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Issue No 104    October 15, 2007

 

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FEATURE STORIES:

1. TONITE 2007 Heritage Toronto Awards & William Kilbourne Memorial Lecture
2. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Fundraising Dinner
15. Heritage loses Champion Caroline Di Cocco
16. Recycling keeps Landmark Church out of Landfill
21. A seven-year struggle brings results in Lakeshore
25. St. Thomas Times-Journal - Alma College Vote in Question
31. New York Times: Asylum Converts to Housing Project

IN THIS ISSUE:

EVENTS submit an event

1. TONITE 2007 Heritage Toronto Awards & William Kilbourne Memorial Lecture
2. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Fundraising Dinner
3. Book Launch: Douglas Richardson's Canadian Churches: An Architectural History
4. Poster from Robert Hill Collection
5. Claretown: Toronto's Lost Irish Village
6. Celebrating 150 Years!
7. Toronto Then and Now
8. Capture Your Memories
9. Creative Placemaking Workshop
10. Exploring Historic Cemeteries
11. How Heritage Research Benefits All of Us
12. Lives of Four ROM Founders: Sir Edmund Walker, Charles Trick Currelly, George Crofts and Mrs. Sarah Warren
13. Conserving the Modern Course, Toronto
14. Parks Canada - Fire Risk Management for Historic Places

NEWS | ACTION submit a news or action item

15. Heritage loses Champion Caroline Di Cocco
16. Recycling keeps Landmark Church out of Landfill
17. Big Plans for Old Places-Heritage Canada Conference
18. Havana Toronto Dialogues on Architecture
19. Uncertain Future of Deer Park United
20. Section 37 and Heritage Postponed to November
21. A seven-year struggle brings results in Lakeshore

LINKS submit a link

22. Globe and Mail: Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs
23. Globe and Mail: The architecture of Paul Raff
24. Treehugger: Accident at Simcoe Hotel
25. St. Thomas Times-Journal - Alma College Vote in Question
26. London Free Press: Alma College to be demolished
27. Hoffmeyer's Woodworking
28. Globe and Mail: Arson in Cannington
29. New York Times: Levittown Anniversary
30. New York Times: Architecture of Dwight James Baum
31. New York Times: Asylum Converts to Housing Project
32. Globe and Mail: Louis Khan's National Assembly in Bangladesh
33. Globe and Mail: David Chipperfield takes Stirling Prize for Architecture

SUPPORT

34. Support Built Heritage News

 

EVENTS : Issue No 104 October 15, 2007
 

1. TONITE 2007 Heritage Toronto Awards & William Kilbourne Memorial Lecture

Place:The Carlu, College and Yonge Street
Date: October 15, 2007
Time: 6:30 - 9:00
Info: 416-338-2175    http://www.heritagetoronto.org

William Kilbourn Lecturer David Mirvish : The History of Theatre in Toronto Canada's longest-running heritage awards program, recognizing outstanding contributions, skills, craftsmanship and knowledge in the City's heritage community. Since the beginning, the success of this popular program has depended on the participation of residents and heritage advocates from across the city, province and country. Nominations are encouraged for any initiative that deserves recognition: a home renovation, a book, a website, or a community education or advocacy project.



Peter and Diane Dent, Grant and Brenda Head enjoy Muskoka hospitality


2. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Fundraising Dinner
Chance to Bid on Fantasic ACO Ontario Weekends Away

Place:Arts and Letters Club
Date: Friday November 16, 2007
Time: 6:00 for 7:30
Info: Contact ACO Manager Rollo Myers, 416 367 8075

The Annual ACO fundraising dinner is a great chance to catch up with colleagues, meet people from across the province, and enjoy the wonderful charm of the Arts and Letters Club. And of course to support Ontario's fastest growing heritage organization.

This year, as in previous years, there will be lots of chances to bid on wonderful weekends away across Ontario. These are a great way to see Ontario as only ACO members can show you.




3. Book Launch: Douglas Richardson's Canadian Churches: An Architectural History

Place:David Mirvish Books, 596 Markham Street, Toronto
Date: Tuesday, November 13
Time: 6-8 pm
Info: http://www.fireflybooks.com/celebration

Firefly Books & David Mirvish Books invite you to a Book Launch & Celebration

With every book purchased, receive a frameable poster. Refreshments will be served.

Editor's Note: A much anticipated book from a favorite professor of Canadian architectural history, if you can't go, you can order online from David Mirvish Books



http://www.ald.utoronto.ca


4. Poster from Robert Hill Collection

Place:Eric Arthur Gallery, 230 College St. Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design
Date: Eric Arthur Gallery, 230 College St. Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design
Info: http://www.ald.utoronto.ca

An unpredented exhibition devoted to the art of the architectural poster, assembled over a 40 year period from 1967 to 2007. Highlights are drawn from this major collection of over 1600 posters from twenty countries.

