerce | Mar
CY33 | Calgary Herald | Jan
Parkade of the Future | The Globe and Mail | Jan
62M | AZURE | Jan/Feb
2018
5468796 | Modern in Denver | Dec
5468796 | CHIC by le germaine | Fall/Winter
62M | Azure | Top 10 Canadian Architecture 2018 | Dec
James Ave Pumping Station | Canadian Architect | Dec
Parkade of the Future | The Globe and Mail | Nov
CY33 | The Calgary Herald | November
62M + 5468796 | Canadian Architect | Nov
CY33 | The Globe and Mail | Oct
Top Firm Listing | Archdaily World’s Best Architects | Oct
One Bucket at a Time | Vectorworks 2018-19 Feature | Oct
5468796 in Venice | Canadian Architect | Sept
Bloc_10 | Housing as Intervention: Architecture towards Social Equity | Architectural Design, Wiley | Aug
Parallelogram House | UM Today | Jul
Parallelogram House | Avontuura | Jul
Housing NWA Design Competition | UofA | May
Parallelogram House | ArchDaily | May
Parallelogram House | Archello | May
Housing NWA Design Competition | Archinect | May
Housing NWA Design Competition | Canadian Architect | May
Housing NWA Design Competition | University of Arkansas Fay Jones School of Design | May
Parallelogram House | WFP | May
Parallelogram House | Glocal | May
Parallelogram House | Dezeen | May
Parallelogram House | Canadian Architect | May
Parallelogram House | The Globe & Mail | May
Parallelogram House | RAIC | May
Parkade of the Future | WFP | Mar
Multi-Family Housing in Calgary | The Globe & Mail | Feb
One Bucket at a Time $10K Donation Campaign | CBC News | Feb
62M | WFP | Jan
One Bucket at a Time | gooood Hong Kong | Jan
One Bucket at a Time | Divisare | Jan
2017
One Bucket at a Time | Interior Design | BoY Awards | Dec
Parallelogram House | ARQA
Guertin Cottage | The Globe & Mail | Nov
Parallelogram House | Dwell Online | Nov/Dec
Parallelogram House | Dwell | Nov/Dec
One Bucket at a Time | Design Curial | Oct
One Bucket at a Time | ArchDaily | Sept
One Bucket at a Time | Inhabitat | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Estilo Propio | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | DesignBoom | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Azure | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Contemporist | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Architect | Aug
Parallelogram House | Architectural Review | Jul
5468796 | Azure | Jun
One Bucket at a Time | Interior Design | June
One Bucket at a Time | Specifier | May
Crossroads Garden Shed | AMC France | May
Parallelogram House | Canadian Architect | Apr
One Bucket at a Time | Arquine | Mar
One Bucket at a Time | Archdaily | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Architectural Review | Mar
5468796 | Dezeen | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Architectural Review | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Canadian Architect | Feb
Tapped/Untapped | Canadian Architect | Jan
Crossroads Garden Shed | Architect Magazine | Jan
OMS Stage + Table for 1200 | Happening 2 | FRAME | Jan
One Bucket at a Time | Interior Design | BoY Awards | Dec
Parallelogram House | ARQA
Guertin Cottage | The Globe & Mail | Nov
Parallelogram House | Dwell Online | Nov/Dec
Parallelogram House | Dwell | Nov/Dec
One Bucket at a Time | Design Curial | Oct
One Bucket at a Time | ArchDaily | Sept
One Bucket at a Time | Inhabitat | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Estilo Propio | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | DesignBoom | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Azure | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Contemporist | Aug
One Bucket at a Time | Architect | Aug
Parallelogram House | Architectural Review | Jul
5468796 | Azure | Jun
One Bucket at a Time | Interior Design | June
One Bucket at a Time | Specifier | May
Crossroads Garden Shed | AMC France | May
Parallelogram House | Canadian Architect | Apr
One Bucket at a Time | Arquine | Mar
One Bucket at a Time | Archdaily | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Architectural Review | Mar
5468796 | Dezeen | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Architectural Review | Mar
Johanna Hurme | Canadian Architect | Feb
Tapped/Untapped | Canadian Architect | Jan
Crossroads Garden Shed | Architect Magazine | Jan
OMS Stage + Table for 1200 | Happening 2 | FRAME | Jan
2016
Brewery at The Forks | Canadian Architect | Dec
OZ Condominiums | Canadian Architect | Mar
5468796 | SPACE Magazine | Jan
5468796 | Globe & Mail | Jan
2015
5468796 | Globe & Mail | Dec
OZ Condominiums | Architectural Record | Oct
youCUBE | Yapi | Sept
Maples Chiropractic | Canadian Interiors | May
youCUBE | ID+C | April
548 Stradbrook | The Plan | Mar
Tree House | Globe & Mail | Feb
2014
Arthur Residence | Canadian Architect | Dec
5468796 | Azure Magazine | Dec
5468796 | Mark Magazine | Oct
OMS Stage | Monocle Magazine | Sept
Migrating Landscapes | Braun | Exhibition Design | Jul
OMS Stage | Yapi Magazine | Jul
OMS Stage | Lightecture Magazine | Jul
Centre Village | Braun | Courtyard Architecture | Jul
OMS Stage | Architect Magazine | Jun
5468796 | Globe & Mail | Jun
OMS Stage | Canadian Architect | May
OMS Stage | Architecture and Culture | April
5468796 | Maclean’s | Mar
5468796 | Globe & Mail | Mar
Bloc_10 | The Architecture of Engagement | Mar
OMS Stage | Materials for Design 2 | Jan
2013
The Avenue on Portage | Architectural Record, Editors’ Picks
Bloc_10 | Arketipo – Housing | Sept
Centre Village | C3 No. 348 – Dwelling Shift | Oct
Bond Tower | Architecture & Culture | Sep
62M | Architecture & Culture | Jul
The Avenue on Portage | Arquine | Summer
5468796 | *Wallpaper Architects Directory | Jun
5468796 | enRoute | Jun
The Avenue on Portage | Canadian Architect | Jun
Manitoba Start | Canadian Interiors | Jun
5468796 | Canadian Architect | May
62M | Globe & Mail | Apr
Centre Village | Hinge Vol. 210 | Mar
The Avenue on Portage | Architectural Record | Feb
2012
Bloc_10 | Architectural Review | Dec
Manitoba Start | Interior Design | Nov
Migrating Landscapes | Canadian Architect | Nov
5468796 | AZURE | Oct
Migrating Landscapes | Maclean’s | Oct
5468976 | Globe & Mail |Oct
Bloc_10 | treehugger | Sep
Migrating Landscapes | SPACE Magazine | Sept
Migrating Landscapes | Archdaily | Aug
Bloc_10 | Globe & Mail | Jun
OMS Stage | The Sky’s the Limit | Gestalten | Jun
OMS Stage | Audi Canada Magazine | Jan
Holy Names House of Peace | 2010-2011 Wood Design Awards
Webster Cottage | 2010-2011 Wood Design Awards
Bloc_10 | Arquine | Mar
Bond Tower | Arquine | Mar
5468796 | The Architect’s Newspaper | Feb
Bond Tower | Architect Magazine | Jan
5468796 | The Atlantic Cities | Jan
Over the years, we have come to see that the architect’s role requires a more holistic view of practice, and design advocacy is part of this ongoing pursuit. 5468796 has grown into a platform for engagement through practice, exhibitions, events and activism, and disseminating knowledge through symposia, teaching and publications.
The firm is committed to promoting design culture and related initiatives within our communities, supporting organizations that help advance awareness and appreciation of good design and its impacts on the public.
We’re always looking for more ways to get involved, and welcome opportunities that inspire colleagues and decision-makers to re-establish a strong design culture in our city and beyond. Please send all lecture, sponsorship, donation and other engagement inquiries to info @ 5468796.ca.
Advocacy Projects
2024 | Waste Lands
2021 | Cool Gardens
2021 | Windsock for Warming Huts
2021 | Sunspot v2.0 for Warming Huts
2020 | Cool Gardens
2019 | Walk Winnipeg
2018 | Bijou pop-up box
2018 | Design Quarter Winnipeg (ongoing)
2017 | Food for Thought | Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce
2017 | One Bucket at a Time Winnipeg
2017 | One Bucket at a Time Mexico City
2015 | Chair Your Idea
2014 | Table for 1200
2014 | Table for Twelve
2009 | Square Meal
Authored Publications
5468796 Architecture, platform.MIDDLE: Architecture for Housing the 99%. Mexico City: Arquine, 2023.
Colin Neufeld, “Experiments in Living Together”, Future Urban Habitation: Transdisciplinary Perspectives, Conceptions, and Designs. Edited by Oliver Heckmann. Wiley-Blackwell, 2022. p. 301-333.
Johanna Hurme and Shannon Wiebe, “Business Case for Compact Cities”, Innovative Solutions for Creating Sustainable Cities. Edited by Sylvie Albert. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019. p. 290-312.
