A WISH AND A WARNING
It is our responsibility to treat buildings from our past as pieces of our heritage and therefore reflections of our collective identity. Similarly, the buildings we erect should embody the ideals we wish to pass on to future generations. We should not accept anything less.
Oliver Community League was a model of community engagement, and still they lost their battle. Allowing an icon like the Molson Brewery to go the way of the Arlington and the Gem Theatre should be a crime.
For more information regarding Oliver Community League's fight to have a say in the Molson Crosstown redevelopment, and stay up to date on the project's progress, click here.
FOR THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE
Quoted from Challenges and Warts: How Physical Places Define Local Economies on Project for Public Spaces.
A VIEW FROM THE TRAIN
THE GREEN DOOR
LOST BUT NOT DEFEATED
Photo from Edmonton Wayfinding Project
SPACETIME COLLABORATION
MIGRATIONS
AIRPORT ROAD
CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN
OPEN SOURCE
RIVER CITY
TENT CITY
HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT
NATURE RESERVE
In an alley behind Jasper ave between 105th and 106th Streets, there exists a park so tiny it seems absurd. It is nothing more than a little wrought iron fence surrounding a patch of earth with one bench and one giant trunk. The gargantuan Horse Chestnut Tree is registered by the Heritage Tree Foundation and has been around since 1920.
WALL WORSHIPPERS
TILE TOWN
LANEWAY TO LA LA LAND
THE BELLS RING OUT
Walking along 96 Street in McCauley the other day, I really enjoyed the diversity of architecture all clustered together on this tree-lined road just north of Downtown. It has been a while since I have sketched for Back Words, so I made a little montage showing the range of styles from Byzantine and French Gothic Revival to Mid-Century Modern that make up Church Street, one of this city's hidden gems.