 

5. Claretown: Toronto's Lost Irish Village

Place:Meet at the south east corner of Dundas St. & Bathurst St.
Date: October 27, 2007
Time: 1:30 p.m.
Place:There is no charge. However, a collection will be taken up to support the Ireland Park Foundation.
Info: Walk leader: Joanne Doucettejoanne.doucette@sympatico.ca

Joanne Doucetter would like to invite you to join her on a walk through the Bathurst/Queen area to discover Claretown, Bathurst and Queen‚s Lost Irish Village.

Joanne Doucette has been leading local history walks and natural heritage walks for over 25 years and have been researching the Claretown area for more than five. She will share this unique and fascinating part of Toronto's heritage.

Rosario Marchese MPP Trinity Spadina will be joining the walk.
Joanne

A two hour walk exploring the history of the area including the Bathurst Street Barracks Orphanage where the widows and orphans where sheltered, The Paddock, St. Mary‚s Church, Cosgrave‚s Brewery, the Robinson Cottages, John Mulvey House, the Wheat Sheaf Tavern, the Garrison Hospital, the Emigrant Sheds at Front and Bathurst, and Ireland Park.

 

6. Celebrating 150 Years!
In collaboration with the NORTH YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY - THE MILLER TAVERN (previously The Jolly Miller)

Place:Miller Tavern, 3885 Yonge Street (at York Mills Subway Station)
Date: Tuesday, October 16th
Time: 5-7pm
Place:$20 donation at the door -all proceeds to the North York Historical Society.

You are invited to the 150th Anniversary Party (1857-2007) - Reminisce about the good old days at the Jolly Miller and celebrate its checkered past.

Your $20 donation will cover generous food and drink - reminiscent of past decades.

 

7. Toronto Then and Now

Place:Enoch Turner Schoolhouse 106 Trintiy St just south of King St. E, north of the Distillery District
Date: Tuesday, November 13
Time: 7:30 pm (doors open at 7:00 for light refreshments)
Place:$10 (Ets members $8)
Info: Mike Filey's slide presentation, "Toronto Then and Now" is based on his book of the same name. In this presentation the the remarkable growth of our city, in particular the ever-changing waterfront, is shown through contrasting archival and contemporary photos. To register or for further information call 416-863-0010 or email programs@enochturnerschoolhouse.ca    http://.www.enochturnerschoolhouse.ca
 

8. Capture Your Memories
Oral History Workshop

Place:Enoch Turner Schoolhouse 106 Trinity St. Just south of King St. E., north of the Distillery District
Date: Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Time: 7:30 - 9:30 pm
Place:$10 (ETS members free)
Info: Writer Noreen Shanhan will conduct a workshop on the art and craft of storytelling as part of the ETS project on Booze in Old Town Toronto, funded by the Department of Canadian Heritage. The workshop is limited to 10 participants. To register or for further information call Shirley Hartt at 416-863-0010 or Noreen Shanahan at 416-461-2417.    http://.www.enochturnerschoolhouse.ca

How have the history of distilling and brewing or the proliferation of booze in Old Town Toronto affected your life or the gathering of family lore? Does the current development in the area change your experience of community? These stories are an integral part of living history and an important framework to the oral history portion of the virtual exhibit, "Booze in Old Town Toronto."

With a pen or microphone in hand, and led by informative exercises and instruction you will begin the process of recording your story.

 

9. Creative Placemaking Workshop

Place:Kingston, Ontario
Date: October 25-26, 2007
Info: visit www.torontoartscape.on.ca/workshops for more information and to register.

Learn how to make your downtowns, main streets and neighbourhoods:

• vibrant places of social interaction
• exciting hubs of cultural activity
• sustainable havens for local business
• flourishing habitats for creative communities

READY TO LEARN MORE?
Artscape’s upcoming Creative Placemaking Workshop taking place October 25-26 in Kingston, Ontario investigates strategies to connect and leverage the creative and cultural resources of communities in generating quality of place. During this two-day workshop, learn from international practitioners on how to nurture and sustain the conditions for creative ecologies to thrive in downtowns, cultural districts, neighbourhoods and mainstreets.

 

10. Exploring Historic Cemeteries
Art Galleries & Museums Out-of-doors

Place:University College (UofT) Room 140 15 King's College Circle, Toronto ON M5S 3H7
Date: Thursday 18 October 2007
Time: 730pm
Place:FREE
Info: Presented by the William Morris Society of Canada, an illustrated lecture by Dr. Jane Irwin, author of the recently published book Old Canadian Cemeteries: Places of Memory (UofT Press). Further information at 416-233-7686.    http://www.wmsc.ca

An amateur local historian, with an interest in the history of architecture and an academic background in English literature, Dr. Jane Irwin will show and discuss works selected from her more than 6,000 images of Canadian monuments. Special emphasis will be on the Arts & Crafts Movement, a principle founder of which was the 19th century British artist, writer and craftsman William Morris. The program of the William Morris Society of Canada encourages interest in Morris, his life, his work and his influence.