5468796 Architecture, “Add via Edit: A Decade in Housing by 5468796 Architecture.” Canadian Architect, December 4, 2018. https://www.canadianarchitect.com/add-via-edit-a-decade-of-housing/
Lectures and Events
2024
Waste Lands (Winnipeg Design Fest & Nuit Blanche)| Pumphouse | Sept 28
platform.MIDDLE | Canadian Centre for Architecture | Montreal | May 30
platform.MIDDLE | RAIC Conference | Vancouver | May 17
platform.MIDDLE | with MA+HG and Trevor Boddy | Inform Interiors | Vancouver | May 14
platform.MIDDLE | Cal Poly San Luis Obispo | May 10
Housing for the 99% | dTalks workshop | Feb 29
platform.MIDDLE | University of Arkansas | Feb 26
UofC SAPL Somerville Visiting Lectureship | Feb 12-16
platform.MIDDLE | IIT College of Architecture | Feb 7
Housing Manuals | A2G | Winnipeg | Feb 5 – Mar 11
platform.MIDDLE | University of Manitoba | Feb 6
2023
Book Launch (Winnipeg) | platform.MIDDLE | Dec 14
World Architecture Festival Main Stage | platform.MIDDLE | with Trevor Boddy | Singapore | Nov 29
Mextropoli | platform.MIDDLE | Sept 22-25
NORR ed | platform.MIDDLE | Sept 19
StorefrontMB | Values for a Livable City: Priorities | Sept 14
IBA’27 Festival | Exhibit | Parkade of the Future | Stuttgart | Jun 23 – Jul 23
CDm2 Lightworks | FOCUS ON / Architecture | Apr 20
2022
Metropolitan University of Toronto | Arch Science Lecture Series | Nov 10
in situ studio, Raleigh, NC | real matter | Jul 27
Chicago Architecture Center | Vincent Scully Lecture Series | Jul 30
Cornell AAP | Johanna Hurme: Practice Ecosystem | Apr 27
Storefront MB | Frontlines | Apr 25
Atmosphere14 | + HOUSING: Living Together Again | Mar 11
Architects, not Architecture | Canadian Edition | Mar 9
Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design | Exploring Design Practices | Feb 9
Forks River Trail WINDSOCKS 2022 | Jan/Feb
2021
OAA | Thinking Big, Building Small: A Toolkit for Developers & Community Members | Nov 17
Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design | Professional Practice | Apr 8
U of Manitoba | Virtual Learning for Life | 5468796 | Mar 31
Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design | Professional Practice | Mar 3
University of Lincoln School of Architecture and the Built Environment | Current Work | Feb 5
Architectural League NY | First Friday Distance Edition No. 01 | Feb 4
Forks River Trail WINDSOCKS 2021 | Jan/Feb
Forks River Trail Warming Hut SUNSPOT | Jan/Feb
2020
Alberta Woodworks WoodSolutions Conference | Nov 16-20
Café Prairie Forum | Architecture Policy for Canada | Feb 28
2019
PROTO- #POCKET | WPG Design Festival | HBC | Sep 26-29
PROTO- #HOUSES | WPG Design Festival | MAKE | Sep/Dec
PROTO- #MODEL | WPG Design Festival | A2G | Sep 26-29
PROTO- #CAST | WPG Design Festival | online interview
Fort Rouge East Fort Garry Community Town Hall | Nov 9
BUILDEX Calgary Keynote | Nov. 7
Edmonton Urban Design Awards | Jury Presentations + Panel | Oct 4
University of South Florida Spring Lecture Series | Tampa FL | May 3
platform.MIDDLE Housing Symposium | Chicago | Apr 12-13
University of Utah Lecture Series | Move Beyond | Apr 8
NC State Spring Lecture Series | with Melvin Kleinsasser | Mar 18
AIA Minnesota | Lake Superior | Mar 1-2
Future Urban Habitation Symposium | Singapore | Jan 29
Morgenstern Chair Lecture | IIT Chicago | Jan. 28
2018
Housing NWA Competition Exhibition | Fayetteville | May 10
Culture of 5: A Gaze Behind the Practice| A2G | Jan/Feb
BUILDEX Calgary | Calgary AB | Nov. 8
Academy of Art, School of Architecture | San Francisco | Nov 7
McEwen School of Architecture | Laurentian University | Oct 18
UBC SALA | Vancouver BC | Oct 15
The Architecture + Design Network | Little Rock AR | Oct 9
Fay Jones School of Architecture | Fayetteville AR | Oct 8
Azure Talks, Interior Design Show | Vancouver BC| Sep 21
Celebrate Architecture | AIA Lecture Series | Baton Rouge | Apr 20
Instantanés d’architectures | Université Laval | Apr 5
Professional Practice Week | Dalhousie SoA | Jan 18
2017
One Bucket at a Time | WPG Design Festival | Sep 13-30
One Bucket at a Time | Mextropoli | Mar 11-14
Tapped/Untapped | Toronto Design Offsite Festival | Jan 17-22
Crossing Boundaries | ACSA Conference | Albuquerque | Nov 4
POP // CAN // CRIT | Toronto | Oct 27
World Design Summit | Montréal | Oct 17
CANU9 | Canadian Urbanism Conference | Sep 14
TEDxWinnipeg | Winnipeg | Jun 6
Low Carbon Symposium | UK-China CCUS Centre | China | Apr 6
FRONTlines | StorefrontMB Discussion Series | Winnipeg | Mar 29
AIA Omaha Lecture Series | Feb 16
Iowa State University College of Design | Feb 15
University of Manitoba | ED50 Lecture Series | Feb 9
2016
University of North Carolina at Charlotte | Sep 28
dTalks | Calgary | Sep. 26
Trends Conference | WPG Chamber of Commerce | Sep 13
Nordic Pavilion | Venice Biennale in Architecture | Jun 27
Mies Crown Hall of the Americas Prize | Finalists Presentation | Apr 1
Mextropoli 2016 | Van Alen Institute | Mexico City | Mar 7
2015
BUILD | A2G | Winnipeg | Nov 24
University of Manitoba Faculty of Architecture Lecture Series | Nov 24
Alaska Design Forum | Oct 5-7
Lulu Series: Art in the City | May 14
Women in Architecture Vancouver Lecture | Mar 4
Centerbrook Architects Lecture Series | Feb 6
Clemson University School of Architecture | Jan 14
2014
T412 | University of Toronto, ON | Mar 03 – Apr 04
STRAND On Architecture : Facing the Future | Dec 1-15
McGill School of Architecture Lecture Series | Nov 20
TEDxUManitoba | Nov 3-4
University of Montreal Lecture Series | Oct 28
AIA State Conference | Phoenix, AZ | Oct 23
NCC Urbanism Lab Event : Design Excellence | Oct 3
Woodbury University Lecture Series | Sep 26
Rice University | Spotlight: The RDA Prize Lecture | Sep 9
RAIC Festival | May 28-31
IIT MCHAP.emerge Symposium | May 20
Governor General’s Medals Lecture | Ottawa, ON | May 12
Banff Sessions | May 2 – 3
BONDMULTI 2014 | Apr 24 – 27
NZIA Speaker Series | Mar 26 – 28
PrefabNZ 2014 Conference | Auckland, NZ | Mar 26 – 28
2013
ML Unpacked | Cambridge Galleries, ON | Jul 5-Sep 8
Migrating Landscapes | Pier 21, Halifax | May 30-Oct 27
Bond Tower | Atlas of the Unbuilt World | British Council | Jun 7-27
Table for Twelve | University of Illinois | Feb 18-Mar 15
AIA Women’s Leadership Summit | Phoenix, AZ | Oct 24-26
Designing Downtown Pecha Kucha 17 | Edmonton | Oct 5
London Architecture Series | Museum London, ON | Sep 26
Winnipeg Design Festival 10x20x20 | Winnipeg, MB | Sep 20
AR+D Emerging Architecture Lecture Series | RIBA | Feb 12
Brown Bag Lunch Series | The Hub, Ottawa, ON | Jan 30
2012
Bloc_10 | AR+D Emerging Architecture Exhibition | RIBA | Nov 29
Bloc_10 | Bargained Building | ARCH2 | Sep 20
Bond Tower | Bargained Building | ARCH2 | Sep 20
Migrating Landscapes | Venice Biennale | Aug – Nov
Migrating Landscapes | Winnipeg Art Gallery | Mar.15
Migrating Landscapes | Brookfield Place | Toronto | Feb 6
Migrating Landscapes | The Forks | Winnipeg | Feb 2
Migrating Landscapes | Mendel Gallery| Saskatoon| Jan 19
Migrating Landscapes | Parisian Laundry | Montreal | Jan 18
Migrating Landscapes | Dalhousie University | Jan 9
In Progress | Ryerson | Toronto | Oct 4
Tecnologico De Monterrey | Guadalajara, MX | Mar 27
Arquine Congress 13 | Mexico City, MX | Mar 13
Architecture League | Emerging Voices | New York | Mar 2
Carleton University | Forum Lecture Series | Jan 23
Dalhousie School of Architecture | Halifax, NS | Jan 16
2011
Migrating Landscapes | ACAD, Calgary, AB | Dec 07
Migrating Landscapes | MOV, Vancouver, BC | Nov 03
OMS Stage | RAIC Festival, Vancouver, BC
OMS Stage | Twenty + Change 03, Traveling Exhibit
OMS Stage | Emerging Architecture Exhibit RIBA | London
In Progress | University of Waterloo | Waterloo, ON | Mar 17
Architecture & Design Now | University of Lethbridge | Oct 24
Winnipeg Free Press Cafe / Chamber of Commerce | Dec 21
2010
Bohemier Residence | Prairie Design Awards, Exhibit
Bridal Path | Redux Park, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto, ON
YouCube | Sounds Like 1974 Exhibit, University of Manitoba
BGBX | Architect Magazine | January
BGBX & YouCube | Twenty + Change 02, Traveling Exhibition
Big Brother / Little Sister | Prairie Design Awards, Exhibit
In Progress | University of Manitoba | Sept 30, 2010
Sponsorship
1JustCity
Art City
Artspace
Assiniboine Conservatory
BEA Prairies
Canada Helps Accountable Development Works | architecture student scholarship
Canadian Architecture Student Association
Canadian Centre for Architecture
CCSAM, Get Off Your Butt + Ski Challenge | corporate challenge
Children’s Heritage Fund
Environmental Design Program, Faculty of Architecture, UofM
Hey Neighbour, Victoria
IDE International Development Enterprises Association
Inner City Youth Alive
Jarvis Ave Artist Relief
Ma Mawi Wi Chi Itata Center
Made with Love, Winnipeg
Main Street Project
Manitoba Harvest
Martha Street Studio | DQW membership
MEMETIC Festival
MS Bike | corporate challenge
Plug In Gallery | DQW membership
RAIC Conference on Architecture | Student sponsorship
StorefrontMB
Student Architectural Society, University of Manitoba
Table for 1200
United Way
Upside Down Tree
Warehouse Journal, Faculty of Architecture, UofM
Westminster Housing Society Inc.
