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NOVEMBER DECEMBER • 2015 Art in offices, lobbies and train stations Re- working Work Showstoppers at Maison+Objet
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Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Jul 24, 2016

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Canadian Interiors is Canada’s leading magazine targeted at interior design professionals. Since its launch in 1964, the magazine is a must read for Canadian interior designers. CI is currently published every two months with a circulation of 13,467
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Page 1: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

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NOVEMBER DECEMBER • 2015

Art in offices, lobbies and train stations

Re-working Work

Showstoppers at Maison+Objet

1CI NovDec cover FIN.indd 1 15-11-16 1:55 PM

Page 2: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

TIME-TESTED INNOVATION FOR THE FUTURE OF FLOORING

[Stands up to subfl oor conditions of 15 lbs MVER, 98% RH and 11.0 pH. Passes 10,000 impact moisture penetration testing.]

To make ethos®, we were the fi rst to harness the potential of PVB from recycled windshields and safety glass over 10 years ago. A high-performance alternative to traditional carpet backing materials,

ethos is time-tested and maintains durability for decades using responsibly sourced, recycled materials.

PVB

wstudio.ca

Infinite Design PossibilitiesFor Commercial, Residential & HospitalityUnlimited Size & Production CapabilitiesPicture-Perfect AccuracyFast Turn Around TimeCost-Effective

Make Your Dreams Come True!Introducting

W-Dream Custom Printed Carpets

W STUDIO SALES CENTRE1120 Caledonia Road, Toronto

(North of Lawrence Avenue) tel: (647) 345-6888

OPENING SOON W STUDIO CASTLEFIELD GALLERY1330 Castlefield Avenue, Torontotel: (416) 929-9290

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W STUDIO WINTER 2015 ISSUE - FINAL.pdf 1 2015-11-05 5:33 PM

2Ads.indd 2 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 3: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

TIME-TESTED INNOVATION FOR THE FUTURE OF FLOORING

[Stands up to subfl oor conditions of 15 lbs MVER, 98% RH and 11.0 pH. Passes 10,000 impact moisture penetration testing.]

To make ethos®, we were the fi rst to harness the potential of PVB from recycled windshields and safety glass over 10 years ago. A high-performance alternative to traditional carpet backing materials,

ethos is time-tested and maintains durability for decades using responsibly sourced, recycled materials.

PVB

wstudio.ca

Infinite Design PossibilitiesFor Commercial, Residential & HospitalityUnlimited Size & Production CapabilitiesPicture-Perfect AccuracyFast Turn Around TimeCost-Effective

Make Your Dreams Come True!Introducting

W-Dream Custom Printed Carpets

W STUDIO SALES CENTRE1120 Caledonia Road, Toronto

(North of Lawrence Avenue) tel: (647) 345-6888

OPENING SOON W STUDIO CASTLEFIELD GALLERY1330 Castlefield Avenue, Torontotel: (416) 929-9290

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W STUDIO WINTER 2015 ISSUE - FINAL.pdf 1 2015-11-05 5:33 PM

2Ads.indd 3 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 4: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

2Ads.indd 4 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 5: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

2Ads.indd 5 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 6: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Origins Collection

Cnd Interiors Nov/Dec 2015.indd 1 11/9/15 4:47 PM

design: Aaron DukeEmissary Chair

design: busk + hertzogCommander Table

2Ads.indd 6 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 7: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Origins Collection

Cnd Interiors Nov/Dec 2015.indd 1 11/9/15 4:47 PM

design: Aaron DukeEmissary Chair

design: busk + hertzogCommander Table

2Ads.indd 7 15-11-16 11:54 AM

Page 8: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

and showrooms6362

concreteformwood

and showrooms

9499white

malachite

that want a color that isn’t ketchup;that want a color that isn’t ketchup;that want a color that isn’t ketchup;

6474storm

hex

hotel roomshotel rooms

1520infi nity

that want to feel more home than room;that want to feel more home than room;

where every day shouldn’t feel so everyday.where every day shouldn’t feel so everyday.8167navy

splatter

Introducing SurfaceSet™ 2016 by Formica Corporation. Our most versatile collection yet features three unique palettes inspired by nature. Designed to make every room beautiful, durable and enjoyable.

Download the Formica® SurfaceSet™ 2016 lookbook at www.formica.com/lookbook_EN

6402thermo walnut

For lunchroomsFor lunchrooms

Formica® and the Formica® Anvil Logo are registered trademarks of The Diller Corporation. All rights reserved. © 2015 The Diller Corporation. A member of the Fletcher Building Group.

2675_Pub1_Formica_CanInt_v1.indd 1 2015-09-14 3:57 PM

2TOC.indd 8 15-11-16 11:56 AM

Page 9: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Regulars

Features

COVER – Made Visible, Public Health Ontario headquarters, by Diamond Schmitt Architects. Photo by Lisa Logan.

32 QUOD ERAT DEMONSTRANDUM Teknion’s new downtown Toronto space uses its own staff to showcase product lines.

36 RAY WORKS HERE A change of command entails a complete rebrand that sees Toronto’s RCA become Ray.

41 A LIGHT SHOW OF ORDERED CHAOS Jean de Lessard generates an ap-propriately informal, seemingly anarchic vibe for a company enmeshed in the helter-skelter of night time crowds.

48 LOOK. LOOK AGAIN. AND AGAIN. Forward-thinking companies look be-yond the walls as just places to hang investments masquerading as art. Instead, they use it as a canvass to energize a workforce and spread the brand gospel.