 

11. How Heritage Research Benefits All of Us
A presentation of Dr. Robert shipley and Associates of the heritage Resource Centre, University of Waterloo

Place:Waterloo Public Library, Albert Street, Waterloo, Ontario
Date: Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Time: 7 pm
Info: Contact John Arndt, President North Waterloo Region Branch ACO 519 578-78624 or jarndt@sympatico.ca

Everyone is invited to this program presented by Dr. Robert Shipley and associates of the Heritage Resource Centre (HRC) at the University of Waterloo. The HRC contributes to the heritage well-being of our communities. Here is our opportunity to learn more about its work and how it benefits all of us – whether we own a heritage house, live in a designated heritage district, volunteer on municipal heritage committees and other related organizations, or are interested in preserving our historical landscapes - built and environmental. Dr. Robert Shipley, Director of the Heritage Resource Centre for several years, has an international reputation for research and publication. ACO has partnered with the HCR on many occasions, the most recent partnership being the book The Lazarus Effect: an Exploration of the Economics of Heritage Development in Ontario. This will be a most stimulating evening. EVERYONE IS WELCOME. BRING A FRIEND!

 

12. Lives of Four ROM Founders: Sir Edmund Walker, Charles Trick Currelly, George Crofts and Mrs. Sarah Warren

Place:ROM (Royal Ontario Museum)
Date: Sundays, Oct. 14  Nov. 4
Time: 1-3pm
Place:Fee: $120 ($115/online)ROM Members $110 ($105/online)
Info: BLUE CARD MEMBERS call 416 - 926-7254 to register    http://www.utoronto.ca/stmikes/cont_ed/courses/noncredit/past-pres-future.html

Great institutions are founded by great people. Through the lives and careers of four major figures – Sir Edmund Walker, Charles Trick Currelly, George Crofts and Mrs. Sarah Warren - learn about the social and cultural forces behind the Royal Ontario Museum’s founding and early success.

INSTRUCTOR: Dennis Duffy taught English literature at the University of Toronto and continues to offer lectures on Canadian cultural, historical and literary subjects. He has delighted audiences in Ireland, India and Spain, as well as in the St. Michael’s College Continuing Education program.



 

13. Conserving the Modern Course, Toronto
Sponsored by Parks Canada Agency and the Ministry of Culture, Province of Ontario

Place:MacDonald Block, 900 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario
Date: Tuesday January 29th and Wednesday January 30th, 2008
Time: 8:30 - 4:30
Place:$150
Info: Registration Contact Susan Algie, Parks Canada Phone: 204 983 4718 Fax: 204 983 8187 Email: heritage.workshops@pc.gc.ca

Course

An ever-increasing number of heritage buildings can be categorized as modern heritage (1940 – 1980). This workshop, which is addressed to custodians, facility managers, architects and others who play a role in the conservation of modern heritage, will provide an introduction to the issues related to the emerging subject of modern heritage and its conservation.

Each participant will leave with a good understanding of the history, basic architectural types and the character-defining elements of modern architecture of the 1940s to 1970s.

Each participant will become aware of basic issues specifically related to the maintenance and repair of modern architecture.Each participant will receive a good introduction to sources of information on modern architecture and on their maintenance and repair.

 

14. Parks Canada - Fire Risk Management for Historic Places

Place:K.W. Neatby Building, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario
Date: Wednesday November 21st and Thursday November 22nd, 2007
Time: 8:30 -4:30
Place:$125 includes NFPA 914 and course workbook
Info: Registration Contact: Susan Algie, Parks Canada, Winnipeg Phone: 204. 983. 4718 Fax: 204. 983. 8187 Email: heritage.workshops@pc.gc.ca

Over the past decade, several historically significant structures have been seriously damaged or lost due to fire. The loss of each of these important cultural resources has illustrated the need for prevention and protection strategies to ensure the safety of both humans and property. The “Fire Risk Management for Historic Places” training package is intended to meet a gap in this knowledge. This course will be delivered in English.

Learning Objectives:

Each participant will receive a good introduction to sources of information for general and specific advice on technical aspects of fire risk management for historic places, including buildings and structures.

Each participant will leave with a good understanding of acceptable policy and technical practices related to the management of fire risk of historic places, including buildings and structures.

  
NEWS | ACTION : Issue No 104 October 15, 2007



Caroline Di Cocco


15. Heritage loses Champion Caroline Di Cocco
Catherine Nasmith

Ontario's heritage has lost an ardent champion in the electoral defeat of Caroline Di Cocco in Sarnia.

She was the Liberal Culture Critic during the Harris government and a strong voice within caucus for the changes to the Ontario Heritage Act. During the first term of the McGuinty government we were blessed with two very strong Ministers. Madelleine Meilleur expertly shepherded the changes to the Ontario Heritage Act in the beginning of the term. Di Cocco got her dream job as Minister of Culture when Meilleur moved on to the Ministry of during the second half of the McGuinty government's first term.