Winnipeg Architecture Foundation
Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce
Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers
Winnipeg Design Festival
Our ‘recycling bin’ consists of lost competitions, iterative renders, paused projects, models collecting dust, hundreds of RFP diagrams, presentations come and gone, team events and activities… making up as much of who we are as the published work, and revealing the range of thought processes and pursuits behind the practice.
23.12.22 WINNING gingerbread house at the annual 5468796 Christmas Extravaganza based on the idea of an affordable multi-family housing project featuring the Grinch’s penthouse
23.11.29 The very first 546 website… end of an era!
23.11.04 546 heads to Chile and visits Open City, Echeverria vineyard, a few Aravena projects, and enjoys many many delicious meals
22.10.17 The WC [winter conservatory] aerial view – RFP proposal for the East Village Public Washrooms Project
22.10.17 The WC [winter conservatory] – RFP proposal for the East Village Public Washrooms Project
16.03.30 Models of multi-family housing projects
No.
Title
Location
Type
Size
Status
Budget
Partners
Client
0492
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential, commercial, adaptive re-use
119,000 sqft
complete 2024
$22M
Alston Properties
Built in 1906, Winnipeg’s historic James Avenue Pumping Station was slated for demolition after 14 failed attempts to revive it. Taking on a role outside of the usual scope of architects, 5468796 Architecture developed an unsolicited conceptual design paired with a financial pro-forma, and presented the business case to an existing client. This combination eventually led to the building’s successful preservation — and new life.
Two specific interventions made the project viable: in the first phase, the capacity of the original gantry crane was leveraged to suspend a ‘floating floor’ above the pump hall machinery. Second, a zoning amendment was obtained to build a five-storey residential building on a 13-metre-deep sliver of land between the heritage building and the street, arguing for a reinstatement of the original industrial streetscape that abutted the former railway line. Along with a second, wider apartment building on the opposite end, the residential developments made the project financially feasible while also expressing a distinct historical narrative within an area under transformation.
Elevated on columns that extend the grid of the gantry crane structure, the two self-standing, mid-rise residential buildings are offset from the existing building, creating new pedestrian lanes that respect the original pumping station envelope, reference the human scale, and expand the ground floor commercial frontages.
Rethinking the norms of multi-family housing efficiency targets, the design employs open-air egress and a skip-stop configuration. Typical nondescript interior corridors are turned into vibrant exterior passageways for neighbourly interaction, becoming an extension of the suites and creating a sense of shared ownership over communal space. Open-air stairwells provide unobstructed vistas to the city, adjacent river and park.
This multi-faceted, mixed-use development is the first proposal on the site that has gained the support of heritage advocates, municipal stakeholders and the community at large.
Photography: James Brittain unless otherwise indicated
Awards: 2024 Governor General’s Medal in Architecture; 2024 AZ Awards Urban Built Development Winner; 2024 AZ Awards Adaptive Re-Use Award of Merit; 2020 ArchMarathon Finalist| Refurbishment; 2019 World Architecture Festival| Future Project, Residential | Finalist; 2018 Canadian Architect | Award of Merit
Selected press: Architectural Record, Canadian Architect
0585
publication
published 2023
Housing affordability in North America has reached a crisis point. Against the backdrop of rapid urbanization and an accelerating environmental emergency, we need solutions for city building that are more socially and economically sustainable, as well as multi-family housing that is more equitable and livable.
“platform.MIDDLE” was originally a symposium that took place at IIT’s College of Architecture on April 12 and 13, 2019, exploring the current state of multi-family housing in North America and the architect’s role in shaping its future, including inputs from design practices and development companies John Ronan Architects, KANVA, LBBA Architects, MA+HG Architects, Rafael Longoria, Brinshore Development LLC, RNDSQR, Shift Development, and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. The symposium offered a platform for engagement and a call to action, motivating the production of three more volumes that expand on practical research working with challenging economic and environmental circumstances, using 546’s built works, urban designs and community projects as the foundations to assemble a ‘toolkit’ of strategies for high-quality attainable, accessible and affordable multi-family housing. The full publication, platform.MIDDLE: Architecture for Housing the 99%, was published with Arquine and released in September 2023.
With this project, we hope to inspire real change in policy and design aimed at creating a more inclusive, environmentally responsible and economically viable housing landscape.
Read the review in Canadian Architect here.
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0310
Regina, SK
single-family residence
4,600 sqft
complete 2023
$1M
Arthur family
The Arthur Residence is a two storey home for a finish carpenter and an emergency room doctor situated in the Cathedral neighbourhood of Regina. Originally from South Africa, the owners longed for a private sanctuary that would provide ample space for gardening and infuse inspiring views into a modest forty foot infill site. Where required side yard setbacks typically result in unconsidered or left over space, the residence is designed to encompass the entire width of the lot. Conceived as a secret garden, the ground floor is surrounded by a concrete fence at the property edge. Beyond the wall, four courtyards – an entry court, a sunken patio, a main garden and a carport – define three interior spaces: the foyer, the combined living and dining room, and the linear kitchen / utility wing. The house is then divided vertically into living and sleeping quarters.
While the main floor is a protective shell punctured by internal garden views, the second floor is an airy refuge providing secretive, more discrete lookouts over the neighbourhood and existing tree canopy. White plaster walls curve inward like curtains drawn in by the breeze, resulting in triangular voids that allow daylight to softly wash the interior. These two distinct territories – of solidity and lightness, of activity and repose – intersect in the double-height living and dining room. Smooth, contoured plaster rests on raw, cast-in-place concrete, reinforcing the tactile and sensory qualities of material, space and light that form the essence of the house, one which is simple but not strictly minimal.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2016 World Architecture Festival | Future Projects, House Category Winner; 2014 Canadian Architect Award of Excellence
0564
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential, commercial, adaptive re-use
165,500 sqft
in construction
$38M
RNDSQR
90/100 Alexander is positioned between a recent condominium development to the south and the historically protected Eaton’s Warehouse building to the north.
Located within the borders of the parcel, the W.J. Guest Fish Company Warehouse — a four storey brick and stone heritage warehouse built between 1905 and 1910 — defines the approach to the project. Due to the site’s depth, there is an opportunity to provide the heritage building with considerable breathing room, allowing it to stand alone, exposing all four sides to operate as a 360 degree building.
A new 7-storey building winds around the existing brick structure, exposing all sides of the original building as an homage to its original free-standing form [uniquely, the entire building was constructed using face brick and remains in excellent repair after 115 years]. The building’s geometry maximizes the site density while creating a series of high quality public spaces.
The entry level of the site is designed with a porous ground floor, offering views through to the heritage building from Waterfront and Pacific, to the Red River from within the structure, and via paths into two intertwined plaza spaces from all directions.
A true mixed-use development, commercial units are offered at grade along Waterfront and Pacific with approximately 160 residential units above. In service to the neighbourhood and to offer an optimal mix of uses, the entire heritage building will hold commercial and office occupancies as well as tenant amenities including a rooftop patio.
Defined through interplay of old and new these spaces vary in scale, light conditions, and compressed or expansive nature, offering opportunities for commerce and city-building at different scales.