54 GIVE AWESOMELY Ideas for giving.

17 CAUGHT OUR EYE 22 HOW IT’S MADE Zones of Immersion, by Stuart Reid. 25 SEEN Maison & Objet turns 20! 66 SCENE 70 OVER & OUT Montreal-based ceramicist Pascale Girardin discusses the art of making an entrance.

11/12 5201

48

41

and showrooms6362

concreteformwood

and showrooms

9499white

malachite

that want a color that isn’t ketchup;that want a color that isn’t ketchup;that want a color that isn’t ketchup;

6474storm

hex

hotel roomshotel rooms

1520infi nity

that want to feel more home than room;that want to feel more home than room;

where every day shouldn’t feel so everyday.where every day shouldn’t feel so everyday.8167navy

splatter

Introducing SurfaceSet™ 2016 by Formica Corporation. Our most versatile collection yet features three unique palettes inspired by nature. Designed to make every room beautiful, durable and enjoyable.

Download the Formica® SurfaceSet™ 2016 lookbook at www.formica.com/lookbook_EN

6402thermo walnut

For lunchroomsFor lunchrooms

Formica® and the Formica® Anvil Logo are registered trademarks of The Diller Corporation. All rights reserved. © 2015 The Diller Corporation. A member of the Fletcher Building Group.

2675_Pub1_Formica_CanInt_v1.indd 1 2015-09-14 3:57 PM

Page 10: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Large and small squares,planks and skinny planks.

A G AT E WAY T O C R E AT I VI T YNature shows us how to enliven the spirit and awaken our senses from the ground up. It is the very root of creativity.

Invite it inside and witness the beauty of possibility. Introducing the Equal Measure™ Collection.

EM551, EM552 and EM553 in Broad

A Foundation For Beautiful Thinking.

interface.com

3Online.indd 10 15-11-16 12:05 PM

Page 11: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Shhh no more With the new Bibliothèque Saul-Bellow, Montréal-based Che-valier Morales Architectes envisioned a 21st century community anchor that is attractive, luminous, stimulates conversation and embraces all types of uses.

Bits ‘n P iecesMontreal-based Daily tous les jours, creators of large scale public art installations such as The Swings, recently launched The littleBits Store in New York City, a new project aiming to “democratize hard-ware” by empowering people to create their own electronic objects using a platform of easy-to-use building blocks.

On the BooksToronto-based superkül has released Rain, Gravity, Heat, Cold, a 160-page monograph

Powers of Ten To begin its second decade of existence, Vancouver-based Bocci has extended its reach and opened its first European studio in Berlin. Housed in an abandoned 2,200-sq.-m.historic court-house, Bocci’s second home at Kantstrasse 79 will be a working laboratory, produc-tion hub, studio and archive.

that highlights projects from a decade of work and il-lustrates the philosophy and design approach that define the firm’s award-winning practice and its role in the evolving creative landscape of Canada and abroad.

omc

11/12 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS

Give Awesomely! This year, don’t give ugly Christmas sweaters, or a fruit-cake. They’re not funny, and no one wants them. Instead, give good design to those on your list. And we’re here to help with killer gift ideas.

Digital Editionextra

Visit the expanded digital edition of

to see our roundup!

11

Large and small squares,planks and skinny planks.

A G AT E WAY T O C R E AT I VI T YNature shows us how to enliven the spirit and awaken our senses from the ground up. It is the very root of creativity.

Invite it inside and witness the beauty of possibility. Introducing the Equal Measure™ Collection.

EM551, EM552 and EM553 in Broad

A Foundation For Beautiful Thinking.

interface.com

3Online.indd 11 15-11-16 12:05 PM

Page 12: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

November| December 2015 / V52 #6

Publisher Martin Spreer416-510-6766

Editor Peter Sobchak

Art Director Roy Gaiot

Associate Editors David Lasker, Rhys Phillips, Leslie C. Smith

ContributorSarah Fletcher

Senior Circulation Manager Diane Rakoff 416-510-5216

Reader Services Silva Telian

416-442-5600 x3636

Production Steve Hofmann

416-510-5194

Senior Publisher Tom Arkell

President of iQ Business Media Inc. Alex Papanou

Head Office 80 Valleybrook Drive, Toronto, ON M3B 2S9

Telephone 416-442-5600 • Facsimile 416-510-5140

Canadian Interiors magazine is published by iQ Business Media Inc.

Tel: 416-442-5600, Fax: 416-510-6875 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.canadianinteriors.com

Canadian Interiors publishes six issues, plus a source guide, per year. Printed in Canada. The content of this publication is the property of Canadian Interiors and

cannot be reproduced without permission from the publisher.

Subscription rates > Canada $38.95 per year; plastic wrapped $41.95 per year (plus taxes) U.S.A. $71.95 US per year, Overseas $98.95 US per year.

Back issues > Back copies are available for $10 for delivery in Canada, $15 US for delivery in U.S.A. and $20 overseas. Please send payment to:

Canadian Interiors, 80 Valley brook Drive, Toronto, ON M3B 2S9 or order online www.canadianinteriors.com

For subscription and back issues inquiries please call 416-442-5600 ext.3636, e-mail: [email protected],

or go to our website at: www.canadianinteriors.com

Canadian Interiors is indexed in the Canadian Magazine Index by Micromedia ProQuest Company, Toronto (www.micromedia.com) and National Archive

Publishing Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan (www.napubco.com).

Member of Canadian Business Press • Member of the Alliance for Audited Media

ISSN 1923-3329 (Online), ISSN 0008-3887 (Print), H.S.T. # 815380985 RT0001

iQ Business Media Inc.Canada Post Sales Product Agreement No. 43005526

“We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage”.

