|  The Fort Whyte Centre was conceived in the late '70s as a place for
education on environmental issues. Poised for a major expansion,
the Centre requires a new building to service its visitors. In additional
to controlling access to the overall site, the Visitor Services
Building will provide such services as loafing and feeding (café),
hatching (meeting room), preening (washrooms), and browsing (gift
shop). In an effort at sustainable development, the facility is
designed to function under various scenarios including as a banquet
hall.
The building strikes a pose of environmental hype-sensitivity.
The rough stone wall on the north wall appears as a geological anomaly
on the prairie and its funnelesque shape collects visitors from
the parking lot and draws them to the centre. The centre of this
long low form is the site of a minor geological disturbance where
the polite flat roofed wings have been interrupted by a shifting
of plates, dynamic soil pressures have pushed the piles out of the
ground causing the roof planes to shift, and the walls to fall over.
By the time visitors arrive, everything will have achieved stasis.
Award of Honour: smarc wins Manitoba Wood Design Award "The
project was unanimously considered to be the most creative work,
as well as the most comprehensive submission. The architects were
able to convey full information on the project with a format of
photos, drawings, text and contextual images. Described by one of
the jury members as "Frank Lloyd Wright on drugs", this
project stood above the rest of the crowd, raising the bar for design.
It is the jury's hope that this project will inspire and heighten
the level of competition in the future. The project was acknowledged
as having been integrated into the landscape, for its sophistication
and simplicity leading to elegance, for the use of natural materials,
which are organized in an evocative but coherent presentation. This
project is both beautiful and functional."-Comments of the
jury for the Manitoba Wood Design Awards |