Elizabeth Wirth Music Building | |
---|---|
Etymology | Elizabeth Wirth |
General information | |
Architectural style | Contemporary |
Address | 527 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Coordinates | 45°30′22″N73°34′22″W / 45.50611111°N 73.57277778°W |
Completed |
|
Opened | 2006 [1] |
Cost | C$70,000,000 [2] |
Affiliation | Schulich School of Music McGill University |
Technical details | |
Material | Glass, limestone, concrete, zinc, aluminum |
Floor count | 10 |
Floor area | 11,775.0 square metres (126,745 sq ft) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) |
|
Architecture firm |
|
Structural engineer | Saia Deslauriers Kadanoff Leconte Brisebois Blais [3] |
Services engineer | Pellemon inc. / BPR [3] |
Other designers | ARTEC (acoustics) [3] |
The Elizabeth Wirth Music Building (formerly the New Music Building) is one of two buildings belonging to the Schulich School of Music at McGill University, the other being the Strathcona Music Building directly adjacent to it. The building is located at 527 Sherbrooke Street West, on the corner of Sherbrooke and Aylmer Street in Montreal, Quebec and was designed in 2005 by the Montreal-based architectural firm Saucier + Perrotte. [3] The building officially opened in 2006, [1] and its construction was made possible through a donation of C$20 million from McGill alumnus Seymour Schulich to the Schulich School of Music. [2] The building was officially inaugurated as the Elizabeth Wirth Music Building on April 30, 2015, after the School received a donation of C$7.5 million from McGill alumna Elizabeth Wirth. [4] [5]
The contemporary, eight-storey building is connected to the historic Strathcona Music Building by a glazed bridge that runs through the main entrance hall, and contains a multi-level lobby, recording studios, multimedia rooms, performance venues and the Marvin Duchow Music Library, which spans three floors. [6]
Part of the old music building was demolished in order to construct the new building, and the conservatory premises had to be refurbished. The old masonry had to be redone at the junction between the existing building and the new construction. The building cost C$70 million to build, [2] $20 million of which was contributed by Seymour Schulich, a McGill Music alumnus and one of Canada's most important businessmen. The building was created by the architectural firm Saucier + Perrotte Architectes, in association with Menkès Shooner Dagenais LeTourneux and began construction after the music program celebrated its 100-year anniversary in 2004. [3] This construction was originally called the New Music Building, but was renamed the Elizabeth Wirth Music Building in 2015 after the Schulich School of Music received a $7.5 million gift from McGill alumna Elizabeth Wirth. The naming ceremony took place in front of new the building on October 7, 2015. [7]
The Elizabeth Wirth Music Building has 8 floors above ground and two below ground, with the bottom floor containing the Wirth Opera Studio [8] and the Music Multimedia Room (MMR), one of the largest sound stages in North America. [9] The first floor comprises a spacious lobby with a mezzanine, and the Tanna Schulich Hall, an intimate performance venue with seating for 187 people. [10] The third, fourth and fifth floors contain the Marvin Duchow Music Library, with the fifth floor also containing the Gertrude Whitley Performance Library [11] and the Music Student Computer Room, which was updated in 2008. The sixth floor contains faculty office spaces, while the seventh floor contains the administration for the School of Music. The eighth floor is home to the research group, Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology (CIRMMT). [6] [12]
The Elizabeth Wirth Music Building has eight storeys that evoke the eight geological layers of the earth. With the building being located at the eastern edge of McGill campus on the corner of Sherbrooke Street and Aylmer Street, Gilles Saucier, the project manager, considered the new wing to be the access point to the campus and to the mountains. He said, originally in French, "It is as if the McGill campus is playing the role of a geological plate that moves the urban grid, which is accentuated by the design of the building." This is why the first floors are made of stone and concrete while those above are made of glass. [13]
The design of the building is anchored by the multimedia studio, which is encased in a polished limestone volume nearly five storeys tall (18 by 24 by 15 metres (59 ft × 79 ft × 49 ft)), submerged three storeys into the ground at the north end of the lot, up Aylmer Street. [14] This space has incredible acoustic insulation, with no noise coming either from ventilation, mechanics, lighting or the outside. Practice rooms and technical studios occupy the basement floors south of the multimedia studio as this provides the best acoustics. When viewed from the outside, a folded concrete plane separates the multi-level main lobby from the library above. The intention of this concrete plane was to "evoke an eroded ground plane leading to Montreal's prominent Mount Royal beyond," according to the architects. [6] [13]