I had the pleasure of working with Ms. Di Cocco as president of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario. On practically her first day in office she moved to save the Lister Block, channelling provincial resources to bring about a locally negotiated solution. She addressed the Ontario Heritage Conference this spring. Perhaps the last piece of correspondence the Minister received was a plea to intervene to save Alma College.

More recently, Ms. Di Cocco interrupted her campaigning to stop the demolition of the Moore farmhouse in Sparta Ontario.

She will be missed, but no doubt this talented woman won't be idle long. Lets  hope the new McGuinty government will continue its tradition of appointing strong champions of Ontario's heritage as Minister of Culture.



restored interior, St. Patrick's Church, Kinkora Ontario


16. Recycling keeps Landmark Church out of Landfill
Catherine Nasmith

There is something poetic about a community that has kept its landmark church out of the landfill by recycling stuff.

The village of Kinkora Ontario is very determined to keep its landmark church. The tiny crossroads farming community is graced by the presence of its cathedral scale St. Patricks Church, built in 1882, designed by the famous architect Joseph Connelly. The church is reminiscent of the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Formosa in being extremely ambitious in scale for its community, as well as having been designed by the same architect. The Formosa church was the inspiration for the Ontario church in Jane Urquart’s novel The Stone Carvers. Such buildings take monumental effort to create.

Open to the public on September 29 there was an opportunity to share the beauty of the building but also the remarkable story of its restoration. In just five years a congregation of only 150 families, with just over 50 very active members has managed to raise 1.4 million dollars. Another $600,000 is needed to re-instate the spire that was removed a few years ago because it had become unstable.

Congregation member Pauline Bokkers spoke of the ongoing effort. “Our ancestors built us such a beautiful building…..we just had to find a way to save it.” When they started, it was with a roofing project that had been estimated at $600,000. As is often the case, once the construction started much more was needed.

The story of how the monies were raised is inspiring. In addition to community bake-sales and gala dinners the congregation began to collect as many recyclables as they could and sold them. This was the most lucrative of the projects, but took thousands and thousands of volunteer hours. Millions of pop cans have been collected; crushed one by one by a blind volunteer who took this on as the thing he could contribute. Newspapers by the thousands were collected. Another volunteer spent months tearing the covers off of all the discarded library books from towns within a hundred miles to capture the paper.

Hats off to Kinkora. Faith, commitment, determination, and perseverance have paid off. The project has not only strengthened the congregation, but the community all around.



Edmonton's Hotel MacDonald against Skyline


17. Big Plans for Old Places-Heritage Canada Conference
Catherine Nasmith

Heritage Canada’s conference, Big Plans for Old Places might have been better titled the challenges of development in historic places.

Some national trends emerged. Many cities are struggling with out of scale development in heritage areas. Another issue was protecting everyday old buildings for the many important roles they play in communities.

Central Edmonton offered lessons in what happens when fine-grained mixed use historic fabric is razed for mega-projects. Edmonton’s new City Hall has a beautiful but absolutely dead plaza in front of it. The coffee bars adjacent are not enough to animate an area where no-one lives or shops. Key-note speaker Roberta Brandes-Gratz contrasted the plaza with Pioneer Square in Portland Oregon, designed by the same firm. The difference is the vitality of the surrounding city fabric. Portland enjoys small city blocks, and great downtown retail areas all around the square. As well Pioneer Square is connected to local transportation systems. Gratz made the distinction between Cities Reborn and Cities Rebuilt, two approaches to revitalization. Edmonton’s downtown is a city rebuilt, New York a city reborn. The key characteristic of the reborn is a vibrant street-life through all hours of the day.

Many Canadian cities enjoy such vitality but Toronto developer Margaret Zeidler warned of disaster about to strike the Queen West Triangle, an area that until now was enjoying rebirth as a major centre for Toronto’s arts community. At the heart of the Toronto debate is no. 48 Abell, a former factory now inhabited by artists, providing low cost housing and anchoring the neighbourhood. The Zeidler family had invested in the Gladstone hotel across the street, only to end up fighting major out of scale condominium re-development as reward for their success. Ms. Zeidler offered the best one liner of the weekend, describing the City of Toronto’s reluctance to designate 48 Abell as “The Noah’s Ark School of Conservation, ie. we already have some of those, so no need to protect this one.” Designation as a heritage structure is the only means available to protect such important fabric, but other tools are needed because of the important role that such old buildings play in communities.

Victoria, a city that was given one of the first Prince of Wales prizes, seems to be losing its luster with several inappropriately scaled developments in sensitive heritage areas.

The conference sessions ended with a blue ribbon panel of Canadian developers drawn from across the country. They described their projects, what draws them to heritage development, as well as the benefits and frustrations. Most have found ways to work without government finance, and a few chose to avoid assistance because of the cumbersome administration that comes with limited funding. However, Margaret Zeidler pointed to the many incentives available in U.S. cities that permit not-for-profits to participate.