GUARANTEE & INSPECTION SERVICEGIS

The new GROHE Essence+ kitchen faucet presents a slim architectural

shape that is ideal for a contemporary kitchen, inviting touch and

interaction. A distinctive, super-slim body conceals the 28 mm GROHE

SilkMove® cartridge, ensuring years of reliable performance. The solid

metal hand spray houses a toggle allowing you to switch easily between

two spray patterns. Essence+ fi xtures are also available for the bath and

shower, letting you create a coordinated look for your entire home.

GROHE.CA

GROHEESSENCE+™

DELICATE DESIGN, POWERFUL FEATURES.

NEW*Founding year of Carl Nestler, since 1956 part of GROHE. More on grohe.com

MASTERS OF TECHNOLOGY | SINCE 1873*

Grohe-Essence-CdnInt-NovDec.indd 1 15-10-28 6:03 PM4Masthead.indd 12 15-11-16 12:04 PM

Page 13: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

The new GROHE Essence+ kitchen faucet presents a slim architectural

shape that is ideal for a contemporary kitchen, inviting touch and

interaction. A distinctive, super-slim body conceals the 28 mm GROHE

SilkMove® cartridge, ensuring years of reliable performance. The solid

metal hand spray houses a toggle allowing you to switch easily between

two spray patterns. Essence+ fi xtures are also available for the bath and

shower, letting you create a coordinated look for your entire home.

GROHE.CA

GROHEESSENCE+™

DELICATE DESIGN, POWERFUL FEATURES.

NEW*Founding year of Carl Nestler, since 1956 part of GROHE. More on grohe.com

MASTERS OF TECHNOLOGY | SINCE 1873*

Grohe-Essence-CdnInt-NovDec.indd 1 15-10-28 6:03 PM4Masthead.indd 13 15-11-16 12:04 PM

Page 14: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

© 2015 S

haw, A

Berkshire H

athaway C

omp

any

DESIGN IS RENEWAL

THE PARK IS DESIGNED TO REDEFINE BOUNDARIES, ENHANCE OUR MOOD AND OPEN OUR MINDS. TRANSITION FROM COMMUNAL ENERGY, TO A QUIET, SINGULAR MOMENT. ALONE. TOGETHER.

SHAWCONTRACTGROUP.COM

VISIT OUR BOOTH AT IIDEX • December 2-3, 2015 • Toronto • booth #5115

Design to improve indoor air quality.The world’s only living wall biofilter that actively cleanses air, by removing pollutants, and reduces energy costs to pay for itself.

Free Standing, Hybrid and Fully Integrated Installations

[email protected] nedlawlivingwalls.com

Improve any indoor area with cleaner air and stunning greenery designed exclusively for your space.

Dirty Air

Filtered Air

University of Windsor

Gayle MarshallSales Rep esentative

[email protected]

1300 Yonge St. Suite 100 Toronto ON M4R 1V6www.chestnutpark.com

r

"I feel most fortunate to have had Gayle by my side as we patiently perused the listings and viewed various houses within the course of a couple of months. Her calm,

knowledgeable demeanour and wisdom were reassuring and her recommendations were always well judged"Great Results, Expert, High Integrity

Selmin Kara, Assistant Professor OCAD University

“I feel most fortunate to have had Gayle by my side as we patiently perused the listings and viewed various houses within the course of a couple of months. Her calm, knowledgeable demeanour and wisdom were reassuring and her recommendations were always well judged”Great Results, Expert, High Integrity

Selmin Kara, Assistant Professor OCAD University

4Masthead.indd 14 15-11-16 12:04 PM

Page 15: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

© 2015 S

haw, A

Berkshire H

athaway C

omp

any

DESIGN IS RENEWAL

THE PARK IS DESIGNED TO REDEFINE BOUNDARIES, ENHANCE OUR MOOD AND OPEN OUR MINDS. TRANSITION FROM COMMUNAL ENERGY, TO A QUIET, SINGULAR MOMENT. ALONE. TOGETHER.

SHAWCONTRACTGROUP.COM

VISIT OUR BOOTH AT IIDEX • December 2-3, 2015 • Toronto • booth #5115

4Masthead.indd 15 15-11-16 12:04 PM

Page 16: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Control [CTL54] • Shift [SHF54]bolyu.com • 1 888.467.5075

5COE.indd 16 15-11-16 3:43 PM

Page 17: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

caught our eye

17

Seasons Change Part of Festival des Architectures Vives, an annual event that takes place within the inner courtyards of selected townhouses in Montpellier, France, A Tenth Spring was inspired by O-Hanami, a Japanese custom of admiring the ephemeral beauty of cherry blossoms. 4,000 balloons were used to evoke the imagery of petals gently detaching themselves one by one.

11/12 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS

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Page 18: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

caught our eye

Sounds Like Fashion Helsinki is the newest sibling to Danish manufacturer Vifa’s series of wireless loudspeakers (also named after Scandinavian capitals). Among its Nordic features are a unique textile cover from Kvadrat that lets sound pass through its woollen threads; a leather strap from Swedish manufacturer Tärnsjö Garveri; and a solid aluminum frame, molded in one piece in order to avoid assembly marks or frail spots. vifa.dk

Beyond the Blackness Parisian artist Baptiste Debombourg explores the little-known (but sci-fi staple) cosmic element known as dark matter in a solo show exhibited at la Chaufferie à Strasbourg as part of a glass biennale. Visitors are encouraged to walk on a mass of black glass, punctuated by a white shard, which together highlight the unreliable nature of reflections. baptistedebombourg.com

