Ravine, Ontario Science Centre
WINNER OF A 2019 CANADIAN ARCHITECT PHOTO AWARD OF MERIT
James Brittain
Client: Moriyama & Teshima Architects
The winning photo by James Brittain
I?ve been thinking a lot lately about the value of revisiting architecture with a camera, and the specific things this can reveal. In my commissioned work, I?m usually asked to photograph a project at the moment of its completion. But I?m also fascinated by how buildings age, and how they?re inhabited and adapted over time. There?s also the evolving relationship between a building and its site, and wider contextual environment.
So I was very pleased when Moriyama & Teshima Architects asked me to re-photograph the Ontario Science Centre, along with several other of the practice?s early works in Ontario, to mark the anniversary of their 60 years in practice. Moriyama & Teshima encouraged me to approach the project with my own vision, and I tried to make pictures about the experience of the architecture?what it feels like to be there?rather than a description
of formal arrangement.
The Science Centre is set on a dramatic site in the Don Valley, with the complex?s concrete volumes spanning a wooded ravine.
The original 1960s concrete formwork is exceptional, but in the intervening years, trees and vines have grown up, and in several places made their way onto the exterior of the buildings.
Because of this, it?s now tricky to make wide views that show the whole ensemble. However, a walk around the outside reveals a lovely...
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canadian architect
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https://www.canadianarchitect.com/
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