A common theme was the love of working with historic buildings. Gene Dub of Edmonton, an architect turned developer confessed his business planning involved buying interesting property and praying. He has had a lot of success using that formula, no doubt because as an architect is able to make solid judgements on the future value of his properties.

Phil O’Brien of Vigor DMC talked about the marketability that heritage structures bring to his projects, but he looks for sites with development potential adjacent. “It is impossible to make a lot of money developing heritage buildings alone.” Others echoed the sentiment, but many were satisfied with more modest returns in exchange for the satisfaction of reclamation. Two of the projects presented had benefited from the now cancelled Canadian Historic Properties Incentive Fund. Neil Richardson of Heritage Property Corporation of Calgary indicated that CHPIF funding had been a critical component in making his business plan work, along with municipal assistance. He also found income from selling billboard space on his construction scaffolding….all ten stories of it.

One of the more interesting “frustrations” was a plea for clear heritage standards and processes. Neil Richardson said, “just tell us the rules, if it is facades fine, if it is whole buildings fine too, we just need to know what the rules are before we start”.

Chutzpah, confidence, and a sense of humour about the ups and downs of the process seemed to be the common denominator for these investors. Heritage Canada has committed to continuing the discussion on what is needed to make heritage development a more attractive option. The discussion so far was enlightening, and also very entertaining!

 

18. Havana Toronto Dialogues on Architecture
Alex Taranu

In early September Toronto hosted two lectures of one of the most prominent personalities in Cuban urbanism, architecture and heritage preservation, Professor Mario Coyula of Havana. The former Director of Planning of Havana, now Professor Emeritus, is the author of an impressive body of work including two landmark monuments and a reference book on Havana. He has taught and lectured at well know universities around the world.

The first lecture, hosted at the gracious Arts and Letters Club was titled ”Many faces of Havana” and presented an overview of Havana’s urban and architectural evolution toward the rich mix of astounding architecture, heritage, landscape and people that makes it on of the most fascinating cities in the world. Highlighting the huge problems that redevelopment and preservation encounter in his city, he also presented a critical view of the most recent urban developments and the open questions that Havana’s future presents.

This lecture was sponsored by Ontario Professional Planners Institute (OPPI), Toronto Society of Architects (TSA) and DuToit Allsopp Hillier.

The second lecture, hosted at The University of Toronto’s Munk Centre and titled "The Sour Trinquenium and the Dystopic City. Autopsy of a Utopia" summarized the city’s rich history and creativity in architecture and urbanism. Professor Coyula focused this time on a grey period of recent history when the initial enthusiasm and energy of the creative years of the early sixties were suffocated by bureaucracy and dogmatism, with a significant impact on the city’s architecture and urbanism.

This lecture was sponsored by ICOMOS (International Committee of Monuments and Science) Canada, the University of Toronto Latin Studies Program, Catherine Nasmith Architect and Ventin Architects.



Deer Park United, St. Clair Avenue


19. Uncertain Future of Deer Park United
Mike Filey

Located near the busy St Clair Ave. East and Avenue Road intersection pretty little Deer Park United (formerly Presbyterian) Church faces an uncertain future. Erected 1911-13, when this part of Toronto was totally residential, the area has changed. Recently, the few members of the congregation who were left agreed to vacate the old building and now the question is will another congregation come to the building's rescue. Perhaps a sympathetic reuse can be found as the nearby Imperial Oil site is redeveloped. Or will Deer Park United simply join the hundreds of other Toronto landmarks now seen only in picture books?

 

20. Section 37 and Heritage Postponed to November
Richard Longley

The discussion of Section 37 to fund Heritage Conservation District Studies and Avenue Studies was postponed until the Planning and Growth Committee meeting on Thursday, Nov 1, pending Adam Vaughan’s negotiations with councillors and community groups who remain opposed.

Anyone who would like to mail, email or present their meetings to the committee at the Nov 1 meeting should contact Merle MacDonald

<mmacdona@toronto.ca> before noon on Oct 31, 2007.

Richard Longley
416-961-2766



SOS-Églises supporters rally around Saint-Joachim church


21. A seven-year struggle brings results in Lakeshore

The Municipality of Lakeshore in South Western Ontario has been the site of a 7 year struggle by  two small rural communities to conserve their architectural heritage: two century-old village churches after they were replaced by a new church built on farmland outside the communities.  The buildings are located in the French-Canadian villages of Pointe-aux-Roches/Stoney Point (Annonciation church) and Saint-Joachim (Saint-Joachim church).

The campaign has been led by  SOS-Églises, a group  of residents led by David Tremblay, a former mayor, who proposed in 2002 that the two buildings owned by the Diocese of London be designated heritage sites.. 