The building is linked to the older Strathcona Building by a box-like glazed bridge, which physically protrudes into the wall of the older building on one end, and into the main lobby of the new building on the other. [14] The east and west facades of the building are smooth planes that frame the views of the city toward the mountain. The east facade is clad in black and grey zinc, with long strip windows, and a large glazed opening into the library entry space. [13] The west facade is made up of matte and polished aluminum which reflects the Strathcona Building adjacent to it, while a series of punched windows evoke the music rolls of antique mechanical pianos. The front facade, which faces south toward Sherbrooke Street, is made almost entirely of glass, allowing ample daylight into the lobby, libraries and conference spaces. [6]
Saucier + Perrotte won the AERMQ Award of Excellence (2006) and the Canadian Architect Award of Excellence (1994) for their design of the Elizabeth Wirth Music Building. [15]
John Abbott College is an English-language public college located in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada, near the western tip of the Island of Montreal. John Abbott College is one of eight English public colleges in Quebec. The college primarily serves the Greater Montreal Region. The CEGEP shares grounds with McGill University's Macdonald Campus.
The Osler Library, a branch of the McGill University Library and part of ROAAr since 2016, is Canada's foremost scholarly resource for the history of medicine, and one of the most important libraries of its type in North America. It is located in the McIntyre Medical Sciences Building in Montreal.
The University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM), also known as U of T Mississauga, is one of the three campuses that make up the tri-campus system of the University of Toronto. Located in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, the campus opened in 1967 as Erindale College, set upon the valley of the Credit River, approximately 33 km west of Downtown Toronto. It is the second-largest of the three University of Toronto campuses, the other two of which are the St. George campus in Downtown Toronto and the U of T Scarborough campus in Scarborough, Ontario.
McGill University is an English-language public research university located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1821 by royal charter, the university bears the name of James McGill, a Scottish merchant whose bequest in 1813 established the University of McGill College. In 1885, the name was officially changed to McGill University. The university has an enrolment of more than 39,000 students.
The Faculty of Engineering is one of the constituent faculties of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, offering undergraduate and graduate degrees in bio-engineering, bioresource, chemical, civil, computer, electrical, mechanical, materials, mining, and software engineering. The faculty also comprises the School of Architecture and the School of Urban Planning, and teaches courses in bio-resource engineering and biomedical engineering at the master's level.
The Schulich School of Music is one of the constituent faculties of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located at 555, Rue Sherbrooke Ouest. The faculty was named after the benefactor Seymour Schulich.
Burnside Hall is a McGill University building located at 805 Sherbrooke Street West, on the university's downtown campus in Montreal, Quebec. It is named after Burnside Place, the Montreal estate of James McGill, the university's founder. Built in 1970 by Marshall, Merrett, and Associates to accommodate the Faculty of Science, the thirteen-storey building is constructed in Brutalist style and stands just northeast of the Roddick Gates, in the centre of McGill's campus.
The Peter MacKinnon Building is a National Historic Site of Canada which is part of the University of Saskatchewan. The U of S is the largest education institution in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The structure is an example of a university building in the classic Elizabethan E shape in Collegiate Gothic style which was designed by Brown and Vallance.
The Keele Campus is the main campus of York University in the North York district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It occupies roughly 1 square kilometre of land and is situated between Jane Street to the west, Keele Street to the east, Steeles Avenue West to the north and Finch Avenue West to the south. It is the largest post-secondary campus in Canada at 457 acres (185 ha).
