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A NEW VANCOUVER LANDMARK’S SCARLET SKIN AND SCULPTURAL FORM ARE MADE TO COMMAND ATTENTION

- WORDS _Timothy Taylor PHOTOGRAPH­S _Ema Peter

A new B.C. landmark is a study in scarlet

It’s impossible to miss the new Perkins+will project that has taken root in the public square at Vancouver’s Emily Carr University of Art + Design. It’s just so … red.

The building is anything but subtle, and that is precisely the idea. Designed by the local office of global firm Perkins+will, which worked closely with developer client Chip Wilson, the flower-shaped structure is meant to be what principal-in-charge Ryan Bragg describes as an “attractor.” Acting as a magnet for social congregati­on, it brings new vitality to the heart of the Emily Carr campus, which is itself key to the transforma­tion of False Creek Flats, the city’s former rail yards.

As the project designer, Perkins+will director of innovation Yehia Madkour employed Alucobond composite aluminum shingles to provide the Red Pavilion’s signature colour. The product was chosen for its colourfast coating, applied with a process that fuses two shades to create a shimmering surface that refracts light. Other colours were considered before settling on red, Madkour says, “but Chip felt this shade would be the best attractor.”

Beneath the off-the-shelf skin, the petals conceal structural innovation­s of which Madkour is understand­ably proud. From the start, he considered the pavilion a research opportunit­y, taking the idea of producing curvilinea­r timber structures of unpreceden­ted scale to the Autodesk BUILD Space in Boston. Prototypes were accomplish­ed using nail-laminated timber (NLT), which was computatio­nally configured in the shape of petals and fabricated using a five-axis CNC router.

With the NLT prototypes as proof of concept, Madkour worked with engineers to optimize the petals, ultimately settling on a waffle structure of curved glulam column beams with steel-plate splines, laminated strand lumber purlins and plywood sheathing. Ten petals were constructe­d by Spearhead architectu­ral fabricator­s in Nelson and transporte­d in sections to the site. Half the petals shape the interior, anchored to a concrete pad and leaning into a circular steel ring beam. The five

remaining petals are mounted to form the outer layer of the structure.

Entering the empty birch plywood–lined interior stirs the same sense of serenity that one suspects was intended for two other structures that this project may evoke: Hariri Pontarini’s Bahá’í Temple in Chile and Patkau’s Temple of Light at the Yasodhara Ashram near Kootenay Bay, B.C.; Madkour says he is aware of these works but that they were not a direct inspiratio­n. Be that as it may, those two structures were intended as places of worship, and Bragg and Madkour both describe the Red Pavilion as a place of “congregati­on,” which soon will be devoted to Vancouver’s own signal sacrament: coffee. Nemesis Coffee opens shop in the structure later this spring.

“It’s the best program we could have hoped for,” Madkour says of the new tenant. If drawing bees to flowers was the original idea, he’s also expecting this place to buzz. “It’s going to be a real destinatio­n when it opens,” Madkour says. “The serenity will still be there, but it’s going to be busy.” ca.perkinswil­l.com

 ??  ?? Soon to become a coffee shop, the Red Pavilion is a new landmark for the redevelopi­ng False Creek Flats neighbourh­ood.
Soon to become a coffee shop, the Red Pavilion is a new landmark for the redevelopi­ng False Creek Flats neighbourh­ood.
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 ??  ?? The pavilion comprises 10 double-curved petals constructe­d by architectu­ral fabricator Spearhead. Each is built with a wafflegrid structure supported by glulam column beams.
The pavilion comprises 10 double-curved petals constructe­d by architectu­ral fabricator Spearhead. Each is built with a wafflegrid structure supported by glulam column beams.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The interior is lined with overlappin­g strips of pale birch plywood. Overhead, a central oculus floods the space with natural light.
The interior is lined with overlappin­g strips of pale birch plywood. Overhead, a central oculus floods the space with natural light.

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