To counter the proposal after receiving a letter of opposition from the Diocese, Lakeshore Council  adopted a policy whereby proposals for heritage designation would only be accepted if they came from the building owners themselves.  SOS-Églises challenged this decision at the Ontario Divisional Court level.  The Court declared the "owners' only need apply" clause was contrary to the intent of the Ontario Heritage Act, and the municipality was ordered to consider SOS-Églises' proposal

Finally in the Spring of 2006, Lakeshore Council announced its intention of  fully designating Annonciation church.  As for the 125 year-old Saint-Joachim church, the designation would only apply to its location (land), the steeple and the War Memorial in front of  the church.

Sos-Eglises and ACO appealed the partial designation intention of the  Saint-Joachim church  to the Ontario Conservation Review Board.

The Diocese appealed the full designation of Annonciation to the same provincial Commission.

In June 2007, Board hearings were held in L:akeshore.

The Board released its report in late August. It recommended that the Town of Lakeshore designate fully both churches.

Municipal administration recommended maintaining the original municipal intention, but on September 25, by a vote of 7 -1, Councillors agreed to  fully designated the two buildings in their entirety.

This decision is subject to appeal to the OMB by the Diocese of London.

For further information SOS-Églises, visit http://www.soseglises.com

  
LINKS : Issue No 104 October 15, 2007
 

22. Globe and Mail: Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs
John Bentley Mays

117God's greatest gift to Jane Jacobs, and, indirectly, to 20th-century Toronto, was a man named Robert Moses.

The public-works czar of New York City from 1934 until his fall from grace in 1968, Mr. Moses despised Gotham's old, established neighbourhoods and happily destroyed them when they got in the way of the huge roads he loved to ram through the city. He was not an original thinker, but he was an idealist, obsessed by the modernist notion that the future of cities belonged to the car.

He cowed and ran rough-shod over bureaucrats, politicians and community groups to get what he wanted: sweeping schemes for slum clearance, public housing, parks and playgrounds, new bridges and tunnels and roadways, and much else.

In his heyday — the Depression years to about 1950 — few people dared oppose him. Those who did, he ridiculed (in his words) as "partisans, enthusiasts, crackpots, fanatics or other horned cattle," and crushed them with a well-oiled publicity machine and by sheer political power.

Mr. Moses's usefulness to opponents such as Ms. Jacobs lay in his pugnacity, and in his public image, increasingly popular through the 1950s, as the incarnation of all that went wrong with post-war urban development. As such, he helped inspire the razor-sharp polemical edge of Ms. Jacobs's 1961 book The Death and Life of Great American Cities.

Ms. Jacobs's famously successful fight (alongside other women whom Mr. Moses dismissed as "a bunch of mothers") to stop the proposed destruction of Greenwich Village's Washington Square in the 1950s honed her talents as a brilliant scrapper.

click here for the URL




23. Globe and Mail: The architecture of Paul Raff
JOHN BENTLEY MAYS

A blend of muted stone and shimmering glass

Toronto architect Paul Raff is an artist of light. He loves it with the passion of those old-school modernists who built houses of glass, and he celebrates sunshine in every project he undertakes.

But unlike some pioneering minds of the modern movement in residential architecture, who liked to invite direct sunlight into every nook and cranny, Mr. Raff is interested in the subtleties of light — the infinite variety of ways it can be modified and modulated to create aesthetic effects, the ways it can be shaped. The result, as we have it in the luxury houses he has designed in Thailand and Toronto, is a distinctively poetic modernism, freed from starkness and too-great simplicity, yet loyal to the clarity of the best progressive residential architecture.

A beautiful new house by Mr. Raff in Toronto's posh Forest Hill neighbourhood is an excellent instance of what I'm talking about. In its basic layout, this building is not radically different from any other family home up and down its shady street. Entering the front door, the visitor finds the living room off to the left and the dining room to the right. The stairway to the upper levels lies ahead, with a spacious kitchen completing the ground-floor ensemble of rooms.

click here for the URL

 

24. Treehugger: Accident at Simcoe Hotel
Lloyd Alter

Demolition by Stupidity

Designated an historic structure, the Simcoe Hotel "was built in 1887 by Charles Ayre, who operated the facility as a small hotel which served the working-class neighbourhood “Riverside” (now part of Leslieville). The building is architecturally notable. It is a good example of a neighbourhood hotel that is distinguished by its pattern of brickwork, bay windows, and a corner entrance." Not noted in its designation is the fact that it was also famous as one of Toronto's first gay leather bars....

click here for the URL

 

25. St. Thomas Times-Journal - Alma College Vote in Question
Kyle Rea, forwarded by Rob Hamilton

Was Alma vote valid?