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 18

Object Lesson We Go to the Gallery, by Miriam Elia (Dung Beetle Ltd.), is a hilarious send-up of contem-porary art, told as a children’s learning book. Funny enough, the limited edition ver- sion was threat-ened with a lawsuit by Penguin UK (owners of the Ladybird imprint), which was withdrawn following a recent change in U.K. copyright law allowing for parody and satire. artbook.com

Document Path DDB:Kohler:Active_Work:KOCCO_Corporate:P52471_KOCCO_Canadian Interiors:Mechanicals:Kohler_DDB_Chic_Nov/Dec_KOCCOP41856_U_CA.inddLinks

P41856_Timeless_FinalSinglePG_V2.psd (CMYK; 428 ppi; 70%), kohler_typeexploration_073114_white.ai (85.25%)

Revision # 0Date Created 9-4-2015 10:09 AMSaved 11-5-2015 12:50 PMPrinted 11-6-2015 4:01 PMPrint Scale None

Fonts

Slug Font Myriad Pro FamilyITC Avant Garde Gothic (Book, Demi; Type 1)

Inks

Cyan Magenta Yellow Black

CreativeAccount GroupPrint Producer [email protected] Digital Artist emily rubyDigital Artist paula weber Retoucher tom waterloo

ProofreaderNotes Due 11/9

Kohler Co.CorporateAd # KOCCO52447_U_CAJob # P52471 WO# 11Studio PO# 24045Print_Magazine, NEVER TOO TIMELESS, Page, 4C, Bleed

TeamTeam: M. Singer, B. Pritzker, K. Ledford, J. Batthany, K. Rose, M.B. Adduci, A. Reeck, C. Nieto, E. Ruby, P. Weber, T. Waterloo

Destination(s)Canadian Interiors

Final Output 100%

Bleed 9.25" w x 11.5" hTrim 9" w x 11.25" hSafety 8" w x 10.5" h

InDesign CC 2015

For artwork inquiries, contact [email protected] | For print inquiries, contact [email protected]

File Name Kohler_DDB_Chic_Nov/Dec_KOCCOP41856_U_CA.indd

S:8"

S:10.5"

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©2015 KOHLER CO.US.KOHLER.COM

NEVERTOOTIMELESSTHE VINTAGE INSPIRED

ARTIFACTS® FAUCET COLLECTION. FIND THE STYLE AND FINISH THAT

TRULY REFLECT YOU.

5COE.indd 18 15-11-16 12:10 PM

Page 19: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Document Path DDB:Kohler:Active_Work:KOCCO_Corporate:P52471_KOCCO_Canadian Interiors:Mechanicals:Kohler_DDB_Chic_Nov/Dec_KOCCOP41856_U_CA.inddLinks

P41856_Timeless_FinalSinglePG_V2.psd (CMYK; 428 ppi; 70%), kohler_typeexploration_073114_white.ai (85.25%)

Revision # 0Date Created 9-4-2015 10:09 AMSaved 11-5-2015 12:50 PMPrinted 11-6-2015 4:01 PMPrint Scale None

Fonts

Slug Font Myriad Pro FamilyITC Avant Garde Gothic (Book, Demi; Type 1)

Inks

Cyan Magenta Yellow Black

CreativeAccount GroupPrint Producer [email protected] Digital Artist emily rubyDigital Artist paula weber Retoucher tom waterloo

ProofreaderNotes Due 11/9

Kohler Co.CorporateAd # KOCCO52447_U_CAJob # P52471 WO# 11Studio PO# 24045Print_Magazine, NEVER TOO TIMELESS, Page, 4C, Bleed

TeamTeam: M. Singer, B. Pritzker, K. Ledford, J. Batthany, K. Rose, M.B. Adduci, A. Reeck, C. Nieto, E. Ruby, P. Weber, T. Waterloo

Destination(s)Canadian Interiors

Final Output 100%

Bleed 9.25" w x 11.5" hTrim 9" w x 11.25" hSafety 8" w x 10.5" h

InDesign CC 2015

For artwork inquiries, contact [email protected] | For print inquiries, contact [email protected]

File Name Kohler_DDB_Chic_Nov/Dec_KOCCOP41856_U_CA.indd

S:8"S:10.5"

T:9"T:11.25"

B:9.25"B:11.5"

©2015 KOHLER CO.US.KOHLER.COM

NEVERTOOTIMELESSTHE VINTAGE INSPIRED

ARTIFACTS® FAUCET COLLECTION. FIND THE STYLE AND FINISH THAT

TRULY REFLECT YOU.

5COE.indd 19 15-11-16 12:10 PM

Page 20: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

TUSCANY COLLECTION

ISA_Tuscany_CanInt_fullpage_ad.pdf 1 2015-05-31 8:37 AM

Today, noise is the number one complaint in the workplace. Now you can help solve it with Total Acoustics™ ceiling panels, featuring the ideal combination of both sound blocking and sound absorption. Whether you’re creating spaces for concentration, team collaboration or confidentiality, get total noise control and design flexibility with Total Acoustics™ ceiling panels. armstrong.com/totalacoustics

WHAT’S ALL THE

BUZZ ABOUT MANAGING BUZZ?

NRC + CAC = Total Acoustics Performance™

ARM15_21032_Canadian_Interiors_9x11.25_me01_01.indd 1 11/9/15 11:40 AM

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Page 21: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

TUSCANY COLLECTION

ISA_Tuscany_CanInt_fullpage_ad.pdf 1 2015-05-31 8:37 AM

Today, noise is the number one complaint in the workplace. Now you can help solve it with Total Acoustics™ ceiling panels, featuring the ideal combination of both sound blocking and sound absorption. Whether you’re creating spaces for concentration, team collaboration or confidentiality, get total noise control and design flexibility with Total Acoustics™ ceiling panels. armstrong.com/totalacoustics

WHAT’S ALL THE

BUZZ ABOUT MANAGING BUZZ?