Awards: 2021 World Architecture Festival | Future Project | Finalist; 2020 Canadian Architect | Award of Merit
0493
Calgary, AB
parkade, commercial
350,000 sqft
complete 2021
$56M
Kasian
CMLC + CPA
Great public infrastructural projects provide fundamental services for cities that increase the quality of life for their users. As means of transportation evolve, how can these projects remain essential over time? Parkade of the Future approaches this issue by designing multiple futures for a singular purpose building. CMLC (Calgary Municipal Land Corporation) and the Calgary Parking Authority (CPA) commissioned 5468796 Architecture as Design Architects to design a ‘parkade of the future’ for a 2.25 acre site on 9th Avenue in Calgary’s East Village. The project consists of a 510 stall garage that anticipates converting into office, light industrial or residential typologies based on future needs.
To transform both the vehicular parking circuit and the user experience from one of conventional, utilitarian function to one with rich, unexpected qualities, key typology-questioning approaches are pursued. High floor-to-floor height, 40 foot shallow floor plates, light-washed pedestrian-forward routes, elevated views in all directions, clear and simple wayfinding and straightforward, single-direction circulation come together to create a delightful destination within a parking-heavy programme. Vehicular access, centred on the property and aligned with 3rd Street SE, is flanked by pedestrian entrances and activities, which animate the frontage along 9th Avenue SE and frame the southern edge of the developing East Village.
Photography: James Brittain unless otherwise indicated
Awards: 2023 Fast Company Spaces and Places [Finalist], Circular Design [Honourable Mention]; 2023 AZ Award of Merit, Urban Design Infrastructure; 2022 Architecture Masterprize; 2022 WAN Awards, Transportation, Gold; 2022 The Plan Awards, Transport; 2022 World Architecture Festival | Completed Project | Finalist; 2022 Consulting Engineers of Alberta | Commercial Building Engineering | Award of Merit; 2022 Prairie Design Award of Merit
Selected press: Macleans, AZURE, CBC, The Plan, Canadian Architect
0429
Winnipeg, MB
single-family residence
5,735 sqft
complete 2022
In a prairie-value, conservative-minded early 20th century Winnipeg suburb composed primarily of large-scale, traditional-style dwellings, our clients sought a home in which to age in place and to enjoy a high degree of both airiness and privacy.
Veil House is arranged on a loose nine-square grid organized around a central courtyard. The residence is configured as a series of free-flowing open living spaces, (living, family, dining, kitchen, circulation) framed by solid utility blocks, (washroom, laundry, fireplace, storage, appliances). This interplay eliminates the need for walls and doors.
The house is situated at grade — rare for a city that receives large amounts of snowfall — with an interior ramp that enables universal access across two floors. This floating feature ascends from the main level, allowing natural light into the basement while providing emergency egress. Firmly planting the main floor at grade results in a seamless extension of the interior spaces to the courtyard and surrounding yard.
The blocks and ramp are blanketed by a weathered steel veil. ‘Propped’ up by the utility blocks, the veil follows the ramp, starting at ground level spiralling up and peeling off the wall to enclose the private patio on top of the garage. Strategically perforated over windows and balconies, the veil creates a sense of wonder and curiosity from the street, while elegantly filtering daylight into the interiors and allowing those inside to view the outside world without being seen.
Veil House functions as both architecture and sculpture, drawing connections between architecture and industry, structure and decoration, retreat, and expression.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2023 World Architecture Festival Winner, Completed Buildings Villa; The Plan Award 2023, Villa / Completed Winner; A+ Awards Architecture +Metal Finalist 2024
Selected press: Architectural Record, Financial Times, The Globe and Mail, AZURE, Wallpaper*, ADPro
0707
Toronto, ON
urban installation
complete 2023
Office In Search Of
The Bentway, Waterfront BIA, Toronto Downtown West BIA and City of Toronto
Boom Town at the Bentway welcomes people of Toronto’s Lake Shore Boulevard and York Street intersection to the waterfront with a cast of characters that animate the site with personality and delight. A blue “stage” and a trio of “Bent Buddies” bring life to the gateway underneath the Gardiner Expressway, transforming the passage from an aging infrastructural giant into a playful experience for commuters and visitors.
The design responded to a call for temporary urban installations that would elevate the thoroughfare experience for both improved safety and enjoyment. Boom Town re-imagines the use of boom lifts and highway supports known as ‘bents’ characteristic of this often residual urban space.
The project is a winning competition proposal by 5468796 Architecture and Office in Search Of (OISO) for Waterfront ReConnect, a collaboration between the Bentway, the City of Toronto, the Waterfront Business Improvement Area, and the Toronto Downtown West Business Improvement Area (BIA). Boom Town will remain in place until 2025, when the section of the Gardiner Expressway overhead undergoes repairs.
Photography: Office In Search Of, Remi Carreiro, and Samuel Engelking © The Bentway.
0560
Calgary, AB
mixed-use, adaptive re-use
172,500 sqft
design development
RNDSQR
IW09, also known as RNDSQR Block, is an iconic mixed use project, woven carefully into the existing neighbourhood of Inglewood, Calgary. Prominently placed, it enhances urban life through a series of new exterior amenities while achieving density of use through 24/7/365 commercial, office, and residential programs. The existing 2-3 storey street fabric is being replaced by mid-rise structures. In correspondence, three floors of commercial retail build up from the sidewalk, referencing the scale and height of the Historic Building. Residential floors are stepped up and back from street level, achieved by twisting the entire form away from the Historic Building on the site’s Southwest corner, and the Lawn Bowling court to the Northeast. This cuts away overall mass, creates visual relief, and effectively ’thins’ out the tall portion of the building for residential use. The building form is shaped by site responses and to reduce its impact on adjacent properties. Maintained as a point of interest along the sidewalk, the renovated Heritage Building injects new life through universal access, roof activation, and via a new forecourt at its side. The remaining spaces extend public sidewalks through a diagrid arcade, with select elements removed to reveal building entrances on both streets, every corner, and the Public Lane. The 360 degree building design makes this possible by eliminating facade hierarchy and responding to each corner and public throughway.
Awards: 2020 AR Future Project Award | Highly Commended, Commercial Mixed Use; 2019 Canadian Architect Award of Merit
0527
Calgary, AB
health, commercial
57,300 sqft
complete 2020
$12M
RNDSQR
17th Avenue Clinic is a health-oriented commercial building that centres around a purpose-designed skin clinic. The building features three clinics [medical dermatology, aesthetic, and rheumatology] at the second storey level, retail units at grade, on top of underground parking.
Light modulation is important for procedures in the clinic. The design evolves around different ways of bringing natural light into the spaces while reducing direct exposure to sun and glare: a tall clerestory perimeter that washes light against the roof’s light wooden undercroft; cut-away balconies at corners that softly light corridor spaces; strategically placed skylights; and a central lightwell that extends down through the two upper floors and pierces the parkade with light.
The lightwell, enhanced with boreal landscape features, radiates into adjacent spaces and embodies the natural and healthy ethos that the centre represents. Open to the sky, tall vegetation is envisioned to liven the interior life of the building.
On the top floor, a sequence of light-filled spaces is defined by a wood beam system, creating ceiling coffers and providing sound separation between rooms. Hundreds of micro-layers of laminated wood are stacked to form the monumental beams that reach down from the ceiling and form a datum grid. This grid supports the convex arc of the roof undercroft, which bows upward to meet the roofline at its perimeter and draws in a wash of natural light.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2022 World Architecture Festival | Completed Project, Health | Winner; 2021 Prairie Wood Design Awards | Commercial
0506
Calgary, AB
multi-family residential, commercial
104,500 sqft
complete 2021
$15.5M
RNDSQR
Courtyard 33, also known as CY33, is a six storey mixed-use building located at the corner of a gateway intersection to the emerging Marda Loop area of Calgary. The proposed development consists of ground floor commercial space with five levels of multi-family housing above, served by two levels of underground parking.
The building design carves into the large mass afforded by the 150 foot x 120 foot lot to introduce an elevated courtyard on the second floor where residents can connect and neighbourhood life can thrive. The public courtyard is accessed via two staircases, one from the main thoroughfare and one from the backlane. The primary staircase is treated as a grand entrance with a mix of landscaping and bleacher-style seating. Two additional commercial spaces open onto the courtyard, and spatial programming is flexible to encourage use by community members.
Residential units vary from one-bedroom suites to two-bedroom homes, providing attainable housing options for both individuals and families. Innovation and efficiency come through the implementation of a skip-stop corridor design. While multi-family buildings are typically designed as double-loaded corridors, the skip-stop strategy incorporates two-storey, through-units accessed via a private staircase. This arrangement serves to eliminate corridors on alternating floors and increases saleable area, while also improving cross-ventilation and access to daylight in many of the suites. A variety of conditions are necessary to meet setback requirements on each facade. The checkered [cellular] approach achieved through alternating composition of balconies and solid walls on all facades permits inflections at each cell, allowing the design to meet zoning bylaws while maintaining the uniform nature of the building. Increasing setbacks on upper levels, inset balconies that alternate positions on each floor, and exterior exit stairs also serve to reduce the overall building mass and draw more daylight into the building.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2017 Calgary MUDA Honourable Mention / Theoretical Urban Design Project
0242
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential
29,300 sqft
complete 2017
$4.75M
Green Seed Development Corp. + Ranjjan Developments
62M is a 41-unit residential development located at the edge of downtown Winnipeg and the Red River. Compressed between a freeway and the backs of neighbouring properties, the site was considered undesirable due to restricted views and a lack of street frontage. Lifted up on 35’ high stilts, the project overcomes the limitations of its surroundings with an iconic form and unprecedented sightlines.
