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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.

Wilson School of Design in Richmond, Canada by KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

 
June 4th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

Our province is the perfect testing ground for technical apparel — you don’t have to go far to find inspiration…. Our vision is for B.C. to become the global hub for athletic performance apparel and recreational products, and the first step is to provide a place to cultivate design talent.” − Shannon Wilson With over 300 apparel companies, BC’s lower mainland is a centre of excellence for technical apparel design. The vision for the new Wilson School of Design at Kwantlen Polytechnic University is to be the preeminent school for this industry. The broader purpose of the University is to fuel the local economy by generating a steady pool of talent and expertise in the fields of interior design, fashion marketing, graphic design for marketing, product design, and fashion and technology. Indeed, one of the key strengths sighted by industry of KPU graduates is their facility with this array of disciplines. The design of the new school fosters interdisciplinary communication and collaboration by positioning flexible design studios, labs, open offices and shared collaboration spaces across all five floors.

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

  • Architects: KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication
  • Project: Wilson School of Design
  • Location: 5600 Kwantlen St, Richmond, BC V6X 3V8
  • Photography: Andrew Latreille
  • KPMB Team:

    • Design partner: Bruce Kuwabara
    • Associate-in-Charge/Project architect: Glenn MacMullin, Geoffrey Turnbull
    • Associate-in-Charge of Interiors: Carolyn Lee
    • Principal: Luigi LaRocca, Lukas Bergmark, Rob McKaye, Lucy Timbers, Danielle Whitely, Marcus Colonna, Dina Sarhane
    • Public Project Team: John Wall (design partner), Brian Wakelin (partner), Chris Forrest (project architect), Laura Killam, Christopher Sklar, Michael Thicke, Sabrina Hoeck, Susan Mavor, Scot Geib
    • Project Manager: Mark Bullen (Capex)

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

  • Consultants:
    • Structural: Fast + Epp
    • Mechanical: AME Group
    • Electrical, security & lighting: AES
    • Landscape: PFS Studio
    • Climate engineer: Transsolar
    • Civil: Core Group
    • Envelope: Morrison Hershfield
    • Acoustics: Daniel Lyzun & Associates
    • AV/Tech: MC2
    • LEED: Recollective
  • Square Footage: 60,000 s.f.
  • Month And Year of construction completion: January 2018

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

In a neighbourhood dominated by cars and parking lots, the new Wilson School of Design represents a major step towards a healthier urban fabric. Responding to the new Lansdowne SkyTrain rapid transit station, the building’s highly visible entry, framed by a covered porch, draws students and visitors into the campus and creates a new front door for KPU on Kwantlen Street. This new gateway dresses the stage for the future transformation of Richmond’s Lansdowne Mall into a vibrant mixed-use community, and, given time, the world centre for technical apparel design education.

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

Architecture and urban planning are rife with descriptions drawn from the soft arts, for example ‘creating a healthy urban fabric.’ These metaphors are important reminders that buildings, and cities, are simply extra layers of protection that we wear and should therefore be just as breathable and comfortable. Our primary line of containment – our skin –performs a complex array of functions that are critical to human life. Clothes establish a second skin that shields, represents, and even performs. Similarly, the exterior skin of the Wilson School of Design serves multiple functions, providing protection from weather; regulating levels of air, light, and temperature; radiating the life and identity of the school outward; and reflecting Richmond’s dramatic sky, symbolic of the creativity and optimistic futures held within.

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

Jane Jacobs observed that “new ideas need old buildings.” From New York to Hong Kong, artists, designers, and architects set up studios in historic industrial warehouse districts. When an existing stock of historic warehouses are not available to repurpose, we can still employ the attributes that make this building typology so attractive for housing design activities.

Image Courtesy © Andrew Latreille

The CNC-milled post-and-beam timber frame of the Wilson School adheres to the same robust, rational plan grid that affords traditional warehouses their exceptional versatility. This flexibility allows many different forms of occupation of the building, over a semester or across generations. A taut, glass curtain wall wraps the advanced wood structure. Varying degrees of reflectivity and transparency allow natural light into the majority of spaces while providing a responsible level of thermal resistance and mitigating glare and solar heat gain. Operable windows bring fresh air in while the central atrium acts as an exhaust plenum. Concrete floors provide radiant heating and cooling. In short, high ceilings, ample natural light, and fresh air provide student designers the headspace to dream, explore, test, and create. The project is on target to achieve LEED Gold certification.

As a signature gateway to KPU’s Richmond campus and producer of a sophisticated industrial workforce, the new Wilson School of Design represents a significant contribution to the vision and development of the MetroVancouver region.

Image Courtesy © KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

Image Courtesy © KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

Image Courtesy © KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

Image Courtesy © KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

Image Courtesy © KPMB Architects + Public: Architecture + Communication

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Categories: Building Campus, Educational Center, Educational Institute




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