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Winding through the woods: to celebrate the cultures of the aboriginal peoples of Quebec and the natural landscapes in which they evolved, this pavilion in the Montreal Botanical Garden evocatively enhances and responds to the woods in which it is set.


Designed as a permanent commemoration of the great peace of Montreal The Great Peace of Montreal was a peace treaty between New France and 39 First Nations of North America. It was signed on August 4, 1701, by Louis-Hector de Callière, governor of New France, and 1200 representatives of 39 aboriginal nations of the North East of North America.  negotiated by the French and the aboriginal people in 1701, the First Nations Garden Pavilion in that city's Botanical Gardens A botanical garden is a place where plants, especially ferns, conifers and flowering plants, are grown and displayed for the purposes of research, conservation, and education.  creates a place where visitors can learn about the cultures of Quebec's 11 aboriginal nations and a venue for sharing First Nation wisdom.

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Confronted with the problem of designing a building for a diverse group of people whose existence was traditionally focused on the natural landscape, the architects chose first to study the land. Working with the aboriginal communities, they selected a site along a path in the Botanical Gardens that marks the boundary between two forests--one a conifer conifer (kŏn`ĭfûr) [Lat.,=cone-bearing], tree or shrub of the order Coniferales, e.g., the pine, monkey-puzzle tree, cypress, and sequoia. Most conifers bear cones and most are evergreens, though a few, such as the larch, are deciduous.  forest that was the ancestral home The Ancestral Home (Dom Ojczysty) is a political party in Poland, founded after the elections. It is a splinter of the League of Polish Families and led by Piotr Krutul.  of groups including the Naskapi, Cree, Innu and Algonquin and a second, made up of deciduous trees deciduous tree

Broad-leaved tree that sheds all its leaves during one season. Deciduous forests are found in three middle-latitude regions with a temperate climate characterized by a winter season and year-round precipitation: eastern North America, western Eurasia, and
, where the Micmac, Malecite, Abenaki and others had traditionally lived. Seeking to develop a scheme that captured the significance of this route and boundary while retaining existing trees, a long, thin ribbon of space defined by a roof was envisaged as a casting of the path. Warped to acknowledge land contours and the bed of an existing stream, this roof was cast in concrete and lifted high into the trees. Supported on slender randomly distributed columns of self-rusting steel, it forms a canopy threaded through the forest.

The new pavilion provides exhibition spaces with a conservation workshop, offices, storage, shop and small meeting room for educational programmes. To minimize the impact of this building in the landscape, museum workspaces and storage are below ground and the other public spaces grouped in two small blocks at each end of the canopy. The shop is housed within a light glassy pavilion above the museum workspaces. Screened with a mat of lashed tree branches that provide shading See Phong shading, Gouraud shading, flat shading and programmable shading.  along the south-west facade, it merges with the surrounding forest and exploits the ambiguity of inside and out. At the opposite end, a meeting room is made with walls of rough shuttered shut·ter  
n.
1. One that shuts, as:
a. A hinged cover or screen for a window, usually fitted with louvers.

b.
 concrete and self-rusting steel--materials that successfully embed em·bed   also im·bed
v. em·bed·ded, em·bed·ding, em·beds

v.tr.
1. To fix firmly in a surrounding mass: embed a post in concrete; fossils embedded in shale.
 it in the ground. These moves reduce the apparent bulk of the new building and leave the wisp-like canopy as the scheme's predominant element.

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The museum exhibits are planned in a series of large free-standing glass vitrines placed along the path and sheltered by the undulating canopy. Emphasizing the importance of the land, the designers have focused the exhibits on the raw plant materials from which everyday objects such as baskets, hats, toys and other household objects were traditionally made. These are collected to create an outdoor display that is beautifully organized, clearly legible leg·i·ble  
adj.
1. Possible to read or decipher: legible handwriting.

2. Plainly discernible; apparent: legible weaknesses in character and disposition.
 and carefully lighted. A birch bark canoe, up-ended and set against a translucent screen of birch bark, is viewed against the backdrop of the forest, alongside displays of other significant examples of everyday objects juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 with screens of cranberries, twigs and cones sandwiched between sheets of glass.

By carefully scrutinizing the form of the land and considering its particular significance to the First Nations' people of the region, this new pavilion radically transforms the programme of the building to create an educational focus and a distinct place in a fragment of forest at the heart of the city.

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COPYRIGHT 2004 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Carter, Brian
Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Oct 1, 2004
Words:550
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