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Vancouver: The Latest Architecture and News

Perkins + Will Design the World's Tallest Wooden Skyscraper for Vancouver

Perkins + Will have revealed a new design for the world’s tallest wooden skyscraper in Vancouver. Called Canada Earth Tower, the mass timber project is designed along the city’s Central Broadway corridor. Bruce Langereis, president of Delta Land Development, unveiled the company’s proposal to transform a 1.3-acre lot at 1745 West 8th Avenue with a project that could rise up to 40 floors. Canada Earth Tower aims to become a new precedent and benchmark for green building construction.

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Yew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio

Yew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio - Renovation, Stairs, Handrail, ColumnYew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio - Renovation, Kitchen, Facade, Countertop, Table, SinkYew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio - Renovation, Beam, Facade, LightingYew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio - Renovation, LightingYew House / Campos Studio + Tom Chung Studio - More Images+ 12

Vancouver, Canada

The World's Most Liveable Cities in 2019

For ten consecutive years, Vienna ranks first in the Mercer survey on cities with the best quality of life in the world. In this edition to the global ranking, eight Western European cities join the top ten, even when "trade tensions and populist undercurrents continue to dominate the global economic climate", as Mercer points out in its report.

Split Level House / D'Arcy Jones Architects

Split Level House  / D'Arcy Jones Architects - Residential, Stairs, Facade, Handrail, TableSplit Level House  / D'Arcy Jones Architects - Residential, Facade, Table, Lighting, ChairSplit Level House  / D'Arcy Jones Architects - Residential, Garden, FacadeSplit Level House  / D'Arcy Jones Architects - Residential, Kitchen, Facade, Chair, Table, CountertopSplit Level House  / D'Arcy Jones Architects - More Images+ 21

Vancouver, Canada

How Zena Howard Uses Design to Help Cities Heal

How Zena Howard Uses Design to Help Cities Heal - Image 3 of 4
The Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Image© Brad Feinknopf

This article was originally published on Metropolis Magazine as "Game Changers: Architect Zena Howard is Using Design as Urban Healing." Metropolis' annual Game Changers series highlights those in design who are pushing the field forward.

Transforming urban centers can be slow going when the process is rooted in community engagement. But within the next five to ten years, historically African-American neighborhoods in Charlotte and Greenville, North Carolina; Miami; Vancouver; and Los Angeles will experience major change, thanks to architect Zena Howard, who leads Perkins+Will’s cultural practice in North Carolina.

Herzog & de Meuron Release Final Design for Vancouver Art Gallery

The Vancouver Art Gallery has unveiled the final design for its 300,000-square-foot building designed by Herzog & de Meuron. Designed to serve the Gallery’s ever-expanding collection of art and educational programs, the scheme will offer “a global platform for Vancouver’s and Canada’s thriving arts scene and play a vital role in establishing this city as one of the world’s most foremost cities for arts and culture.”

The scheme has been designed as a sculptural, symmetrical, upright building infusing opaque and transparent surfaces. The stacked scheme sees a minimal mass at the bottom contrast with larger volumes concentrated at the top, allowing light and air to filter down to an active, open-air courtyard below.

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Studio Three / D'Arcy Jones Architects

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  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Artemide, Blomberg, Herman Miller, Magis, Meeting Table, +1

New Renderings Reveal Vancouver's 'Gateway Tower' Counterpart to BIG's Vancouver House

Shanghai-based JYOM Architecture and GBL Architects have released new renderings of 601 Beach Crescent, the 'Gateway Tower' counterpart to Bjarke Ingels Group's Vancouver House project. As the Daily Hive reports, developer Pinnacle International recently submitted its formal rezoning application to develop the vacant site on the north end of the Granville Street Bridge in downtown Vancouver. Conceptually, the tower was designed to replicate the motions of the dancing female form.

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UBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication

UBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication   - Research Center, FacadeUBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication   - Research Center, Stairs, Table, ChairUBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication   - Research Center, FacadeUBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication   - Research Center, Facade, DoorUBC Quantum Matter Institute / PUBLIC Architecture + Communication   - More Images+ 9

Vancouver, Canada

BIG's Relocated Serpentine Pavilion Nears Completion in Toronto as Landmark Tower Tops Out in Vancouver

The collaboration of Bjarke Ingels Group and Westbank are celebrating two milestones in Canada, as the topping out of their innovative Vancouver House coincides with the advanced construction of their relocated Serpentine Pavilion in Toronto.