NRC + CAC = Total Acoustics Performance™

ARM15_21032_Canadian_Interiors_9x11.25_me01_01.indd 1 11/9/15 11:40 AM

5COE.indd 21 15-11-16 12:10 PM

Page 22: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

3—Each panel is made of laminated layers of glass with a minimum thickness for each composite panel of 21mm.

4—Reid hand-worked every single sheet of glass, including painting ‘resists’ for sandblasting and drawing or painting on the glass sheets.

Above More than seven years in the making, the artwork runs the entire length of the Union Station subway platform.

1—Reid began by riding the subway and observing fellow passengers, sketching people and writing poems about the commuter experience.

One of the largest permanent public art projects in Toronto, Stuart Reid portrays in glass the people who “ride the rocket” every day.

Zones of Immersion

To jazz up the subway platforms of Union Station in time for the Pan Am Games this past summer, the TTC held an open international competition in 2007. Canadian artist Stuart Reid’s winning bid, called “Zones of Immersion,” is a 7-foot high by 500-foot long translucent wall mural featuring 166 silver-stained, enameled, engraved and lam-inated glass panels with original imagery and text that captures the blurred rhythms of a city in transit. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • stuartreid.ca

By Peter Sobchak

2—These images and text were reworked onto 166 glass panels, most of which are 3.5 feet wide by 7 feet tall with an average weight of 200 lbs.

how it’s made

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 22

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Customer: California Closets Pub(s): Canadian Interiors Trim = 9 x 11.25

Job Name: Modernist Issue Date: Nov/Dec 2015 Live = 8 x 10.5

for the love of home

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Page 24: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Looking for a sustainability rock star? Minerality has

all the qualifi cations. Cradle 2 Cradle Bronze.

Made in the USA. FloorScore certifi ed.

Recyclable. Phthalate free.

Minerality is understated, classy sophistication with the

performance luxuries of rubber fl ooring. Talk about

a well-rounded candidate.

Room to room, fl oor to fl oor, bring the whole experience together.

Find out more at tarkettna.com.

Minerality™ Rubber Tile and Plank.

You’re Hired!

BRONZE

Johnsonite_CanInt_NovDec2015.indd 1 11/9/15 4:02 PM

7Seen.indd 24 15-11-16 3:29 PM

Page 25: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

11/12 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS25

seen

For five days in September, more than 69,000 visitors thronged the aisles of the Parc des Expositions Paris Nord Villepinte, and other signs of two decades of growth are evident everywhere: the expansion of M&O Projets throughout Hall 8; the growing value of Now! Le Off, a satellite springboard for up-and-coming international designers; and the overlapping buzz of activity surrounding Paris Design Week, which was further bolstered by 50 new participants and the addition of new districts between Barbès and Stalingrad. Having shed its ungainly teen years, Maison+Objet is looking bright and ready to face the world. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

oaring It may only be 20 years, but it feels like Maison+Objet has been around forever. That permanence is a testament to the ongoing yet evolving validity of this show as a place to celebrate creativity and lifestyle.

By Peter SobchakRinto its Twenties

Baristas Rejoice When you need luxury, Tom Dixon is your man. He showed several new collections at Maison+Objet that elevate common tasks to new levels of indulgence, for example Brew, a tribute to the mysteries of the modern-day coffee ceremony. Comprising caddy, scoop, cafetiere, stovetop, milk pan, espresso cups, biscuit tin and serving tray, the range includes a totem to worship every stage of the coffee ritual. Each product is stainless steel with a high-gloss finish, achieved by applying a film of vaporized copper. tomdixon.net

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Get in Gear The wonderfully ironic Italian design brand Seletti came to Maison+Objet with tongue firmly in cheek and debuted several new collections including Industry Garden Furniture by Antwerp duo Studio Job. The set, consisting of a round table, oval table and chairs, evokes the style of the classic garden sets but integrates mechanical graphics. Made of light and recyclable cast aluminum, Industry can be completely disassembled. seletti.it

Toe the Line Most of Kristina Dam Studio’s product portfolio consists of furniture, sculptures, decoration items and illustrations that carry a strong rectilinear quality. Which makes sense, since Dam’s initial training was as an architect, and architectural elements such as balance and form characterize products like the oak Sculptural Chair. kristinadamstudio.dk

Slide on In There The new Easer chair from Dutch-based firm Lonc, is a sleek, sturdy yet comfortable minimalist combination of molded polypropylene and stainless steel. Designed by Rogier Waaijer, it seems perfectly at home in almost any setting, and thanks to weather-resistant materials and a drainage slit integrated into the seat, that setting can be indoors or out. lonc.nl

Shuffle Up and Deal Gaël Manes, the creator and founder of Paris-based Minimalist Editions, has expanded in 2015 his exceptional Playing Cards furniture collection with several new items, including the sober yet inviting Canapé Kerloas, with a solid oak base in natural varnish. minimalist-editions.fr

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Go Big! The suitably named Ultrasofa is an XXL piece of outdoor furniture from Fermob that will dominate your patio, like it or not (hopefully the former). Designed by Frédéric Sofia, its single-piece frame and seat are water-repellent, and measuring a full three metres in length means guests won’t be stuck standing at your next garden party. fermob.com Life Support With a surrounding wooden frame that looks sturdy

enough to store a bowling ball collection, Scaffold, designed by André Teoman Studio for Portuguese furniture brand Wewood, transcends being just a sofa, and demands multiple parts in your life as a side table, bookshelf and even room divider. wewood.eu

