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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

[Misfit]Fit building in Toronto, Canada by Batay-Csorba Architects

 
February 19th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: v2com

[Misfit]fit is a new six-storey, 32,000 square foot boutique office building situated on a small vacant site in Toronto’s Liberty Village. Seeking to build upon the rich lineage of Toronto’s precast concrete history, the proposal  provides an alternative to the pervasive glass curtain wall project. The building’s program is comprised of four floors of flexible office space, retail at grade, and a rooftop sculpture garden/ event space.

Front Elevation, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

  • Architects: Batay-Csorba Architects
  • Project: [Misfit]Fit building
  • Location: Liberty Village, Toronto Ontario, Canada
  • Area: six storey 32,000 sft
  • Status: Design Development, 2017

Retail Space, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

As Liberty Village continues its redevelopment, it’s critical to ask the question: how does one add to this unique building fabric without simply producing what is there, or reverting to a glass office building which so brashly departs from the character of Liberty Village? To propose an answer to this, we looked both within the larger building context of Toronto and within the district itself.

Front Elevation, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

The first step to operating within the context of the site was to study Toronto’s precast concrete project and its history in the city’s development. Despite the prevalence of this construction method it’s been met with great apprehension; so often the mass-produced panels are organized in a highly rigid manner, producing a static pattern of solid and void. Designed with the intention of producing a continuous, modulated surface, the aesthetic ultimately results in a monotonous and monolithic volume. Combined with the weightiness of concrete, the building becomes static, and heavy – a dead weight.

Main Entry, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Looking through the lens of Liberty Village and its wealth of architectural character, we seek to revitalize the precast project. The brick details found within the historical factory buildings produce dual readings of continuity and discontinuity of surface, especially present around window and door openings, at rooflines, and along lines of vertical structure. Here, the complexity of coursing techniques becomes intensified, pronounced, and ornamental as bricks protrude and shift in a variety of ways. Importantly, these details depend on a certain balancing act between elements – there can be slippage, but not too much. These moments of activation are important in comparison to the dead weight common amongst traditional precast projects.

Corner Detail, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

While upholding the paramount value of precast concrete’s economy of repetition, the [Misfit]fit leverages advanced fabrication techniques and reusable moulds in order to move the project beyond just pure repetition. The panelling system focuses on three main characteristics: panel-to-panel discontinuity, stacking and repetition, and tenuous equilibriums. Individual panels are designed hermetically without regard for the overall aggregation or adjacent units. As panels are confronted with one another, their incompatibility is abrupt and glaringly obvious, allowing each element to be read independently against the larger mass.  Individual edges and profiles are pronounced, reading not as a singularity but as a rough stacking of objects that have found their equilibrium. Furthering this effect, the corner condition becomes emphasized as a location where panel profiles are fully exposed with discontinuities clear. Apertures are created with the removal of units, a process divorced from the stacking logic which allows for infinite flexibility. The overall aggregation is produced through a vertical repetition where each row is shifted in relationship to one another. Here, similar panels relate imperfectly but just enough to hold together an overall sense of movement. This process breaks decidedly from the traditional strategy of repetition and homogeneity in the precast project, as well as the contemporary parametric practice of continuous surfaces, both of which pursue the perfect match and produce the monolithic volume. Here the imperfect and tenuous characteristics of the misfit produce new perceptual, formal and spatial effects.

Roof Top Sculpture Garden, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

About Batay-Csorba Architects

Batay-Csorba Architects strives to create projects which engage their context, users, and the public realm. The practice is committed to creating transformative spatial experiences through the exploration of site, typology, materiality, and movement. Batay-Csorba’s work is dedicated to the construction of real spaces that engage people and place, and is based on the belief that architecture has a fundamental role in shaping how we experience the world. Each project is generated through a deep reading of the site in search of unexpected relationships that can both tie each project to a larger urban contribution and shape new perceptual experiences.

Construction Detail, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Ground Floor Plan, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Typical Floor Plan, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Roof Plan, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Site Plan, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Fabrication Procces, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

Panel Organization, Image Courtesy © Batay-Csorba Architects

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Categories: Building, Office Building, office Complex, Offices, Retail




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