The three storey, circular building is both spatially efficient and cost-effective. As a whole, the 360 degree plan provides the widest possible perimeter for glass with the smallest amount of exterior envelope to construct. In addition, all units have identical, pie-shaped layouts that simplify assembly. Each 610 s.f. suite is arranged so that the entry and utility spaces occupy the narrow end, closest to the circulation core. This configuration frees the remaining square footage for a flexible, open living area that culminates in an expansive wall of floor to ceiling glass.
At ground level, a forest of columns fills the site; some of these stilts support the building while others function as light standards to illuminate the parking area. Their thinness becomes a clear counterpoint to the thicker ring of housing, emphasizing the weight and mass of the building floating above.
Photography: James Brittain and James Florio
Awards: Prairie Design Award of Merit 2022, AZ Awards Award of Merit Multi-Family Residential 2019, World Architecture Festival Shortlist 2014
Visit the Penthouse today at padwinnipeg.com.
0199
Winnipeg, MB
health, commercial
2,900 sqft
complete 2013
Dr. Gilbert Miranda
Maples Chiropractic is a busy clinic that recently relocated to an existing one storey strip mall in Winnipeg’s suburban Maples neighbourhood. The design-aware client wanted to refine the aesthetic experience of the clinic so that the space itself reflected the holistic, health-conscious ideology of the practice.
The project’s limited square footage is maximized through the introduction of a central spine rendered in standard dimensional lumber. The ends of the lumber are left exposed to best present the natural beauty of the material. The spine spans the length of the clinic and houses a number of functions, facilitating the sequential circulation of clients as they progress through different stages of treatment, beginning with the entry vestibule and intake area, and concluding with the follow up booking area.
The treatment rooms are organized along one side of the spine, with reception and adjustments along the other. A staff room and utility functions are housed at the back of the space.
Throughout the clinic, a modern material palette creates a simple and soothing effect; the presence of wood lends warmth and comfort, while white walls and glass make the best use of limited incoming daylight.
Awards: 2018 Prairie Wood Design Award
0372
Calgary, AB
pavilion
720 sqft
complete 2016
$100,000
CMLC
The Crossroads Garden Shed demonstrates the value and capacity of architecture to transform communities with even the smallest of briefs. Intended to supply a growing neighbourhood with a simple storage structure for gardening tools and outdoor furniture, the original vision shifted drastically when re-approached as a unique opportunity to enhance the pedestrian realm. This discovery led to a rigorous design process, developing the project into much more than initially imagined, and activating the area for residents and visitors.
Inherently stable and waterproof structures, three 8 foot x 10 foot shipping containers establish the base structure. Selected for their utilitarian nature and in response to the brief and budget, these were placed to create intimate spaces in-between, while the overall structure acts as a threshold between the street, gardens, and play area. One container is a tool shed, the initial programme requirement, while the remaining two provide additional storage and programmable space, critical to evolving the structure into a civic amenity.
The containers are composed of weathering steel, making it a natural choice for the whole structure. Their corrugated geometry is ’multiplied’ and ’stretched’ through layering weathered steel plates and expanded metal mesh, consequently softening the structure’s appearance. An oblong grid of hexagonal weathered steel shapes create a domed surface to gather within; steel honeycombs open skyward in vertical flues and, connected by an overhead trellis, dapple the ground below with light.
The final design is the product of a formulaic analysis which optimizes both budget and design for the largest civic impact possible. The project focus is not only its merits as an object but the ability of the spaces between to foster community. The re-imagined SHED is a civic attraction that lends itself to further programming as the area grows and includes areas for work, shelter and relaxation.
Photography: Images 1 and 11 courtesy of CMLC.
Awards: 2018 Architizer A+ | +Urban Transformation; 2017 Calgary Mayor’s Urban Design Award; 2016 Platinum American Architecture Prize
0510
Mexico City, MX
urban installation
complete 2017
Factor Eficiencia
Mextropoli 2017
In Mexico City’s metropolitan area, with a population of more than 23 million people, 4.5 million daily commuters navigate complex road networks, frequent traffic jams, public protests and parking shortages. The street—the prime public space—is the setting for all such friction. There, “viene viene” —entrepreneurs who function outside of government oversight —bribe the local police, use common painter’s buckets to claim a piece of the street, and charge hopeful drivers looking for a parking spot with an additional fee in exchange for access to their illegal stall.
One Bucket at a Time was inspired by this hijacking of public (parking) space and uses common painter’s buckets as the building blocks for an interactive pavilion. Connecting the buckets via a grid of ropes, the installation is a malleable surface that the public is encouraged to freely explore. The surface can be rolled, pulled together or up to a point or along a line taking on different forms. People can sit, run, play, stand, lounge, and participate in the act of taking over the public realm. In situ for a three day period, the installation will come down gradually, released from the ropes and absorbed by the city. By using buckets —a symbol of holding the public space hostage, we are highlighting and questioning this pervasive condition, and also empowering people of Mexico City to reclaim ownership of their public space, one bucket at a time.
Photography: Jaime Navarro and Mortiz Bernoully Photography
Awards: 2018 ArchDaily Building of the Year nominee; 2017 IDA Design Awards | Arch Pavilions; 2017 Glocal Premio Noldi Schreck finalist; 2017 Interior Design Installation BoY Award
0397
Winnipeg, MB
craft brewery
1,750 sqft
not pursued
The Forks Renewal Corporation
The Brewery at The Forks is part addition, part renovation of a new craft brewery operating out of Winnipeg’s historic Forks Market. Height limitations and load constraints caused the existing market building to be unsuitable for use as a full production brewery. These restrictions created an opportunity to explore a new complimentary form that draws inspiration from the market’s past and the processes occurring inside.
Prescribed by surrounding site constraints, the brewery is compressed on a small footprint which generated the need to vertically stack the key functions of the brewing process, resulting in a design reminiscent of early gravity fed breweries. The process begins on the roof deck, where malted grain is stored in a series of exterior grain bins. From here, it flows to the top floor for crushing, mashing and boiling. The product then travels down to the floor in series of tall fermentation tanks. The brewmasters and public have their first interaction as testing and tasting occur simultaneously.
Drawing on the site’s industrial past, the addition interlocks with the existing building at each level of production, the geometry articulated as a series of cogs in the brewing process. On the exterior, a dual purpose steel skin wraps the structure providing support for the significant lateral loads in addition to framing a series of apertures that provide small glimpses of the process inside. A new entrance folds into the existing market building at the ground floor, revealing an intimate tap room inside the exiting market.
Awards: 2017 ArchMarathon finalist; 2016 Canadian Architect Award of Merit
0439
Storm Bay, ON
cottage
1,960 sqft
complete 2021
On the banks of Lake of the Woods, three black crests quietly emerge from a scattering of birch and spruce. The forms intersect with each other to create the Guertin Cottage, phase two of a three part lake-front property.
At the client’s request, the guest cottage evokes the form of a ’witches hut’ from the tale of “Hansel & Gretel”. Atop a simple raised platform the cottage materializes as a sculptural ’ wooden tent.’ The predominant black roof line contains three high cones with three associated low brims; each component arranged on a checkerboard grid in plan. The resulting shroud meets the ground for privacy in the northwest and is pushed and pulled at the joints and edges of the roof line to allow for light, views, and the expansion of living space to the south facing the lake. The structure co-exists with the forest both in function and aesthetic, exuding a playful character for guests of the family – primarily their children and grand children.
Propped up on a heavy timbre frame, the roof and it’s skeleton forms a clear delineation of materials and structure that maintain the simplicity that is integral to the cottage design. Three low box volumes are positioned between the supports, designed to house utilities and to create rooms. Resting above two of these volumes are a pair of sleeping lofts. The third volume acts as a chimney servicing the interior and exterior of the cottage. These towering volumes act to draw up warm air and provide ample daylighting within the cottage.
0416
Winnipeg, MB
design advocacy
complete 2016
Available to all Winnipeggers, Chair Your Idea is a crowdsourced and crowdfunded open competition that seeks to generate 1000+ urban design ideas and $30,000+ to realize the winning idea.
For a $25 registration fee, participants were asked to submit their creative initiative in 140 characters or less and contribute one white chair for public use to mark their submission. The chairs, with the ideas written on them, were placed in public locations throughout the city and cared for by participating local businesses for the duration of the three week competition period. The accumulating chairs and the creative ideas associated with them allowed Winnipeggers to enjoy newly claimed public spaces, take part in a discussion about urban design, and exchange thoughts on how to make our city even better.
At the end of the competition period, the winning ideas were selected by a high caliber jury and announced at a block party at City Hall, where the chairs were gathered for a final spectacular display of Winnipeg innovation and pride. The winning idea – to hold a contest for kids to design environmentally themed art for city transit buses to encourage youth ridership – was implemented in the spring of 2016. Working together with Art City, an art competition called Imaginary Superbus was held at The Forks on May 14th.