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Back In Black At Maison+Objet, Vitra previewed its new Black Collection, an assortment of new design objects along with new editions of classic pieces in shades of black. Highlights include several Eames products, such as the Eames Elephant in black, which Charles and Ray developed back in 1945 but never put into production. Vitra launched a plastic version several years ago, and has now developed a black version to emphasise the silhouette and give it a more subdued character. vitra.com

The Circus Comes to Town French designer Marc Venot has created the ingenious Acrobat table lamp for Normann Copenhagen that can be placed both vertically and horizontally in any number of positions. This is because the lamp consists of two parts: a cone-shaped base and an oblong LED light source that are held together by magnets only. normann-copenhagen.com

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seen

Coming Home Vitra chose Maison+Objet — a show for and about the home — to debut its expanded range of Home Complements, a collection of design objects, accessories and textiles featuring classic patterns and objects by such luminaries as Alexander Girard, George Nelson and Charles and Ray Eames. One of the items is Little Devil, decorative wooden dolls designed and made by Girard for his own home in Santa Fe and inspired by his extensive personal collection of folk art. vitra.com

Mix n’ Match Drawing inspiration from Alexander Calder’s kinetic sculptures, Spanish artist and designer Jaime Hayon merged disparate sizes, shapes and colours into one cohesive design for the Palette series of three multi-tiered tables for &Tradition. The mixing even extends into materials, which include white Bianco Carrara marble, ash or pink stained oak veneer, brass and satin brushed stainless steel. andtradition.com

Grab Hold Jeux d’Anses, by Jeanne Bonnefoy-Mercuriali for TH Manufacture, is a modern reinterpretation of antique water pots native to Palestine and the surrounding region. What is historically purely utilitarian has now been rendered both playful and sculptural. And with a name that translates to Dancing Handles, how does it not put a smile on your face? thmanufacture.com

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Custom Furniture, Millwork and Public Seating

Svend Nielsen Ltd. is an established Designer/Manufacturer of the finest custom furniture and millwork. Drawing upon more than 65 years experience, we take great pride in crafting products that satisfy the most discerning eye. As a company we have a proven strength in working with designers and architects. We take your vision on paper and translate it into reality through a collaborative process in which our clients’ needs are seen as paramount. Over the years we have demonstrated our ability to handle the most demanding projects, executing contracts on time and in a professional manner.

55 Penn Drive, Toronto, Canada, M9L 2A6 Tel: 416-749-0131 Fax: 416-749-0414Email: [email protected] Website:www.svendnielsen.com

Designer > Helen Moffett Associates | Photographer > Philip Castleton

Pub Canadian Interiors 9" x 11.25"

noraplan® valuaINSPIRED BY NATURE.PERFECTED FOR YOUR HEALING ENVIRONMENT.Infuse tranquility into your patient-centered environment with the nature-inspired texture and detail off ered by noraplan® valua. A soothing color palette brings the elements of nature indoors while meeting facility performance demands and fostering the well-being of your patients.

Take a closer look. www.nora.com/us/valua

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Page 31: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Custom Furniture, Millwork and Public Seating

Svend Nielsen Ltd. is an established Designer/Manufacturer of the finest custom furniture and millwork. Drawing upon more than 65 years experience, we take great pride in crafting products that satisfy the most discerning eye. As a company we have a proven strength in working with designers and architects. We take your vision on paper and translate it into reality through a collaborative process in which our clients’ needs are seen as paramount. Over the years we have demonstrated our ability to handle the most demanding projects, executing contracts on time and in a professional manner.

55 Penn Drive, Toronto, Canada, M9L 2A6 Tel: 416-749-0131 Fax: 416-749-0414Email: [email protected] Website:www.svendnielsen.com

Designer > Helen Moffett Associates | Photographer > Philip Castleton

Pub Canadian Interiors 9" x 11.25"

noraplan® valuaINSPIRED BY NATURE.PERFECTED FOR YOUR HEALING ENVIRONMENT.Infuse tranquility into your patient-centered environment with the nature-inspired texture and detail off ered by noraplan® valua. A soothing color palette brings the elements of nature indoors while meeting facility performance demands and fostering the well-being of your patients.

Take a closer look. www.nora.com/us/valua

nor3992-8ValuaHC-Ad-caD1.indd 1 11/6/15 1:40 PM7Seen.indd 31 15-11-16 3:29 PM

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The view is amazing – the breadth of office systems that meets the eye in Teknion’s new 10,750-sq.-ft. showroom in downtown Toronto. Oh yeah, and the three-quarters vista of the city’s Financial District from the Bremner Tower’s 20th floor is pretty spectacular as well. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Created for the Canadian contract furniture manufacturer by San Francisco-based Vanderbyl Design, the space comes across not so much showroom as showcase, a live-action display of 21st century work environments. For instance, there’s no lobby per se off the high-tech elevator banks but rather the Hub, a large common area complete with a centrally placed, new-age harvest table suitable for everything from staff luncheons to client meetings. (That is not to mention the occasional wine tastings hosted by company president and CEO, Da-vid Feldberg, who also happens to be a principal of Niagara-on-the-Lake’s Stratus Wines.) Built-in library shelves with cushioned ban-quettes bookend the entryway, while on either side of the communal

Clockwise The new Teknion Collaboration Hub offers abundant natural lighting, spectacular vistas of downtown Toronto, and comfortable, home-away-from-home lounges and chairs. The Stratus Wine Bar is not such a bad touch, either…. Exiting off an elevator bank so high-tech that you might require directions for its use, clients, suppliers and staff enter through the Hub’s main doors. Like most of the column-free, glass-walled interior, physical transparency acts as a visual metaphor for the company’s work ethic. A long “harvest table” running through the centre indicates both community and collaboration…. The office’s fluid flow allows staff a daily choice between different work stations – every one of them with a view.