St. Thomas councils decision to clear the way for a demolition permit for Alma College at a closed-door meeting last Thursday may be null and void, according to the Ontario Municipal Act. In a 5-2 vote last Thursday, council voted at a special, in-camera meeting to grant a demolition permit to Alma Heritage Estate, owned by the Zubick family of London, Ont. The case is currently before the Ontario Municipal Board, which has the final say on the matter. Under the Ontario Municipal Act (2001), section 244 states, No vote shall be taken by ballot or by any other method of secret voting and every vote so taken is of no effect. And under section 239 (5), a meeting shall not be closed to the public during the taking of a vote.

click here for the URL



Alma at the turn of the Century


26. London Free Press: Alma College to be demolished
PATRICK MALONEY

Alma slated for demolition

Critics are fuming that St. Thomas council struck a deal with the historic school's owner.

The final bell is ringing at Alma College, with a deal between its owners and St. Thomas city council essentially clearing the way for the landmark's demolition.

Advocates of the historic former girls' school -- hailed as one of Canada's most endangered places -- were stunned by the deal and are fuming at councillors, who in turn blame the imminent loss of the 130-year-old structure on the province.

"The most disappointing thing . . . is the absolute unwillingness of the City of St. Thomas to protect this building," said Andrew Gunn of the Alma College Foundation, a group pushing for the site's preservation.

click here for the URL

Editor's Note: In 2006 ACO president Scott Valens wrote to the Minister of Culture recommending provincial designation. Ontario Heritage Trust prepared a report for the Minister which is confidential, but given the obvious merit of the building, presumably supports designation of the property. Alma College is listed on both Heritage Canada and ACO's most endangered lists.

 

27. Hoffmeyer's Woodworking

Antique Woodworking Mill Sebringville Ontario

Near St. Mary's this mill has been operating over a hundred years, using the same equipment. Full of belts, wooden pulleys and fine craftsmen it is a great place to order custom made wood elements for your heritage building.

They keep a stock of old wood, and old glass to make/restore historic windows.

It is open as part of the St. Mary's/Stratford Doors Open, and of course is always open to its customers.

click here for the URL




28. Globe and Mail: Arson in Cannington

Fire marshal investigating two church blazes

Cannington -- The Ontario Fire Marshal is investigating fires that destroyed two churches early yesterday in the small community of Cannington, northeast of Toronto.

Residents are expressing outrage at a series of blazes in a six-block radius, which appear to have been ignited around 4 a.m. Durham police say a number of vehicles and neighbouring restaurants were also damaged.

One of the buildings destroyed was a 150-year-old church on the town's main street.

click here for the URL




29. New York Times: Levittown Anniversary
forwarded by Adam Sobolak

Change Blurs Memories in a Famous Suburb

LEVITTOWN, N.Y., Oct. 9 — Sixty years ago this month, the first families moved into this suburban outpost, and soon there were 17,447 houses that as the song “Little Boxes” noted derisively, were “all made out of ticky-tacky, and they all looked just the same.”

The Cape Cods that first became available in 1947 — with four rooms, one bathroom and among other modern amenities a Hotpoint electric range in every kitchen — were offered for $6,990, and 800-square-foot ranch homes went for $7,990.

These days, the little boxes have been individually renovated, remodeled and enlarged beyond recognition. A decade ago, there were perhaps 200 unaltered Levitts left, but only a handful remain today. Even the Smithsonian Institution has been unable to obtain one to display.Change Blurs Memories in a Famous Suburb

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Dwight James Baum Papers, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library


30. New York Times: Architecture of Dwight James Baum
TUCK STADLER, forwarded by Alex Taranu

Architect's Legacy: Durable and Desirable Homes

IN 1931, as a home-building boom in America was giving way to the Depression, President Herbert C. Hoover summoned Dwight James Baum of the Bronx to the White House and awarded him an architectural Oscar.

It was a gold medal sponsored in part by the American Institute of Architects. The citation was for "best small-home design from 1926 to 1930."

The three-bedroom Greek Revival house that brought the architect the medal was built in the Fieldston section of Riverdale in the northwest Bronx for $10,000 for Dr. Francis Collins.

Another doctor's family bought it in 1981 for $210,000. The agent who handled the latest sale estimates the home would now sell for more than $500,000.

The biggest cluster of Baum houses is in Fieldston, a woodsy, rocky area of less than a square mile containing about 250 homes. John Brown, vice president of the 75-year-old Robert E. Hill agency, believes a third of the homes there were designed by Baum "in whole or in part."

click here for the URL

Editor's Note: After reading this piece, forwarded by Alex Taranu, I googled Baum. He left an impressive and prized legacy. In Toronto, we don't know our residential architects as well, but the work of developer Home Smith with his chief architect T.G. Mueller and others at Kingsway Park in Etobicoke seems similar in scope and quality to Fieldston which is a Historic District in New York. Anyone want to take on the challenge of writing the book on Toronto's residential architects?




31. New York Times: Asylum Converts to Housing Project
BETH GREENFIELD, forwarded by Adam Sobolak

At Home in Infamous Surroundings

DANVERS, Mass IF the walls of Chris Bencal‚s apartment could talk, they might actually scream. That‚s because the 1878 building was the longtime home of the Danvers State Hospital ˜ formerly called the State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers ˜ infamous for allegations of abuse and neglect that prompted its closing in 1992.