0330
Toronto, ON
multi-family residential
42,600 sqft
not pursued
$4.5M
Symmetry Developments
Tree House is a new low-rise, 39 unit townhome development in Toronto’s emerging Birch Cliff neighbourhood. The project raises the bar for high quality, contemporary architecture in the area by offering well-built, ample-sized and affordably priced homes and authentic community spaces for first time homebuyers, particularly families. Instead of a large residential building, The Tree House is composed of three separate block staggered to follow the property lines and maximize green space, with all required parking located underground. The multi-level two and three bedroom units range in size from 935 sqft to 1325 sqft. The project will appeal to buyers who desire both indoor and outdoor areas, with exterior access in the form of courtyards, private rooftop terraces and gardens. The shared courtyards provide open communal space for residents, encouraging social engagement.
The rhythmic, staggered geometry of stacked unit cells creates an ever-changing interplay of void and solid, shadow and light across the façade. The blocks are clad in anodized aluminum, which offers durability, modularity and beauty. The material’s almost iridescent quality provides a unique surface to receive and reflects light and shadow. Based on the length of the anodizing process, different shades are applied to each of the blocks so that the overall aesthetic remains consistent while still allowing for variety across the site.
0259
East St. Paul, MB
single-family residence
2,700 sqft
complete 2014
Situated on a typical suburban street in a bedroom community just north of Winnipeg, the Parallelogram House stands in quiet and refined contrast to its stucco-clad neighbours. While the clients desired a one-storey layout for their young family, they also wanted to ensure that all of the bedrooms had views of the front or backyard. By skewing the floor plan into a parallelogram, the window area was greatly increased without increasing the footprint, opening the home up to a panoramic view of the trees and preserving the site’s southern exposure within the required setbacks.
The house is clad in vertical wood siding that wraps onto the underside of an extensive roof overhang, which is supported by a family of Cor-Ten columns that acts as both structure and screen, evoking the rich texture and shadows of the tree line. Together, wood and steel render the house as part of the surrounding landscape.
Inside, the main living space is defined by an 11-foot high ceiling horizon and an open plan that flows around a freestanding utility box. The bedroom and garage wings are separated from the living space by white metal screens that extend the geometry of the exterior columns through the house. A simple and muted palette emphasizes the interior volumes, highlighted by a sequence of light wells and skylights.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2018 Governor General’s Medal in Architecture ; 2017 Architectural Review House Awards shortlist
0393
Oakville, ON
mixed-use tower
160,000 sqft
not pursued
$33M
Symgine Developments
Lake & East is a 20 storey mixed-use tower located at an important gateway intersection to Bronte Village on the shores of Lake Ontario in Oakville. The project site is one of the last remaining underdeveloped properties in the area, which is characterized by a mix of high-rise towers and one storey commercial buildings. The project brief called for 140+ dwellings with complementary amenity and retail spaces at grade.
While the expected solution would be a podium and tower model, further analysis revealed a need to reconcile the village atmosphere with the density of the adjacent high-rises. The result is a series of scattered, boulder-like volumes at ground level that extend the low-rise fabric into the site, with a slender and reflective tower above. The tower’s cladding carries down to grade, where it wraps the site as a continuous, protective screen. The tower’s form arises from a desire to provide all suites with views of the lake beyond. At the same time, the skewed footprint preserves views from the adjacent 18 storey building and reduces the tower’s shadow impact on the intersection. The custom aluminum façade consists of a gradient of porous and solid panels, generating a pattern reminiscent of the concentric ripples produced by rain falling on water. Each permeable section unifies four to six units through interconnected balconies that create opportunities for contact between residents.
0401
Ottawa, ON
mixed-use tower
200,000 sqft
competition finalist
$45M
Windmill Development Group
In 2015, 5468796 was shortlisted for an invited competition to design a 200,000 s.f. mixed-use scheme for a former industrial site on Ottawa’s Chaudiere Island. The project scope included a 20-storey residential tower, office and retail space, underground parking and the integration of two existing warehouse buildings. Proponents were asked to tie into an existing community masterplan while maintaining social and environmental sustainability as a high priority.
Permeability of the ground plane became an important driver for the planning strategy. By breaking down the podium’s mass into simple blocks and organizing them around pedestrian routes and the existing heritage buildings, the design increases points of contact between street and building, old and new, residents and visitors, resulting in a rich and memorable every day experience. Furthermore, the separation of the lower blocks provides a variety of entrance points and creates a diverse array of outdoor rooms, while increasing retail frontage and drawing natural light to the podium’s core. Inspired in part by Windmill’s desire to create a complete community, and in part by our belief that shared public spaces are essential to the quality of life in cities – particularly in tall buildings – the amenity spaces become part of the public domain, starting from the ground floor up and weaving upward through the building like a vertical streetscape.
0174
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential
46,000 sqft
complete 2014
$7M
OZ Condominium Corporation Ltd.
OZ is a 25 unit, high-end condominium development located in the heart of Osborne Village. Located on an L-shaped site, the project is conceived as two towers linked by a minimal glass entry and a shared elevator core. Each tower is wrapped in a cohesive skin of black metal cladding that is carved into and punctured through to introduce outdoor space, provide shelter for ground floor entrances and respect setback restrictions. The deeply fluted corrugated metal skin consists of a gradient of solid and perforated panels that create a subtle play of light across the facade. Every component that is recessed behind or cut through the skin is rendered in white, reflecting daylight into the building’s void spaces.
Although zoning regulations initially limited the structure to five storeys, by introducing mezzanines on two levels the saleable square footage was increased substantially while still conforming to the maximum allowable building height. In addition, the precise interlocking of a variety of unit types served to reduce corridor areas. Compared to a conventionally planned development, the OZ configuration significantly increases density efficiency and thus profit potential for the developer. The square footage gained from compact planning allowed for the creation of horizontal courtyards off the mezzanines that punch through the building and provide large exterior decks with expansive vistas for loft units.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2015 MCHAP.emerge Finalist
0409
Peterborough, ON
museum
79,500 sqft
competition finalist 2015
$25M
MTA
Canadian Canoe Museum
Situated on the shore of the Trent-Severn Waterway, the new CCM is inspired by the story of the canoe, its ingenuity and efficiency, its beauty and serenity, and its ability to elicit a personal response in all of us. The museum emerges in a wooded clearing as a simple box wrapped in a sinuous, shimmering cloud of mesh. As shadows move with the sun, the skin’s ethereal nature blurs the definition between architecture and sculpture and belies the efficient and rational form within. Visitors are drawn to the main entrance along an elevated boardwalk that passes through a purifying filter of birch trees. Below, the undulating terrain flows beneath the building, intersected by a creek and a meandering trail that leads visitors to the Lift Lock beyond.
From the lobby, the museum branches in two directions, one to the multi-purpose room and restaurant, and the other to the exhibition space. Imitating the descending landscape, a set of cascading bleachers connects with the cafe, storage, educational and administrative spaces on the lower level. The exhibition space is enveloped by a backdrop of stretched fabric that creates the illusion of a solid wall under certain lighting conditions and becomes semi-transparent in others. Through surface projection, the scrim allows the gallery to take on different atmospheres, from the gentle lapping of waves on Lake Ontario to the untouched wilderness of the Far North.
0369
Helsinki, FI
art gallery
130,000 sqft
competition 2014
$180M
Guggenheim
The iconic Guggenheim brand and the quiet confidence of the Finnish identity inspire an art gallery defined by an ethereal quality of light, space and material drawn directly from an understanding of place. The visible program is reduced into a highly charged timber form that claims the site for the city, but also distills its energy into a powerful point of gravity – iconic yet restrained, playful yet subtle, warm yet stoic. Set against the city or the harbour, the lush green of Tahtitorninmaki park in the summer or the bitter whiteout of winter, the wood structure becomes a beacon for visitors and locals alike.
The galleries rest under a civic blanket whose subtly undulated surface creates controlled ponding during and after rain, resulting in natural reflection pools. Below the plaza, the single level exhibition space provides a highly flexible and functional environment for art. A choreography of curated courtyards allows for precise filtering of light into the galleries, rendering each with a unique atmosphere and immersing visitors in a composition of dappled light and shadow. Inside the wood form, the gallery soars into an unexpected vertical volume where a movable floor takes on different programmatic identities – from performance hall to classroom to observation deck – depending on the level to which it is docked. Small apertures left between the stacked timbers modulate the delicate light that surrounds or emanates from within.
0258
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential
9,200 sqft
complete 2013
$1.6M
Sunrex Group of Companies
548 Stradbrook is an eight unit infill development in Winnipeg’s Osborne Village neighbourhood. Located on a mature residential street lined with turn-of-the-century homes, the building is wrapped in a reflective glass shroud that allows it to be camouflaged with its character-filled surroundings. The project responds to existing zoning setbacks and density constraints with a three-storey, compact form that contains six two-bedroom flats and two three-bedroom loft units.
