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Canadian civitas.


Environmentally responsive yet appropriately civic, this new library on the outskirts of Toronto demonstrates the significance of such buildings in the cultural and educational life of the nation.

The Richmond Hill Richmond Hill may refer to:

Places:
Canada
  • Richmond Hill, Ontario
  • Richmond Hill (electoral district), a Federal constituency
United Kingdom
 Central Library is the first completed building of a new Civic Centre which has been planned for a rapidly growing community situated on the outskirts of Toronto. Located on a prominent site high up on a ridge of land that is close to the original centre of Richmond Hill, it overlooks the town to the south and the city beyond. Within the framework established by a master plan for the site, it is this library which defines a new town green that will form the central public space at the heart of the Civic Centre. But also, and perhaps more importantly, it has established the concept of an environmentally responsive and civic architecture appropriate for the construction of a modern civilised Adj. 1. civilised - having a high state of culture and development both social and technological; "terrorist acts that shocked the civilized world"
civilized

educated - possessing an education (especially having more than average knowledge)
 city.

The library is an important public institution and educational facility. It is also one to which Canadians still attribute major significance in the development of new communities and the building of a nation. Consequently this particular building has been planned to create a definite physical presence in that community which it serves. Organised on three floors to house 170 000 volumes in a total of 7500 sq m of new space its internal planning reflects a rational ordering for the storage of information and a concern to create a series of generous, well-proportioned rooms where people can meet, browse, read and study. The building is comprised of two double volume spaces stacked one above the other. Each has an intermediate mezzanine. Public areas most frequently used - the children's library, meeting rooms, exhibition spaces, a coffee shop and the main reception areas - have been planned at street level fronting the town green with the main stacks, reading areas, reference rooms and a city archive above within the upper volume. Generous sweeping staircases provide obvious routes through the building and create direct visual connections between floors.

The design of this library has been developed in both plan and section so as to assertively express the physical order and form of both its organisation and construction. In this respect it not only builds on a distinguished typological tradition rooted in the work of Wren wren, small, plump perching songbird of the family Troglodytidae. There are about 60 wren species, and all except one are restricted to the New World. The plumage is usually brown or reddish above and white, gray, or buff, often streaked, below. , Labrouste and McKim, Mead & White but also explores issues related to the immediate physical environment and the setting of the building in a relatively harsh northern climate.

Unlike much recent architecture which is preoccupied merely with surface and shape, the design of the new Richmond New Richmond can refer to:
  • New Richmond, Indiana
  • New Richmond, Minnesota
  • New Richmond, Ohio
  • New Richmond, Wisconsin
  • New Richmond, Quebec
 Hill Library is based on a thoughtful consideration of space making which has been thoroughly integrated with the design of systems of structure and environmental servicing, The scheme is planned on a tartan Tartan, in the Bible
Tartan (tär`tăn), in the Bible, official title of two Assyrians sent to Hezekiah by Sennacherib and Sargon.
tartan, pattern
tartan: see plaid.
 grid which clearly designates served and servant spaces. A reinforced concrete reinforced concrete

Concrete in which steel is embedded in such a manner that the two materials act together in resisting forces. The reinforcing steel—rods, bars, or mesh—absorbs the tensile, shear, and sometimes the compressive stresses in a concrete
 structure, with major service runs accommodated between concrete beams Concrete beam

A structural member of reinforced concrete placed horizontally to carry loads over openings. Because both bending and shear in such beams induce tensile stresses, steel reinforcing tremendously increases beam strength.
 that form the minor bays and which in turn define the major spaces of the library, is clearly articulated and expressed throughout the whole building. It is a discipline which also defines where and how natural light is introduced into the building. The library has been designed using a limited palette of materials extremely carefully detailed in its assembly so as to underline these systems of order. Together these moves combine to suggest a definite sense of permanency per·ma·nen·cy  
n.
Permanence: tourists who were in awe of the permanency of the great pyramids of Egypt.

Noun 1.
 with a series of dignified spaces planned within clearly stated hierarchies.

In the design these systems acknowledge the different levels of the building with the development of an increasing lightness as you move into and up through the building. So large round mushroom-headed columns at the lower levels support clusters of four smaller columns above. Within a symmetrical order the plan has been developed with a distinct front and back while the north side is closed to provide protection from both the weather and the traffic noise from an adjacent busy road, a largely glazed glaze  
n.
1. A thin smooth shiny coating.

2. A thin glassy coating of ice.

3.
a. A coating of colored, opaque, or transparent material applied to ceramics before firing.

b.
 south-facing arcaded facade has been extended to create a distinct civic front to the library. There are fine views from many of the public rooms out over the city beyond. However this is a move which also allows the exposed thermal mass Thermal mass, in the most general sense, is any mass that absorbs and holds heat. In the architectural sense, it is any mass that absorbs and stores heat during sunny periods when the heat is not desirable in the living space of a building, and then releases the heat during  of the building to take full advantage of the location on a prominent south-facing site.

While natural light is harmful to print material it is also essential in creating spaces which are habitable habitable adj. referring to a residence that is safe and can be occupied in reasonable comfort. Although standards vary by region, the premises should be closed in against the weather, provide running water, access to decent toilets and bathing facilities, heating,  and humane. So brises-soleil and a system of finely detailed suspended cones within a series of circular rooflights help to filter or reflect the natural daylight which has been introduced into the heart of the Richmond Hill Library.

Contained within the explicit geometries of the structural frame these details introduce an intricate complexity and manipulation of daylight within the interior spaces of the building which recalls the work of Soane. Externally, vertical fins not only figure on the more closed north elevation but have also been designed to prevent low north-west lightfrom penetrating the reference reading room.

A concern for the design of buildings which support and encourage a public urban life while also taking account of climate and the rigour rig·our  
n. Chiefly British
Variant of rigor.


rigour or US rigor
Noun

1.
 of construction has been a consistent preoccupation in the work of this practice. It is a concern that has been clearly inspired by A.J. Diamond's direct experience of working with Louis Kahn Louis Isadore Kahn (born Itze-Leib Schmuilowsky) (February 20, 1901 or 1902 – March 17, 1974) was a world-renowned architect based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After working in various capacities for several firms in Philadelphia, he founded his own firm in 1935. . The design for the HUB Building at the University of Calgary in Edmonton, which A.J. Diamond developed in collaboration with Barton Myers Barton Myers, FAIA (born in Norfolk, Virginia, November 6, 1934) is an American and Canadian architect and president of Barton Myers Associates, Inc. in Los Angeles, California.  in the late '60s, promoted the idea that the physical form of the new student building be considered as a response to the problems of creating a setting for a public life in an extremely inclement in·clem·ent  
adj.
1. Stormy: inclement weather.

2. Showing no clemency; unmerciful.



in·clem
 climate. This scheme combined a mix of uses - housing, restaurants and facilities for students - within a linear building planned so as to form a new covered 'public' street that in turn linked two major centres of activity on the campus. It is a building which still works extremely well today and those same concerns are clearly reflected in the development of subsequent projects by A.J. Diamond, Donald Schmitt such as the Earth Sciences Centre for the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells,  and the Student Centre for the University in Ontario (AR May 1993). This specific response to climate and its effect on architectural form has also, by design, placed particular importance on the development of an improved urban life and it is this combination which distinguishes the work of these particular architects and establishes that work within a wider international significance.
COPYRIGHT 1995 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Richmond Hill Central Library in Toronto, Ontario
Author:Carter, Brian
Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:May 1, 1995
Words:1083
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