
Contributors George Baird, OAA, FRAIC, is an architect, educator, and writer. He is a partner in Baird Sampson Neuert Architects, a former professor at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, and a former dean of the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design at the University of Toronto. Baird received the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Gold Medal in 2010, and is recipient of the 2012 AIA/ACSA Topaz Medallion for Excellence in Architectural Education. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2015 for his contributions to architecture. Brian Carter, Hon. FRAIC., is a graduate of Nottingham School of Architecture and the University of Toronto. A registered architect in the UK, he worked in practice with Arup in London prior to his appointment as Chair of Architecture at the University of Mich- igan. Subsequently he served as dean of the School of Architecture and Planning at the University at Buffalo, the State University of New York, where he is currently a professor of architecture. He is the designer of several award-winning buildings and author of numerous articles and books. Ian Chodikoff, OAA, FRAIC, is an architect and advocate for inclusive, healthy, and vibrant built environments. He holds degrees in architecture and urban design and was awarded the 2003 Druker Travelling Fellowship from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design to study the effects of transnational migration on patterns of urbaniza- tion. Since then, Ian has taught and published extensively and continues to investigate var- ious urban-related phenomena. He is a former executive director of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and a former editor of Canadian Architect magazine. Odile Hénault is a multilingual architectural critic and writer, trained as an architect at the Technical University of Nova Scotia. In 1983, she founded the award-winning Canadian architectural magazine Section a. She moved to Barcelona, Spain, in 1986 where she edited and published a book on Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion and contributed to inter- national publications such as Architecture (US) and L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui (France). She became president of the Ordre des architectes du Québec in 1994 and was instrumen- tal in establishing the institutional framework for the province’s architectural competi- tions program. A former director of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 523 (ACSA), she has been living in Quebec since 2004 and is a regular contributor to Cana- heritage, and the late-twentieth-century emergence of “ecological” architecture. He is the dian Architect magazine. author of Atlantic Modern: The Architecture of the Atlantic Provinces 1950–2000 (Dalhousie Architectural Press, 2004) and Living Lightly on the Earth: Building an Ark for Prince George Thomas Kapelos, OAA, FRAIC, is an architect and planner and is a professor in Edward Island 1974–76 (Dalhousie Architectural Press, 2018). the department of architectural science at Ryerson University. He has authored articles and books, and curated exhibitions on aspects of postwar Canadian architecture, includ- Sherry McKay is an associate professor in the School of Architecture and Landscape Ar- ing Competing Modernisms: Toronto’s New City Hall and Square (Dalhousie Architectural chitecture at the University of British Columbia (UBC), where she teaches architectural Press, 2015) and Interpretations of Nature (McMichael Canadian Art Collection, 1994), history and theory. Her present research focuses on postwar “urban housekeeping” and for which he received an Award of Excellence from the Canadian Museums Association. the class dimensions of modern apartment life. Two current book projects are a history Kapelos studied architecture at Princeton and Yale, and planning at the Harvard University of the UBC School of Architecture with Raymond Cole and a study of the design value Graduate School of Design. He is past president of the Society for the Study of Architec- of infrastructure with AnnaLisa Meyboom. She was the book review editor for Building ture in Canada, and a continuing senior fellow at Massey College in Toronto. Research & Information (UK) from 2010 to 2017, and editor, with Leslie Van Duzer and Chris Macdonald, of the series West Coast Modern House (ORO Editions with SALA, Elsa Lam, FRAIC, is editor of Canadian Architect magazine. She was the 2012 winner of UBC). the Phyllis Lambert Prize for writing in architecture, awarded for her doctoral disserta- tion “Wilderness Nation: Building Canada’s Railway Landscapes, 1885–1929,” completed at Marco Polo, FRAIC, is a professor in Ryerson University’s department of architectural Columbia University with advisors Kenneth Frampton and Vittoria di Palma. Lam studied science. He publishes extensively on architecture and design, and was editor of Canadian architectural history at McGill University and architectural design at the University of Architect from 1997 to 2003. His exhibition 41° to 66°—Architecture in Canada: Region, Waterloo. She has written extensively for architecture periodicals, as well as