St. Catherines is a Rust Belt city in the province of Ontario. Last November, in response to local demand for the arts, the city of 131,400 opened the four-stage FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre. That event was preceded last September by the unveiling of Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts.
The five-story brick-and-beam structure is an adaptive reuse of the Canada Hair Cloth Building, where coat linings and parachute silks were once made. Diamond Schmitt Architects led the repurposing of the original 1888 structure and the design of a 35,000-sf addition that supports a new 280-seat studio theatre.
The project consolidates the university’s fine and performing arts facilities in a single downtown location for 500 students.
All work had to meet the university’s strict Facility Accessibility Design Standards. A former raceway water channel for the looms was preserved as a pedestrian path. The contractor (the aptly named Bird Construction) even made sure not to disturb the chimney swifts that were nesting in the
old factory.
Tom Arben Photography.
PROJECT SUMMARY
Silver Award Winner | St. Catherines, Ont.
Building Team: Diamond Schmitt Architects (submitting firm, architect); Blackwell (SE); Crossey Engineering (mechanical); Mulvey & Banani International (electrical); AECOM (plumbing); Prism Partners (CM); and Bird Construction (GC).
Details: 94,000 sf. Construction cost: $45 million. Construction time: September 2012 to September 2015. Delivery method: Stipulated sum.
Related Stories
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
Patient friendly: The University of Chicago Medicine Center for Care and Discovery adds 203 new beds
Strict infection control and life safety measures were implemented to protect patients on other floors as work proceeded.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
The birthplace of General Motors
The automotive giant salvages the place from which it sprang, 131 years ago.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Mama mia! What a pizzeria!: It started as a bank nearly a century ago, now it’s a pizza parlor with plenty of pizzazz
The first floor features a zinc bar and an authentic Neapolitan pizza oven.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Honor Guard: San Francisco’s historic Veterans Building pays homage to those who served in World War I and other foreign wars
The Veterans Building houses the War Memorial staff, the city’s Arts Commission, the Opera’s learning center and practice/performance node, the Green Room reception venue, and the 916-seat Herbst Theatre.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 20, 2017
Eyes wide open: Students can see their new home’s building elements
The two-phase project revamped an opaque, horseshoe-shaped labyrinth of seven buildings from the ’60s and ’70s.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Gray lady no more: A facelift erases a landmark’s wrinkles, but not her heritage
The Building Team restored the granite and terra cotta façade and reclaimed more than 500 double-hung windows.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Elegance personified: New life for a neglected but still imposing retail/office space
The building was in such disrepair that much of the reconstruction budget had to go toward structural, mechanical, and electrical infrastructure improvements.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2017
Back to the '20s: Coney Island gets a new eatery reminiscent of the past
This project included the restoration of the landmark Childs Restaurant.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 15, 2017
Foyer fantastique: Faded images provide the key to a historic theater's lobby restoration
The restoration relied heavily on historic photos and drawings.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2017
Hallowed ground: A Mormon temple rises from the ashes of a fire-ravaged historic tabernacle
Parts of the tabernacle’s exterior shell were the only things that survived the blaze.