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Canadian Modernism (just don't mention the 'b' word)

Anything but boring: exploring one of the 'architectural world's best kept secrets'
Moriyama & Teshima, Waterloo Regional Museum, Kitchener, Ontario. The museum takes reference from the Mennonite heritage of the area, including such contemporary quirks as the coloured ‘quilt’ façade and using timbers from razed barns as interior wall finishes.
Moriyama & Teshima, Waterloo Regional Museum, Kitchener, Ontario. The museum takes reference from the Mennonite heritage of the area, including such contemporary quirks as the coloured ‘quilt’ façade and using timbers from razed barns as interior wall finishes.


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From multi-story carparks that double up as sports fields and vast display boards to the inventive transformation of a 1980s car showroom into a centre for crime scene investigation, contemporary Canadian architecture is anything but dull.

Practices such as gh3 architects, Paul Raff Studio and Moriyama & Teshima are taking up the baton from an older generation that worked in the '80s and '90s to develop a rigorous and restrained style born out of early 20th century European architecture, to bring a new, refined sense of design to every area of the built environment, from holiday cottages to worship space.

 

Follow the link to Wallpaper* for a guide to Canadian Modernism and the work of Canadian architects making their mark today


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Wallpaper*/Moriyama & Teshima