The students visited Cornwall to see the potential sites. They met with Mathieu Fleury, the city’s chief administrative officer, and several of his colleagues from the municipal government. Through their discussions and research, the students were able to learn first-hand about the city, its current situation, and ambitions.
As much as pragmatic requirements, the two projects invited thinking about nature, history, and future residents.
For example:
“The first project — to get them to understand the city, its history, its environment — was to take one of the many post-industrial sites that they have around the waterfront and to reconsider them as 21st-century, medium-density, family neighbourhoods,” explains Voordouw.
For the city hall project, students had a choice of four sites. One site was set in the existing colonial grid; another replaced a defunct shopping centre; the third was adjacent to a marina, while the fourth shared land with a post-secondary college. Responses to these varied contexts demonstrated potential different ways for a new building to engage the city and shape the opportunities available to residents.
“The project brief for the city hall building was sophisticated and incredibly thorough,” says Voordouw. “The city could use that as a template for their own thinking about what a city hall is, how people have access to such a public place, and how it might interact with the larger city, and the common good that it might foster.”