collaborated Culture, Tectonics, co-curated with John McMinn of the University of Waterloo, was select- on the editing and writing of several books on design history. ed to represent Canada at the 2008 Venice Biennale of Architecture. With Colin Ripley, Polo curated and wrote Architecture and National Identity: The Centennial Projects 50 Lisa Landrum, MAA, AIA, MRAIC, is an associate professor and associate dean (research) Years On, an exhibition and publication examining the role of Canada’s 1967 Centennial in the faculty of architecture at the University of Manitoba. She is a registered architect in Projects in the articulation of a national identity. the United States and Canada. Landrum earned her professional degree at Carleton Uni- versity and a master’s and doctorate in architectural history and theory from McGill Uni- Larry Wayne Richards, FRAIC, AIA/IA, is a Toronto-based educator and writer and re- versity. Her many publications examine architectural agency and representation, especially cipient of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada’s national Advocate for Architecture dramatic modes of representation implicit in the works and words of architects. Award. A graduate of Yale University, he taught at Dalhousie University and Nova Scotia Technical College, then served as director of the University of Waterloo School of Archi- Graham Livesey, FRAIC, is a professor in the Master of Architecture Program at the Uni- tecture from 1982 to 1987. He was dean of the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, versity of Calgary, where he teaches design, history, and urban design; he was the admin- and Design at the University of Toronto from 1997 to 2004, where he continues as Profes- istrative head of the program for nine years. He studied architecture at McGill University sor Emeritus. Books by Richards include CCA: Building and Gardens (MIT Press, 1989) and holds a doctorate from Technical University of Delft. He was a principal of Down + and University of Toronto: The Campus Guide (Princeton Architectural Press, 2018). Livesey Architects from 1995 to 2004. Livesey has served with a wide range of organi- zations and is currently a regional correspondent to Canadian Architect. He undertakes Colin Ripley, OAA, MRAIC, is a professor in Ryerson University’s department of archi- research in contemporary urbanism and modern architecture and recently coedited, with tectural science and was chair of the department from 2012 to 2015. He is a partner and di- Dr. Antony Moulis, a four-volume anthology on Le Corbusier (Routledge, 2018). rector of the critical practice RVTR. Since 2007, RVTR has been published widely and has received awards including the 2009 Canada Council Professional Prix de Rome in Archi- Steven Mannell, NSAA, FRAIC, is founding director of Dalhousie University’s College tecture. In 2014, Ripley published, with Marco Polo, Architecture and National Identity: of Sustainability. He is a practicing architect and professor of architecture. His research The Centennial Projects 50 Years On (Dalhousie Architectural Press), which accompanied includes twentieth-century waterworks architecture, the conservation of modern built an exhibition displayed at venues across Canada. 524 CONTRIBUTORS 525 Lola Sheppard, OAA, OAQ, is an associate professor at the School of Architecture at the University of Waterloo. She is a founding partner of Toronto-based firm Lateral Office. Her work and research have focused on architecture’s relationship to geography, territory, and emergent urbanisms, with a particular focus on arctic regions. She is the coauthor, with Index Mason White, of Many Norths: Spatial Practice in a Polar Territory (Actar, 2017). She was Italic page numbers awarded the 2012 RAIC Young Architect Award, and her firm has received the 2011 Emerg- refer to illustrations ing Voices Prize from the Architectural League of New York and the 2010 Professional Prix de Rome from the Canada Council for the Arts. 1x1 architecture, 329 Andrews, John and, 344–49 Montreal and, 349 5468796 Architecture, background of, 157 First Nations and, 357 Nova Scotia and, David Theodore, MRAIC, is an assistant professor in the Peter Guo-hua Fu School of 329 campus architecture Montreal and, 365, 368, 333–40, 342, 345, 352 60 Richmond East and, 111–12, 116, 120 371, 374 Ottawa and, 372 Architecture at McGill University, where he holds the Canada Research Chair in Archi- Housing Co-operative, Gund Hall and, 429 New Towns experiment Technical University of tecture, Health, and Computation. He received a doctorate in the history of architecture, 258–59, 264 interior streets and, 11 and, 357–66 Nova Scotia (TUNS) megastructures and, 157, prefabrication experi- and, 334, 342, 345 medicine, and science from Harvard University. An active design journalist and critic, he Aanischaaukamikw 159, 160, 179 ment and, 366–72 University of Toronto is currently a regional correspondent for Canadian Architect and a contributing editor at Cree Cultural Insti- Metro Centre and, 429 rethinking the domestic and, 340 tute, 130, 138, 140, 141 Newman and, 111 and, 356–57 Vancouver and, 345 Azure.
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