World-renowned architects make their mark at 澳门六合彩开奖现场

World-renowned architects make their mark at 澳门六合彩开奖现场

The Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts is now open, hosting classes and performances, and those interested in learning more about how the building was created and designed will get the chance to hear from the lead architect. Craig Dykers of Sn酶hetta will be speaking at the Isabel on Friday, Sept. 19 from 7-8:30 p.m. The event, which is free and open to all, is organized by the School of Urban and Regional Planning.

September 17, 2014

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[Craig Dykers]
Craig Dykers, founding partner and a principal architect at Sn酶hetta, will be making a special presentation at the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts on Friday evening. (Photo University Communications)

They designed the pavilion marking the entrance to the memorial museum at New York鈥檚 World Trade Centre site, reimagined Manhattan鈥檚 Times Square, and have drawn up the plans for hundreds of innovative buildings around the world, from opera houses to spaces for learning. And with the opening of the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts on the Kingston waterfront, world-renowned architectural firm Sn酶hetta marks its Canadian debut.

Home to the Department of Film and Media, the Isabel will also provide learning and working space for the university鈥檚 other creative arts disciplines, while housing a film screening room, black-box theatre and a state-of-the-art concert hall.  Sn酶hetta, who worked in partnerships with Ottawa鈥檚 N45 Architecture when devising the building, took a careful look at the university鈥檚 plans for the intended structure, while also considering both the users鈥 experience and the way the building would integrate into the existing landscape.

鈥淔undamentally, we wanted a place that brought light into (the users鈥) experience,鈥 explained Craig Dykers, Sn酶hetta鈥檚 founding partner and a principal architect with the firm on a visit to Queen鈥檚 in late 2013. 鈥淲e wanted to establish a strong connection between the landscape and the character of the shore, as well as the broader environment.鈥

It was for the latter reason that Dykers and his team chose to work with limestone 鈥 a building material commonly used in the Kingston area 鈥 reimagining it in a more monolithic, or slab-like interpretation so that it might look like it was emerging organically out of the landscape. They also deliberately incorporated two historic limestone buildings that made up the original site.

鈥淲e like being able to provide a new perspective on a material that people are already very familiar with,鈥 said Dykers of his rationale. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like being married and still wanting to learn new things about (your partner), even though you鈥檝e lived together for so long.鈥

When it came to conceiving of the building鈥檚 jewel-like interior concert hall, Dykers and his team again turned to local limestone for inspiration. 鈥淲e came across a beautiful limestone outcropping on one of our early visits to Kingston,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淓ach layer seemed to depict a different event in the history of this place, laid down over the millennia.鈥

The solution was to reinterpret the limestone鈥檚 subtleties in warm wood, a material that would also pay homage to the instruments that would be highlighted in the acoustically perfected space. The architects also decided to create a hall that is ever so slightly asymmetrical 鈥 the result being a room with a slightly more organic feel.

That hall was formally animated for the first time on Saturday, Sept.13 when the JUNO-nominated band Timber Timbre took to the stage as part of the Isabel Goes Alt series. The Isabel鈥檚 classical series kicks off on Sept. 21 with a performance by the Afiara Quartet, who will be joined by pianist Maxim Bernard.

For Dykers and his architectural collaborators, it will an opportunity to see Isabel鈥檚 spaces 鈥 once only imagined 鈥 being inhabited and enjoyed by the audiences it was first intended for. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to be proud of something before the doors are open and people are using it,鈥 says Dykers. 鈥淧eople are excited about this building.鈥

The Isabel was made possible by a transformational gift from Alfred Bader (Sc鈥45, Arts鈥46, MSc鈥47, LLD鈥86) and his wife, Isabel (LLD鈥07) as well as the financial backing of the federal and provincial governments, the City of Kingston and additional philanthropic support.

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