Azure

Stark Beauty

A CEMETERY COMPLEX IN ALBERTA’S CAPITAL FUNCTIONS AS BOTH A PUBLIC AND PRIVATE MONUMENT

- WORDS _Simon Lewsen PHOTOS _Ema Peter

In 2012, the City of Edmonton put out a request for proposals for a new building at the South Haven Cemetery, southeast of downtown. That same year, Dwayne Smyth, a partner at the Vancouver firm Shape Architectu­re, lost his grandmothe­r and found himself reflecting on mourning and transience. The resulting project — the South Haven Centre for Remembranc­e, a 650-square-metre structure completed in collaborat­ion with Group2 and Pechet Studio — comprises offices, family rooms, meeting rooms and a field-services yard and garage where workers mix concrete, set gravestone­s and repair damaged plaques. The architectu­re is sensitive in every sense of the word: to place, to purpose and to the unique needs of the many people who visit the site.

Smyth grew up in Red Deer, Alberta, so the project offered him a chance not only to channel his grief through design but also to work in his home province. “It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y,” he says. Unsurprisi­ngly, then, the centre both complement­s and enhances its prairie locale. It is low and expansive like the landscape, and clad in dark engineered wood and hot-rolled steel that stand in stark juxtaposit­ion with the surroundin­g grasslands or snow. The roofline appears to rise out of the ground and then slopes upward, culminatin­g in a 13-metre-tall tower that’s visible for miles.

Out of respect for the bereaved, Smyth ensured that the administra­tive and custodial functions of the centre wouldn’t undermine the peaceful ambience. The public spaces sit at the north end beneath the tower, which channels light from a clerestory window into a large family room and hallway. The staff areas lie to the south, accessible through an inconspicu­ous doorway. Behind the offices, shop and garage is the field-services yard, 1.5 metres below grade and surrounded by an integrated fence that looks, from the outside, like an extension of the building. For Smyth, such discretion was key. “We modelled the entire 21-hectare cemetery,” he says. “We wanted to be confident that at no point on the site could you see inside the yard or spot the end of a backhoe peeking over the fence.”

Another challenge for the architect was creating a sense of sacredness in the absence of religious imagery. “The cemetery is non-denominati­onal,” Smyth explains, “so the symbolism had to speak to everyone.” The public section of

the building includes west-facing windows that frame a courtyard and the horizon beyond. Silkscreen­ed onto the glass is a white latticewor­k by Calgary-based artists Brendan Mcgillicud­dy and Jeffrey Riedl, which resembles an abstracted veil fluttering in the breeze. In the meeting rooms, elliptical pendant lights cast a spectral reflection onto the landscape. And the building itself, with its sunken interiors and looming tower, evokes a stone-capped grave. These flourishes suggest solemnity and transcende­nce in the most subtle of ways.

There’s one final symbolic element, which is deeply meaningful to the architect. The wall flanking the north end of the courtyard points toward downtown Edmonton. More specifical­ly, it points to a modest bungalow where Smyth’s grandmothe­r once lived. It’s a strikingly personal touch within an otherwise universal project — an intimate yet public monument to memory and grief overcome. shapearchi­tecture.ca

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 ??  ?? Wrapped in dark engineered wood and hot-rolled steel, the expansive South Haven Centre for Remembranc­e gracefully complement­s its semi-rural setting.
Wrapped in dark engineered wood and hot-rolled steel, the expansive South Haven Centre for Remembranc­e gracefully complement­s its semi-rural setting.
 ??  ?? ABOVE: The 13-metre-tall tower, further illuminate­d by an angular clerestory window, rises out of the structure as a beacon for the new centre.
ABOVE: The 13-metre-tall tower, further illuminate­d by an angular clerestory window, rises out of the structure as a beacon for the new centre.
 ??  ?? RIGHT: Honed limestone floors and Baltic birch built-ins with concealed lighting add an ethereal air to the lobby.
RIGHT: Honed limestone floors and Baltic birch built-ins with concealed lighting add an ethereal air to the lobby.

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