The project’s cladding treatment draws direct inspiration from its historic context, reinterpreting traditional lap siding with a custom, shingled glass facade of reflective panels that are overlaid like fish scales both vertically and horizontally across the entire building. The mirror-like finish and subtle angling of the glass creates an ephemeral interplay of reflections and light during the day, and transforms the building into a glowing apparition at night. At the second floor level, a metal canopy wraps the building’s perimeter, supported by a colonnade of thin black columns that lightly touch the sidewalk below. Functionally, the canopy defines a front yard patio space and sheltered walking path for tenants. Aesthetically, the canopy provides a stable counterpoint and grounding element to balance the ever-changing nature of the glass facade above.
Photography: James Brittain
Award: 2015 Architizer A+ finalist
0260
East St. Paul, MB
single-family residence
1,900 sqft
complete 2015
Designed for a young family of four, the Square House is a modest bungalow located in the municipality of East St. Paul, just north of Winnipeg. The owners purchased the lot and moved out of the city in order to raise their children in the community that they grew up in. The client requested a 1960s, mid-century modern quality with a contemporary twist.
The design began as a simple four-square plan with quadrants for the living and dining space, the master bedroom, the children’s wing and the garage. A sunken courtyard separates the children’s wing from the garage, bringing daylight and access to the outdoors down to the basement. Across the courtyard, a concrete bridge links the front sidewalk to the main entry, carrying the point of arrival into the very centre of the home.
Photography: James Brittain
0337
Winnipeg, MB
pop-up dinner
1200 ft long
complete 2014
Storefront Manitoba
5468796 together with design advocacy group Storefront Manitoba celebrated the culmination of Winnipeg’s Architecture Fringe Festival and the 2014 Royal Architectural Institute of Canada’s Festival of Architecture on Saturday, May 31 by transforming the Esplanade Riel pedestrian bridge into a giant pop-up dining room and inviting guests to experience and discuss the power of architecture and design. The project is the culmination of 5468796’s Table for 12 – a nine-city series of intimate dining events that put the spotlight on architecture culture.
On this major civic landmark and against the backdrop of Winnipeg’s new Canadian Museum for Human Rights, the team joined together 150 tables of eight to create one continuous 1200 foot long dining table – making it one of the longest dining tables on record. Volunteer ”Table Captains” decorated their tables to a theme of their choice, competing for prize money for the best table setting. Diners from across Canada – including representatives from prominent institutions, the city government, arts organizations and the general public – were notified of the event’s secret location only hours prior to the dinner. Meals were provided by local chefs from RAW:almond (Mandel Hitzer from Deer + Almond and Joe Kalturnyk from RAW Gallery) along with Ben Kramer from Diversity Food Services.
Photography: Jacqueline Young (except Instagram grid)
0289
Various
research
complete 2014
$50,000
Canada Council for the Arts
In 2013, the Canada Council for the Arts awarded 5468796 the $50,000 Professional Prix de Rome in Architecture for their project, Table for 12, a nine-city series of intimate dining events that put the spotlight on architecture culture.
In every city, a regional host helped bring together a group of individuals – including architects and their clients, planners, local critics, members of the media, politicians and artists – to discuss the state of architecture in their city. The objective of the project was to research cities around the world with a thriving design culture and to gain a deeper understanding of the catalysts that have built a strong commitment to architecture.
5468976 disseminated the results of their research through a lecture at the 2014 MAA / RAIC Festival of Architecture.
0272
Victoria, BC
art gallery
34,600 sqft
competition 2014
$14M
number TEN + Atelier Anonymous
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
The AGGV’s permanent collection is housed in an historic mansion and series of Modernist additions in an established residential area of Victoria. Our design team was shortlisted for a competition to envision the future renovation and expansion of the gallery.
The current facility appears impenetrable, its vibrancy hidden behind brick and concrete. Our submission re-imagines the AGGV as a village of small pavilions, engulfed by the existing landscape and new public spaces that cascade through the site. A dedicated upper level gallery rises above, nested in the dense tree canopy of oaks and sequoias, its sculptural form enclosing a cohesive and flexible sequence of exhibition spaces. Programs on the second floor radiate around a large opening carved from the building mass that allows daylight to flood the lobby and frames the sky.
Interior spaces are defined by transparent walls, layered behind an innovative system of wood quills that cantilever from an external structural mesh. The skin acts as a natural shading device while allowing for diffused light penetration. Visitors meander through the exhibits, held above the land as if walking through the tree canopy itself, a gallery experience unlike any other in Canada.
Award: 2014 WAF Future Project of the Year
0212
Winnipeg, MB
office, commercial
40,000 sqft
not pursued
Green Seed Development Corp.
Bond Tower is an eleven-storey office building that stands in clear contrast to the downtown Winnipeg skyline. Rising as a thin, black bar from its extremely narrow lot, the tower offers 4,200 s.f. floors of corporate condominiums and views of the downtown, resting on a commercial base. While the main level sits within the city’s setback regulations, the upper stories cantilever fifteen feet over the sidewalk on each short end, engaging the streetscape below, extending the usable floor space and capturing daylight through full-height glazing.
Due to the 33’ lot width, it becomes necessary to build flush with the side yards in order to maximize square footage requirements. As a result, no windows are permitted on the east or west façades. The introduction of diagonal ‘courtyards’ cutting through the structure allows the space to be broken up into smaller compartments, increasing access to light, views and fresh air. Generic plans are made unique by the size, orientation and location of these apertures, which are angled upward to incorporate a long flight of accessible, bleacher-style steps. Since every hole crosses from one floor to another, the floor plates remain continuous either above or below the opening
Awards: 2012 World Architecture Festival Shortlist; 2012 p/a awards | First Award; 2011 Canadian Architect Award of Merit
0198
Venice, IT
exhibition
complete 2012
$1M
Jae-Sung Chon
Canada Council for the Arts | RAIC
As more and more people move around the globe, the issue of im/migration is more important than ever. In spite of humanity’s increased mobility, many countries are becoming less open to new im/migrants, with Canada remaining a notable exception.
Migrating Landscapes was selected by a national juried competition as Canada’s official entry at the 2012 Venice Biennale in Architecture. The project was curated by 5468796 Architecture + Jae-Sung Chon, who joined together to become the Migrating Landscapes Organizer (MLO).
Migrating Landscapes explores the settling-unsettling dynamic of im/migration, featuring 18 video narratives and architectural scale models of ‘dwellings’ designed by young architects/designers. The work was selected by a prestigious jury from a Canada-wide competition and displayed in regional exhibitions, organized and constructed by MLO.
MLO has designed a wooden exhibition infrastructure that acts as a conceptual landscape onto which each architectural dwelling is settled, with each model representing an act of first im/migration. The landscape is envisioned as a malleable grid mosaic – an abstraction of the physical, social, economic and political conditions that form Canada’s pluralistic cultural identity.
Photography: Lisa Stinner-Kun and Jacqueline Young
0197
Winnipeg, MB
office, education
22,500 sqft
complete 2012
$1.7M
Manitoba Start
Manitoba Start is a non-profit organization that provides arrival services to Winnipeg’s recent immigrants. Their new facility is located on the main floor of The Avenue on Portage. Faced with a somewhat irregular grid of existing columns, the plan responds with a hexagonal geometry that flows freely through the building. Rooms oriented at 30 and 60 degree angles establish solid and void spaces that allow for easier movement of people and greater connectivity between elements. Fixed programs are contained in solid boxes – with walls of birch plywood or white-painted MDF – while flexible spaces fill the remaining voids. Hexagonal perforations in the plywood panels provide a greater sense of openness while still maintaining visual separation, acting as a filter between the more energized public environment and the quieter classroom zones.
The hexagonal geometry is employed in a variety of forms and at multiple scales, from the configuration of lighting and the open office furniture layout, to the detailing of way-finding signage and interior finishes. Functioning as both an organizing principle and a graphic element, the repeated pattern establishes a coherent spatial arrangement and cohesive branding for the organization.
Award: 2014 Prairie Design Award of Merit
0169
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential, commercial, adaptive re-use
97,000 sqft
complete 2012
$12.7M
Mark and Rick Hofer
The Avenue on Portage revives two historic commercial buildings from the early 1900s located one block west of Winnipeg’s most famous corner, Portage and Main. Once major retail destinations in the city, the Avenue and Hample Buildings experienced a slow decline, becoming blights to the street and downtown. In 2010 our client purchased the site to develop the derelict properties into 75 rental apartments and 22,500 s.f. of commercial space.
A series of formally simple moves dramatically transform the original façades, shifting public perception of the buildings from eyesores to a unified urban landmark. Hovering above the sidewalk, steel balconies cantilever from existing window openings and provide outdoor access for residents. Clad in mirror-finish aluminum, the balconies become camouflaged against their surroundings, reflecting at turns the sky, the façade and the street below.
At street level a wall of glass folds back into the building to create a deep, V-shaped entrance that broadens the width of the sidewalk. Overhead, a faceted canopy angles outward 13 feet from the face of the Hample before returning to meet the edge of the Avenue, unifying the two façades. Together, these elements draw the city into the building’s expression, making it an active participant in the life of the street.
Photography: James Brittain unless noted.
