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Student Work/ Invisible Landscape: Toronto’s Hidden Natures

December 1, 2015 Posted by Sneha Sumanth Articles, Undergraduate Work, Work

In the summer of 2015, a second year studio at the Waterloo School of Architecture investigated, through design and discussion, the relationship of building, landscape and urban networks. The studio aimed to design for Toronto’s various ecologies; inhabitation, mobility, natural systems, infrastructures and cultural and social structures. The site of study was the Don Valley, a ravine in Toronto that forms part of the Don River watershed. This series is a collection of selected projects from the studio.

Proposal by Michelle Lin | Studio Coordinator : Lola Sheppard

axo of site-small

SITE AXONOMETRIC

Walk in the Forest

Cemetery configurations are a reflection of its society. Currently, the most prominent cemetery style is an organized grid that easily guides visitors in marked grassy fields and cement sidewalks. The design is heavily influenced by suburbia, however space is now valued more, and burying bodies needs to be more efficient and economical.

There is a resurgence of green burial, a practice to decompose bodies naturally in a forest rather than contain the human body in non-decomposable materials.

The narrative begins with a refurbished greenhouse, and a public cafe. A dense forest cover starts and unravels the thick concrete walls that grapple deep into the hillside.  The first space is a small garden center that offers flowers for loved ones. The building transitions into funeral homes on the lower levels, built further into the hillside. A pathway leads the visitor deeper into the forest and a small chapel rests on top of the hill. The interior and exterior paths are long, narrow, occasionally diverging into reflection spaces, allowing visitors to experience solace in a reclaimed forest.

plan 0m

FLOOR PLAN

section of entrance-small

SECTION OF ENTRANCE

section of chapel

SECTION OF CHAPEL

view into the chapel

VIEW INTO THE CHAPEL

model-gif

Sneha Sumanth
+ postsBio

Sneha Sumanth is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. Her role in BRIDGE involves overseeing the website and publications. Her thesis work looks at the relationship of energy and architecture in the offshore infrastructure of the Santa Barbara Channel in California.

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    Teaching Architecture / Terri Meyer Boake
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    Call for Submissions: Living Architecture Systems Group
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    Master Works 2016
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    Call for Submissions: Water_On Exhibition
Tags: BurialCemeteryDon ValleyForestFuneral HomeGarden Center

About Sneha Sumanth

Sneha Sumanth is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. Her role in BRIDGE involves overseeing the website and publications. Her thesis work looks at the relationship of energy and architecture in the offshore infrastructure of the Santa Barbara Channel in California.

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Student Work/ Invisible Landscape: Toronto’s Hidden Natures

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Student Work/ Invisible Landscape: Toronto’s Hidden Natures

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Nov 23, 2015

As part of a series of selected projects from this past summer's 2B studio (ARC 293), Alexandra Sermol proposes SHROOMS R US, a proposal that addresses ground and runoff water contamination in the Don River Valley. This intervention focuses on remediation through the production of mushrooms; within which a network of cells, called mycelium, filter heavy metals and other contaminants out of ground water. The system engages a sectional relationship of the site, enabling proximities, movements and growing environments.

Student Work/ Invisible Landscape: Toronto’s Hidden Natures

Student Work/ Invisible Landscape: Toronto’s Hidden Natures

Nov 16, 2015

As part of a series of selected projects from this past summer's 2B studio (ARC 293), Felix Yang proposes Don Valley Expandables - a connected series of heterogeneous experiences along a recently abandoned 5 kilometer rail line known as the Don Branch of the Canada Pacific Railway. This proposal connects the Don Valley Watershed on a seasonal basis, with pieces of temporary infrastructure will pieces of temporary infrastructure acting as catalysts for cultural experiences and further intensifications of the site.

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