OAA Announces Selections for SHIFT2021 Challenge
Five projects exemplify how architectural thinking can respond to today's need for greater economic, environmental and social resiliency.
The Ontario Association of Architects’ (OAA) biennial SHIFT Challenge event celebrates five ideas that “exemplify how architectural thinking is uniquely positioned to respond to the critical concept of resiliency.”
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As part of its Virtual Conference Week, the OAA will host a free event next month to recognize a selection of innovative ideas submitted by active OAA members. Members were asked to explore the intersection of architecture and resiliency, be it physical, economic, environmental, cultural, social, virtual, or spiritual.
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“Whether in a literal sense or in a figurative one, the concept of resiliency involves flexibility, inherent strength, and elasticity. It is a quality in objects to hold or recover their shape; it is an ability in people to stay intact in the face of challenges or to rebound quickly from difficulty. The goal was to propose innovative, yet practical and feasible ideas that advance design thinking at scales from small spaces to entire ecosystems,” says the OAA.
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The online event, open to the public through the OAA’s YouTube channel, begins at 4:30 pm on Thursday, May 20 with short introductions of each of the five ideas selected by this year’s jury of design and planning experts.
The honorees for this year’s SHIFT Challenge are:
- Temporary Foreign Worker Communities: This holistic design approach illustrates the possibilities for healthy, nurturing, and adaptable living spaces for those responsible for helping ensure Ontario’s food supply (team led by architect Gordon Stratford).
- Mining Scars of Single Industry Communities: The Lakeshore Basin: The phased remediation of a mining basin in Kirkland Lake, Ont., shows how to transform an industry relic into a sustainable and thriving community resource (team led by intern architect Holly Sutton).
- Ontario Place: On-to-our Next Adventure: This plan to preserve the provincial landmark public space supports the needs of a new generation of communities (team led by M.Arch, candidate Victoria Cardoso).
- K-Town: A Future: A bottom-up approach to revitalizing diaspora commercial strips in urban areas while maximizing multi-use opportunities (team led by architect Steven Fong).
- The Mini-Midrise: A new vision of main street midrise development can be achieved in cities, even on small plots of urban land (team led by architect Naama Blonder).
The Mini-Midrise. Team led by architect Naama Blonder.
Additional online events that showcase the individual SHIFT ideas, as well as a special digital publication, are planned for the fall.
To learn more about previous participants or find out how to participate in future SHIFT Architecture Challenges, visit www.shiftchallenge.ca.