Award: 2014 Prairie Design Award of Excellence
0155
Winnipeg, MB
pavilion
18′ diameter
complete 2010
$10,000
Ewa Tarsia
The Forks
Sunspot, along with four other skating shelters designed by local and international architecture firms, was part of an exhibition of Warming Huts along the Forks River Trail in the winter of 2009. The event is now an annual celebration of art and architecture on ice.
The finished project is the result of a collaboration between 5468796 Architecture and Winnipeg-based artist Ewa Tarsia. The sphere is an extension of Ewa’s exploration of ‘dot’, a recurring theme in her recent work, as well as an interpretation of the ultimate source of heat – the sun.
The Sunspot hangs from the Forks’ Historic Rail Bridge, hovering just three feet above the frozen river. Composed of a structural frame coated in a skin of ice and coloured water, the interior is rendered with a vibrant and warm glow that evokes Tarsia’s painting plates. A large diameter opening at the bottom of the sphere allows skaters to enter and experience the transformed sky. The bottom ring provides a rope-wrapped bench to rest on, while the structure offers shelter from the wind.
0134
Winnipeg, MB
pavilion
28′ cube
complete 2013
$1M
Exchange District BIZ + City of Winnipeg
‘The Cube’ is an open-air performance venue situated in Old Market Square, an iconic green space and summer festival hub in Winnipeg’s historic Exchange District. In 2009, 5468796 won an invited competition with a multi-functional design that throws out the old bandshell concept on the grounds that when a conventional stage is not in use it looks forlorn – especially through the city’s long winters.
A concrete structure enclosed by a flexible metal membrane, The Cube functions as a multipurpose environment. The membrane is composed of 20,000 identical hollow aluminum pieces strung together on aircraft cables. The orientation of the pieces alternates, forming a malleable and shimmering curtain that can stand like a wall, be pulled in to reveal the performance space, or function as a light-refracting surface – allowing it to morph into a projection screen, concert venue, shelter or sculptural object. When the stage is closed, the membrane’s diamond extrusions capture and refract internal lighting or projections to their outer surface, creating a unique pixel matrix for artists to appropriate at will.
Photography: James Brittain unless noted.
Awards: 2015 Premier’s Design Award of Excellence; 2014 Governor General’s Medal in Arch; 2014 Mies Crown Hall Prize | Shortlist; 2011 RAIC Award of Excellence; 2010 AR Award for Emerging Architecture
0133
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential
12 000 sqft
complete 2011
$2M
Green Seed Development Corp.
Bloc_10 strives to re-imagine and re-invent the market-driven condominium. Situated on the site of a former gas station, the developer wanted a modestly priced building designed and constructed within 12 months. The resulting three-storey, 10-unit condominium is modelled after a ‘white-box’ concept: each buyer purchases an unfinished unit with basic plumbing, heating and electrical systems installed, allowing them to decide which rooms and finishes they would like on each floor. 5468796 challenged traditional townhouse layouts with apartments that cross from one side of the building to the other as they ascend over three levels. This arrangement provides every unit with north and south views, and transforms eight into corner suites. To take advantage of the maximum allowable mass for the development, cantilevered projections expand rooms, create balconies and provide support for the screen of vertical wood slats that wraps the exterior. The screen provides each homeowner with privacy and shade, filtering surrounding views and creating a buffer against traffic noise. The screen’s sheer texture unifies the façade and gives Bloc_10 a distinctive identity within the neighbourhood.
Photography: James Brittain and Lisa Stinner-Kun
Awards: 2013 RAIC Award of Excellence; 2012 AR Emerging Architecture Award; 2012 Governor General’s Medal in Arch.; 2010 Canadian Architect Award of Excellence
0122
Winnipeg, MB
office
43,000 sqft
complete 2012
Hargrave Holdings LLC.
WRHA on Hargrave is a six storey, 43,000 s.f. office building in downtown Winnipeg. Bound by a street, a parking lot and two existing buildings, the site could only accommodate a 75’x75’ floor plate. With a conventional stair and elevator core, the project would not have provided enough usable area to meet the WRHA’s requirements for open office space and access to natural light. By uncoiling the stair flights, pushing them to the building’s perimeter and allowing them to cantilever over the site’s boundaries, the project became possible. Additional square footage was claimed for the offices, making the design economically viable and creating uninterrupted office space with ample daylight. The perimeter staircases also give the building its distinct appearance.
Starting from opposite corners, two staircases spiral down the building’s perimeter. The sloping stair geometry creates an unconventional massing on all four sides of the building and provides an unexpected spatial experience within. The exterior skin stretches over this geometry, with the stairs dividing the building in half and making a natural break between the more expensive curtain wall and the more economical metal cladding with punched windows. This division makes the material decisions appear natural and elevates the perceived value of the project.
Photography: James Brittain
0078
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family residential
21,700 sqft
complete 2015
$3.4M
Green Seed Development Corp.
youCUBE is an 18 unit housing development that explores the potential for density and affordability on a narrow, 264’ x 63’ urban lot. Located on the north end of Waterfront Drive, the project occupies a seemingly unremarkable site with limited visibility of the nearby river and neglected, industrial surroundings. With a modest budget and a background in custom home building, the developer needed a design that could be built using standard construction methods by residential contractors. In response, the project challenges conventional multi-family housing design with a modular and more affordable configuration of individual dwellings that goes beyond the brief to include extensive outdoor space and inspired architectural interiors.
The final composition clusters three and four storey townhouses together on an elevated plaza, which provides access to all of the suite entrances and shelters parking below. Each unit culminates in a rooftop patio with spectacular 360 degree vistas of the river and city skyline. Inside, the suites are defined by an architectural ‘wrap’, a design element that sculpts the interior into a fluid sequence of open plan rooms within a spacious, light-filled volume.
Photography: James Brittain
Awards: 2015 Premier’s Design Award of Merit; 2011 AR Future Projects Award | Commended; 2009 Canadian Architect Award of Merit
0057
Dunnottar, MB
cottage
1,200 sqft
complete 2010
Webster Family
Located adjacent to Lake Winnipeg in the village of Dunnottar, Webster Cottage is a modest, 4-season home away from home for a family of four. Cottage functions are divided to create a variety of habitable spaces, and allow for energy conservation through seasonal expansion and contraction. One roof envelopes three primary structures [main cottage / summer cottage / accessory building (storage+carport)] and an array of outdoor rooms [screen porch, covered decks, open decks]. Spaces are linked on the ground by a raised walkway. The material palette is kept simple to emphasize the contrast between the roof surface of dark, ribbed siding and the internal structures of exposed framing, plywood and translucent glass and plastics.
Inside, a simple strip of living space folds onto itself, orienting views toward the lake, and capturing sunlight and natural breezes. Delicate maneuvers in plan and elevation help preserve existing trees on the property. Complexity is created at the crease where the main cottage twists in response to these site conditions. The resulting two-storey sawtooth wall that bisects the main cottage and the triangulated roof surface brings dynamic volumes to an otherwise uncomplicated wood-frame cottage structure.
0054
Storm Bay, ON
boatport
3,000 sqft
complete 2011
Guertin Family
The Guertin Boatport is a two-storey, open-air floating dock and fixed boardwalk situated on Storm Bay in western Ontario. The main level provides two sheltered boat stalls while the upper floor serves as an informal lounge space and viewing deck. Occupying a permanent position along an isolated stretch of the shoreline, the boatport accommodates shifting site conditions in order to provide a year-round amenity for the client.
The project is composed of fragmented vertical planes clad in reflective materials that scatter and redirect light off the lake’s surface. Perforated metal walls protect against wind and filter views while still allowing for extended sightlines of the bay and the surrounding Canadian Shield.
The boatport is accessed by an extruded aluminum plank boardwalk that follows the profile of the rocky shore. Flexible, hinged joints accommodate the rise and fall of water levels, as well as the freeze and thaw cycles of ice. The structure consists of custom designed, cold-formed steel C-channels, pressure treated joists and composite decking. The upper deck is lowered around its edges to keep the lake view clear and unobstructed by the stainless steel cable guards.
Award: 2013 Architizer A+ Awards | Winner
0027
Winnipeg, MB
multi-family housing, support services
25,000 sqft
complete 2010
$3.75M
Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council
Welcome Place offers shelter and transitional services to Manitoba’s new refugees. On a quiet residential street in an inner-city neighbourhood, the building is designed to address the fragile psychological and emotional state of residents and to help them to slowly transition to a new, supported life in Canada. The design concept was for the building to feel like a solid, protective volume, with offices on the lower floors, and three levels of residential suites above. The residential units are sheltered behind heavy walls with deeply set, porthole-like windows that provide occupants with discrete outdoor views while minimizing views in.
A sequence of shared spaces – starting with a landscaped entry courtyard, flowing to indoor lounges, assembly and seminar rooms and offices, and culminating with a rooftop terrace – flow through the building encouraging interaction amongst residents and staff. The solidity of the building is broken down with these colourful and airy public spaces, giving occupants an opportunity to experience openness and positivity while still within the protective shell. Once familiar with their surroundings, the residents will gradually start to transition from their private accommodation to utilize the shared spaces and subsequently ease their way into the surrounding community. This act is a first step towards their lives as Canadians.
Photography: James Brittain