Redpath Hall is a historic building at 3461 McTavish Street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on the main campus of McGill University. It was originally the reading room of the Redpath Library, which opened in 1893 as McGill's first dedicated library building. During the first half of the 20th century, the library was extended several times to the south, and the expanded building became known as the Redpath Library Building. Subsequently, the adjacent McLennan Library Building was built between 1967 and 1969. Today, the Redpath-McLennan library complex houses the Humanities and Social Sciences Library, the largest branch of the McGill University Library.
The McLennan Library Building of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada is situated at 3459, rue McTavish on the northeast corner of rue Sherbrooke and rue McTavish. The building, along with the Redpath Library Building, which is adjacent to the McLennan Library Building, currently houses the Humanities and Social Sciences Library, the largest branch of the McGill University Library.
McGill University Library is the library system of McGill University in Montréal, Québec, Canada. It comprises 13 branch libraries, located on the downtown Montreal and Macdonald campuses, holding over 11.78 million items. It is the fourth-largest research intensive academic library in Canada and received an A− from The Globe and Mail's 2011 University Report, the highest grade awarded to the library of a large university.
The McCall MacBain Arts Building is a landmark building located at 853 Sherbrooke Street West, in the centre of the McGill University downtown campus in Montreal, Quebec. The Arts Building is the oldest existing building on campus, and was designed in Classical style by John Ostell beginning in 1839. The building's central block and east wing were completed in 1843, and the west and north wings were completed in 1861 and 1925, respectively, after involving multiple architects, including Alexander Francis Dunlop and Harold Lea Fetherstonhaugh. Today the Arts Building is made up of three distinct wings around a central block: Dawson Hall (east), Molson Hall (west), and Moyse Hall (north), and currently houses the Department of French Language and Literature, Department of English and the Department of Art History and Communication Studies. The building also hosts lectures for several other departments from the Faculty of Arts.
The McIntyre Medical Sciences Building is part of the McGill University campus in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. A concrete building built in 1965, it is known for its circular shape. The McIntyre Building is the central hub of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine. Its sixteen floors include classrooms, research facilities, laboratories, offices and a cafeteria. Its design, by Canadian architect Janet Leys Shaw Mactavish of the architecture firm Marshall and Merrett, is meant to reduce traffic and circulation between rooms.
Eric McLean was a Canadian pianist, music critic, and historian. From 1979 to 1988 he was the music critic for the Montreal Gazette in Canada, and retired as their critic emeritus. His overall career spanned 60 years.
The Marvin Duchow Music Library is a branch of McGill University Library. Its mandate is to "provides resources and services to support the performance, composition, research, and teaching programs of the Schulich School of Music".
The McGill School of Architecture is one of eight academic units constituting the Faculty of Engineering at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1896 by Sir William Macdonald, it offers accredited professional and post-professional programs ranging from undergraduate to PhD levels. Since its founding, the school has established an international reputation and a record of producing leading professionals and researchers who have helped shape the field of architecture, including Moshe Safdie, Arthur Erickson, Raymond Moriyama and the founders of Arcop.
The Macdonald-Harrington Building is a building located at 815 Sherbrooke Street West, on McGill University's downtown campus in Montreal, Quebec. Designed and built in Renaissance Revival style by Sir Andrew Taylor between 1896 and 1897, Macdonald-Harrington was one of the many donations made to the university by Sir William Macdonald. Today it houses the McGill School of Architecture and the School of Urban Planning, and prior to 1987, contained the Department of Metallurgy and Mining laboratories and the Department of Chemistry.
The Stephen Leacock Building, also known simply as the Leacock Building, is a building located at 855 Sherbrooke Street West, on the McGill University downtown campus in Montreal, Quebec. The building was named after Stephen Leacock, a well-known Canadian humorist and author, and Professor of Economics at McGill from 1901 to 1944. Built between 1962 and 1965 by the Montreal architectural firm Arcop, the Leacock Building's purpose was to accommodate the growing number of students at McGill, particularly in the Faculty of Arts which had outgrown its ancestral home, the Arts Building.
Saucier + Perrotte Architectes is an architectural firm based in Montreal, Quebec. The firm was founded in 1988 by architects Gilles Saucier and André Perrotte, and is known for designing institutional, cultural and residential projects.