The two BIG-designed structures, located on opposite coasts, have both been recognized for their architectural innovation. The LEED-Platinum Vancouver House was awarded the World Architecture Festival’s Future Building of the Year in 2015, while the “unzipped wall” is the first Serpentine Pavilion to embark on a multi-city tour of this kind, before ultimately landing in a permanent home on the Vancouver waterfront.

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Cambie Apartments / Haeccity Studio Architecture

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Ole Scheeren Unveils Design for High Rise 'Barclay Village' Project in Vancouver

Buro Ole Scheeren recently revealed their design for two new towers to be built between Davie and Robson Villages in Vancouver, Canada. Named “Barclay Village,” the project combines residential units (with 30 percent of the units reserved for social housing), a variety of public amenities, and green terraces. The design was inspired by the "texture and scale of the surrounding urban fabric and folds the typologies of the two historic villages."

The Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture

The Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture -           Boathouse, Beam, Handrail, Lighting, BenchThe Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture -           Boathouse, Facade, CoastThe Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture -           Boathouse, FacadeThe Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture -           Boathouse, BeamThe Dock Building / Michael Green Architecture - More Images+ 8

Vancouver, Canada

Drifter Way / Stark Architecture

Drifter Way / Stark Architecture - Renovation, Kitchen, Beam, Door, Table, Countertop, ChairDrifter Way / Stark Architecture - Renovation, Stairs, Handrail, BalconyDrifter Way / Stark Architecture - Renovation, Facade, ForestDrifter Way / Stark Architecture - Renovation, Door, Stairs, Facade, HandrailDrifter Way / Stark Architecture - More Images+ 13

Whistler, Canada
  • Architects: Stark Architecture
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  3200 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  BC Brick Supplies, Eames, Flos, Kaws, Ply Gem, +1

Aperture / Arno Matis Architecture

Aperture / Arno Matis Architecture - Residential, FacadeAperture / Arno Matis Architecture - Residential, Garden, FacadeAperture / Arno Matis Architecture - Residential, Facade, DoorAperture / Arno Matis Architecture - Residential, FacadeAperture / Arno Matis Architecture - More Images+ 14

Vancouver, Canada
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  98000 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Grohe, Miele, Kawneer, Lindahl Aluminum, Mapei, +2

UBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA

UBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA - Swimming Pool, FacadeUBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA - Swimming Pool, FacadeUBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA - Swimming PoolUBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA - Swimming PoolUBC Aquatic Centre / Acton Ostry Architects + MJMA - More Images+ 12

Vancouver, Canada

Pause / DBR | Design Build Research

Pause / DBR | Design Build Research - Small Scale, Door, FacadePause / DBR | Design Build Research - Small ScalePause / DBR | Design Build Research - Small ScalePause / DBR | Design Build Research - Small Scale, Door, FacadePause / DBR | Design Build Research - More Images+ 7

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1000 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  ByNature, CBR Products, Environmental Protection Covers, Euro Birch, FilzFelt, +2

Even in Wealthy Cities, Architects Must Work for Social Justice in Every Way Possible

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Woodward's Redevelopment. Image © Bob Matheson

The "about" section of Vancouver-based studio Henriquez Partners Architects' website boldly states: "We believe that architecture should be a poetic expression of social justice." While empowering communities through socially conscious design is hardly a new concept, the term "public-interest architecture" tends to call to mind images of low-budget constructions. Rarely is it employed to describe the large, mixed-use projects that have come to characterize downtown Vancouver and Gregory Henriquez's firm.

However, experimenting with different models of social regeneration through architecture is the driving principle of the studio's work. Throughout the years, Henriquez has explored concepts such as affordable ownership and dignifying design for the city's disenfranchised communities. In partnership with local real-estate development and culture company Westbank, he has built a number of projects that seek to equalize living conditions for all in one of the world's most affluent and progressive societies. Here, in an exclusive interview with ArchDaily, Henriquez describes his firm's ethos, his stance on issues such as homelessness, affordable housing, and gentrification, and the lessons he's learned in over 30 years of heading Henriquez Partners Architects.