Finalists' Designs for Canadian Canoe Museum Unveiled
The team of Bing Thom Architects of Vancouver and Lett Architects of Peterborough (All images courtesy of the Canadian Canoe Museum)
The Ontario-based museum has unveiled the designs of five architects/teams in a two-stage competition as part of their relocation to the Parks Canada Peterborough Lift Lock National Historic Site on the Trent-Severn Waterway.
The five designs were unveiled during a public meeting on September 23rd, four months after the non-profit Canadian Canoe Museum announced the six finalists: Kohn Pedersen Fox, New York; Heneghan Peng Architects, Dublin; team of Bing Thom Architects, Vancouver, and Lett Architects, Peterborough; team of Provencher_Roy, Montreal, and NORR, Toronto; team of Patkau Architects, Vancouver, and Brook McIlroy, Toronto; 5468796 Architecture, Winnipeg. All but the team led by Patkau Architects submitted designs.
The project, which would form a collaboration between Parks Canada and The Canadian Canoe Museum, would be an 80,000 sf building with space for a gift shop, a restaurant and a meeting room facility to accommodate up to 250 people. There is no timeline indicated on when a decision will be made, but people can comment on the designs via the museum's website.