Teknion’s new downtown Toronto space uses its own staff to showcase product lines

Photography by Patrick St-ArnaudBy Leslie C. Smith

Quod erat demonstrandum

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line. They stand a full nine feet tall, lending expansive-but-still-human dimensions to the office’s 12-foot ceiling height with its faux-ware-house finish (the actual building mechanicals run beneath the floor). But they are also an anomaly, being among the few solid obstructions to the gaze that passes through a column-free interior filled with open workstation features and glass-walled meeting rooms to a floor-to-ceiling skyscape beyond. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Even the staff kitchen and photocopier room have laminated, electri-fied glass walls that can turn from opaque to clear at the flick of a switch. Teknion must be aware of studies that demonstrate how ac-cess to natural light tends to produce healthier, more creative work-places. Certainly, its aim of maintaining “a sense of transparency and accessibility that is consonant with the Teknion brand” has been skillfully achieved. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - This collegial office, built for creativity and common-ground interac-tion, assuredly fits in with modern-day management mantras. Yet one must not forget that this is, at the core, a showcase for office systems. With its three annually scheduled product launches, Teknion’s initial offerings – Upstage, Interpret, Teknion Studio and Expansion Desk-ing in its southern section; District, Leverage, Journal and Cluster to the north – may well make way as many times a year for fresh-off-the-line contemporary design. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

table, grouped lounge chairs and side tables scatter across a warm ex-panse of white-oak flooring. Bracketing but not completely enclosing the Hub, two freestanding walls house a large video screen and a cof-fee/wine bar, respectively. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -“We wanted,” says Candace Samuel, Teknion’s design services man-ager, “something that reflects our company culture and our corporate brand. The harvest table, the comfortable armchairs, the soft colours all feel like we’re welcoming you into our home.”- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A well-published corporate researcher into the future of working life, Teknion takes its outcomes literally. Staff have no assigned desks, which leaves them open to shifting fluidly through the Hub to slightly more formal workstations on the north side (signalled by a conven-tional layout, acoustically hushed meeting rooms and dark walnut ve-neers) to the more relaxed sales area to the south (an open plan filled with blond maplewood veneers and modular office systems with punches of primary colours). Here, a wall of textile samples and fin-ishes blends into the workspace, allowing clients to consult effortlessly with employees. Each workstation is flexible enough to allow tailored adjustments to an individual’s needs, while personal items and files repose in digital lockers concealed behind huge closet doors. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - These doors, painted in washable white so they can double as a writing surface for collaborative notation, are like the rest of the space’s datum

Below A south-facing lounge surrounded by exterior and interior glass walls acts as a casual meeting place, a space for quiet conferences or just relaxing. The fact that you are experiencing the company’s con-tract furniture the way it was designed for seems almost incidental.

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Page 35: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

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8Teknion.indd 35 15-11-16 3:37 PM

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Talbot and Trozzo had already decided to start over in a new space, shifting from RCA’s old Queen Street West offices to the main floor of a renovated factory in the upwardly trending Junction Triangle neigh-bourhood. The question next became how to maintain the industry goodwill and reputation of their former firm while establishing their own unique identity, as well as charting a path towards the future. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - “We had a debate,” Talbot recalls of the rebranding initiative that be-gan earlier this year. “We said, ‘We’re in the design business – should we be doing this ourselves?’ We finally decided to leave it to the profes-sionals. We are always telling our clients to hire experts. So we did.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A friend recommended Toronto brand-strategy group Parcel Design, led by partners Erin Brand, Julie Mitchell and Gary Beelik. Because of the tight turn-around connected to the new firm’s physical move, the entire strategic procedure of conducting research, formulating strategy and creating an identity would have to be done in just two months, half its normal time. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

A change of command entails a complete rebrand that sees Toronto’s R CA become Ray

Photography by David Whittaker By Leslie C. Smith

Things change. Organizations evolve. Sometimes, a firm requires re-positioning to meet new demands or to refresh a brand. Or it may face transitional concerns as its founders reach retirement age. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Design firms are particularly vulnerable to the latter challenge. Often, a company’s reputation is inexorably linked to that of its originator. Remove the literal name brand and everything can tumble like a house of cards. New companies may spin off from the ensuing debris yet still, they must build again from the ground up. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Such was the situation with Toronto’s Raymond Chiappetta Associ-ates. Founded in 1987 by Joanne Raymond and Mario Chiappetta, RCA existed for many years as a well-respected company with a spe-cialty niche in commercial interiors. Its principals, having recently transferred company ownership to two former partners, designer Isa-belle Talbot and project manager Joe Trozzo, now work part-time as conversion to the new business entity takes effect. Pursuant to mutual agreement, the company’s name needed to be changed. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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Opposite Principals Isabelle Talbot and Joe Trozzo. Above The main work area is expressed in an open floorplan simply fitted up in black and white with a few punches of colour. All central facilities – copy room, sample room and kitchen – meet in the middle. Note the practical reuse of lighting fixtures salvaged from a bank building teardown and the amusing plastic lawn furniture lounge.

