Asst. Prof. Piper Bernbaum on Montreal Holocaust Museum competition finalist team
October 5, 2022
Assistant Professor Piper Bernbaum was part of a design team with Pelletier de Fontenay + NEUF Architect(e)s that was shortlisted in an international architectural competition for the new Montreal Holocaust Museum.
The team was among four finalists selected by the jury out of 32 proposals from nine countries.
“It was an international competition with a budget of almost $30-million, so it is an honour to make it through to the last phase of the work,” says Bernbaum, who worked on the project from December 2021 to July 2022.
“It was an incredibly meaningful journey to think about how to build a place for Holocaust education, to consider what it means to make a building that acts as a memorial, and to challenge ourselves in proposing a space that can contribute positively to the future generations of Jewish communities in Montreal.”
The finalists each received $125,000 from the museum to further develop their projects in Phase 2 of the competition. The other three finalists were KPMB Architects + Daoust Lestage Lizotte Stecker, Atelier TAG et L’OEUF architectes en consortium, and Saucier+Perrotte Architectes.
Last July, after presentations by the four shortlisted groups, the nine-member jury selected the project by KPMB Architects + Daoust Lestage Lizotte Stecker as the winner.
The museum had invited architects to address the important issues of places dedicated to Holocaust remembrance and the education of future generations about the universal risks of racism, antisemitism, hatred, and indifference.
The entry by Pelletier de Fontenay + NEUF Architect(e)s is titled חַי, which translates from Hebrew as “the living” or “to life” and is pronounced Chai. It offers a civic space of openness for education, storytelling, and reflection.
Bernbaum served as a design consultant and engaged in design conception and feedback.
“We did workshop charettes as a team where we all worked together to talk through the design ambitions and symbolism,” she says. “I also offered feedback and information on Holocaust history, Jewish spatial practices, and cultural practices.”
Bernbaum sought to ground the design work in the needs and values of the Jewish community and support the design of a conscious and careful building that engaged carefully and thoughtfully with Holocaust history, she says.
“A challenge for a building such as this is how to commemorate and engage with such a horrific history while simultaneously designing a building that can contribute to the contemporary city and be a place of belonging,” she says. “The building needed to serve the community of the past and the present and offer an experience that moved the visitor.”