But that image changed for the good with the arrival of AvalonBay Communities, a developer that since 2005 has been transforming the property into a collection of luxury residences.

Just as the 1970s and 1980s saw an endless number of former factories converted into living spaces, the last decade has seen more improbable buildings ˜ shuttered asylums, hospitals and even prisons ˜ transformed into apartments and condominiums. Concerns that these buildings, with their murky pasts, might scare off potential buyers are quickly being put to rest.

AvalonBay ˜ which bought the state-owned Danvers site for $11.4 million and has invested another $72 million into its transformation ˜ had a hunch the property would be alluring to buyers. „We were attracted to the site because of the quality of the real estate,‰ said Scott Dale, the vice president of development. „It is, quite simply, a beautiful piece of land that overlooks Boston.‰

Most of the Danvers compound ˜ originally designed by Thomas Kirkbride, a 19th-century doctor renowned for his designs of mental hospitals ˜ was razed to make way for new buildings. But part of one structure ˜ a brick Gothic masterpiece with soaring sharp angles and spires ˜ has been restored.

click here for the URL

Editor's Note: Think Toronto's Riverdale Hospital....



National Assembly Bangladesh Viewed across Man Made moat


32. Globe and Mail: Louis Khan's National Assembly in Bangladesh
LISA ROCHON

A modern fortress, as light as transcendence

In a country ground down by poverty, newly ravaged by floods, and living under military rule, Louis Kahn's masterwork, the National Assembly of Bangladesh, remains a monumental meditation on humanity, with the power to move both body and mind

1DHAKA -- At midnight, before getting to the haunting moon-eye of the National Assembly, I drive from the Dhaka airport past market vendors asleep in their enormous woven baskets, past rickshaw drivers finally pulled over for the night, past piles of freshly cut bamboo running 10 metres long. There is evidence, between the crush of tumbledown buildings, that the original deltaic city of water and lush greenery still survives despite the fact that Dhaka now accommodates some 14 million people. In their apartments, in the slums, on the sidewalks, families prepare to lie down for the night. The air is drenched in humidity, the sky bruised black and blue.

I am not expecting the moon-eye. I am expecting the monumentality, yes, and the kind of epic design that would allow a modern citadel belonging to a young democracy to rise out of a lake. Driving through the streets of Dhaka in the middle of the night, I steady myself for evidence of the architectural courage that belonged, could only belong, to the American genius Louis Kahn. He lived in Philadelphia, but he occupied the cosmic world.

And, beginning in 1963, he imagined a great, ordering architecture for one of the most desperate countries in the world. Surely there was Western benevolence at play, an American hero come to civilize the dirty, developing nation. But, the hunches, the images from books and magazines, all of my preconceptions dissolve when I am finally confronted by the National Assembly and its enormous circular window lit like the colour of equanimity. The moon-eye fixes its gaze across the reflecting waters and the surrounding parkland. It communicates a meditation on humanity, not to do with pointed questions or definitive answers, but offering something waxing and surrendering. Everything I have learned about this masterpiece of Kahn's, everything I had previously concluded about this modern wonder of the world, will have to be learned all over again.

What I'm about to discover is that Kahn's masterwork stands apart from the rest. It is not a luscious seduction like the work of Frank Gehry. It is not geometric volumes sent hurling into the air by the likes of Zaha Hadid or Daniel Libeskind. Nor does the National Assembly embrace luminosity the way Renzo Piano or Norman Foster do. Kahn's work in Dhaka moves the body and the mind. Simultaneously. Like no other.

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Editor's Note: This article is in Globe Insider and will require fee payment to read.



Museum of Modern Literature


33. Globe and Mail: David Chipperfield takes Stirling Prize for Architecture

German museum wins prestigious Stirling Prize for architecture

LONDON — Britain's most prestigious architecture prize was awarded Saturday to Germany's Museum of Modern Literature, a classically influenced building of concrete, stone and wood.

Designed by David Chipperfield Architects, the museum opened last year in Marbach, southwest Germany. It houses Friedrich Nietzsche's death mask and original manuscripts including Franz Kafka's “The Trial” and Alfred Doblin's “Berlin Alexanderplatz.”

Judges of the Stirling Prize award described the museum as “simultaneously rich and restrained” and praised the architects for delivering style on a relatively small budget of about $17-million.

The judges called the building as “a small Acropolis” overlooking the River Neckar valley. Praising the subtly lit room holding the museum's permanent collection, the panel said there was “a particular theatricality about this space, as though the reflections, refractions and multiple shadows from the small intense lights collectively represent the soul of the German imagination.”

The $40,000 Stirling Prize is presented by the Royal Institute of British Architects. The winner must be a RIBA member, but the building can be anywhere in the European Union.

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SUPPORT : Issue No 104 October 15, 2007
 


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