5468796

5468796

  • Royal Architectural Institute of Canada 2025 Architectural Practice Award

    April 9, 2025
  • Pumphouse

    July 3, 2024

    0492

    Pumphouse

    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


    Ralph Gutierrez
  • MCHAP

    July 3, 2024
  • Governor General’s Medal

    July 2, 2024
  • AZ Awards

    July 1, 2024
  • Arthur Residence

    June 30, 2024

    0310

    Arthur Residence

    Regina, SK

    single-family residence

    2,250 sqft above grade; 1,200 sqft below grade

    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

  • National Low-Rise Housing Design Catalogue – Prairies

    June 30, 2024

    0809

    National Low-Rise Housing Design Catalogue – Prairies

    Manitoba and Saskatchewan

    multi-family residential

    to be published 2025

    LGA Architectural Partners

    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation

    In 2024, the Canadian government commissioned the development of the National Low-Rise Housing Design Catalogue  in collaboration with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) and Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada. 

    The Housing Design Catalogue provides tools to increase housing options within existing neighbourhoods through gentle density, featuring 50 standardized housing designs for rowhouses, fourplexes, sixplexes, and accessory dwelling units across the country. Michael Green Architecture delivered designs for British Columbia, while LGA Architectural Partners led the project for the rest of the country, working with architects in each geographic region of Canada. In partnership with LGA, 5468796 Architecture contributed seven designs for the Prairies (Manitoba and Saskatchewan.)

    To help ensure the Housing Design Catalogue supports the goals of Canada’s housing system, numerous principles were considered during the development phase. These principles include adaptability and accessibility, energy efficiency, financial feasibility, use of regional construction methods and materials, and compliance with local regulations and building codes.

    Once the final architectural design packages are ready, the Housing Design Catalogue will help builders streamline the process from concept to construction, cutting costs and speeding up housing delivery. The catalogue simplifies design, ensures compliance with building codes, and helps estimate costs—so homes can be built faster.

    The final architectural design packages will be released this spring.

    For more information visit https://www.housingcatalogue.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/

    Renders: Office In Search Of…

  • Shared Ground

    June 18, 2024

    0802

    Shared Ground

    Winnipeg, MB

    research initiative

    on-going

    Scatliff + Miller + Murray and Réleven

    Shared Ground is an applied research initiative dedicated to developing more affordable housing on social purpose infrastructure in Winnipeg.

    We provide social purpose organizations with the knowledge and tools they need to determine if their land and building assets can support an affordable housing development. If you’re a mission-driven charity, non-profit, co-operative, or social enterprise with land or a building ready for transformation, we’re here to help!

    Please visit https://www.shared-ground.ca to learn more and sign up.

    Shared Ground is funded in part by the Government of Canada through the Research and Knowledge Initiative (RKI), a national merit-based contributions funding program from Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada (HICC).

    Read the official press release here.

  • platform.MIDDLE

    May 2, 2024

    0585

    platform.MIDDLE

    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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    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.
    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.
    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.
    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.
    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.
    Ana Luz Valencia. Courtesy of Arquine.

  • 90/100 Alexander

    October 10, 2023

    0564

    90/100 Alexander

    Winnipeg, MB

    multi-family residential, commercial, adaptive re-use

    165,500 sqft

    complete 2024

    $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

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