Parcel kicked things off with some conversational research, one-on-one interviews with past and present RCA clients and other stake-holders. Their collective comments were then boiled down and plot-ted out on a tree-shaped chart called the Brand Map, which allows at-a-glance evaluation of how the brand is perceived. At this point, Talbot and Trozzo entered the core decision-making process. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - “Some of the info we knew,” says Trozzo, “and some was hard to hear. We started brainstorming. What were our strengths and weakness-es? Our goals and values? What did we want the company to be?” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

One of the take-aways uncovered in this joint exercise was that the existing brand didn’t accurately portray the type of relationship that Trozzo and Talbot’s clients had come to expect. “It was almost like the existing brand was doing them a disservice,” Erin Brand remem-bers in a recent phone interview. “It felt traditional, a bit dated, not very design driven, whereas the actual experience with Joe and Isa-belle was quite different.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Research showed that the design duo excelled in building personal connections with their clients, in carefully listening and responding to needs, in coming up with relevant design solutions that were as

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itself balances white walls with black furnishings. And, like the typeface, the space showcases Ray’s open, approachable design se-miotics. Trozzo and Talbot, along with their 14-member staff, have fully embraced the We Are Ray brand experience, best described as a yin-yang of right-brain creativity matched with left-brain project management skills. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Feedback from clients and the design community after the June, 2015 launch of both the new office and the new name has been highly positive. “Ray is still a boutique firm,” says Talbot, “but the rebrand-ing pushes it up in category and in profile.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Parcel’s Erin Brand remarks that, thanks to the support and collabo-ration of Ray’s partners: “Our whole team thoroughly enjoyed the process. We’re so proud of the outcome. They trusted us to do our best work, and allowed us to do our best work. The results speak for themselves.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - And when they do speak, we bet they do it on a first-name basis. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

practical as they were attractive. Brand tags their approach Prag-matic by Design. Given this feedback, Parcel proposed a handful of potential names that would speak to the firm’s “value proposition,” marketing-speak for its uniqueness. Of the handful of choices, one instantly stood out – Ray. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The new name gives a nod to the past yet implies a more accessible, contemporary persona. According to Talbot, people would frequent-ly call Raymond Chiappetta and ask to “speak to Ray.” Her partner Joe also uses a friendly, shortened form of his more formal birth name, and all their own work is conducted on a first-name basis. As an added bonus, “Ray” possesses welcome connotations of illumina-tion and energy. Even the materials sent out to announce the name change, headlined “Ray Creates Anything,” dovetailed neatly into the firm’s SEO-rich rca.on.ca domain name. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - It’s fascinating how those three little letters have already done so much for the firm. The new word-mark logo, set in traditional serif type with a distinctive modern fade, is stencilled in bold black and white – Ray Works Here – over their reception desk. The new office

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Left Joe Trozzo and Isabelle Talbot share a combined office space removed but not isolated from the rest of the Ray work team by a floor-to-ceiling glass wall that signals accessibility. Above Ray’s repurposed building combines old pine floors and supports, exposed brick walls and a vintage vestibule with such modern ele-ments as a dramatic spiral chandelier by Toronto’s Artimede Light-ing. Right The new Ray office was relocated to a converted pickle factory in Toronto’s trendy, post-industrial Junction Triangle. Instead of working on multiple floors, as they did in their Queen St. W. past, staff members can now liaise across one large, dynamic expanse.

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Jean de Lessard generates an appropriately informal, seemingly anarchic vibe for a company enmeshed in the helter-skelter of night time crowds.

a

shoochaos

o ed der rfw

Photography by Adrien Williams

By Rhys Phillips

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From the exterior, Montreal-based PixMob’s new head office, tech-nology studio and warehouse appears hardly auspicious. It is lodged in the middle of a plain, single-storey red brick structure of indeter-minate mid-20th century vintage sitting among other aging industrial buildings and warehouses north of the city’s crosstown Metropolitan freeway. Only a few signs suggest this gritty area may be getting a new lease on life with conversions into the type of industrial lofts much coveted by the new creative economy. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Inside, however, the approximately 6,000-sq.-ft. office/studio designed by Jean de Lessard first appears as a tightly compacted but chaotic landscape populated with abstracted black boulders, a rich yellow shard and angled pine-board sheds. The light level is relatively low but comfortably mellow and streaked by beams of natural light from two skylights. Stout, original structural wood columns supporting an ex-posed wood roof deck have been stripped back to their natural state. This, along with the yellowy-white chipped paint left untouched as a raw, tactile patina on the interior brick walls only reinforces the idea of a techno-landscape tucked beneath a unifying tree canopy. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Unlike in newer office buildings, de Lessard believed an “interesting story” resonated; so, he says, “we kept the details on the walls, we re-moved little to retain the existing incredible mood.” He eschews, how-ever, a geological reading of the space although not its sense of chaos, albeit an oxymoronic “ordered chaos” that ensures considerable func-tionality in the plan. “It is the spirit, the energy, the feeling for what goes on at PixMob” he says, that he has sought to infuse in his design. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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PixMob is a globally successful firm, established in 2003 as ESKI and renamed in 2014. It is the brainchild of CEO David Parent and MIT-trained Vincent Leclerc, the firm’s Chief Technology Officer. The firm “connects crowds,” particularly those attending large events such as concerts or sporting matches, by supplying each audience member with a LED embedded wristband or neck pendant whose colour is remotely controlled through computers programmed by the compa-ny. Other products include light balls that bounce around a crowd morphing from colour to colour in sync with live music, light shows and physical hits; and Helicos, firefly-like swarms dropped into audi-ences. The Sochi Winter Games, Super Bowl 2014, the NBA All-star Break 2015, Microsoft Xbox, and musical acts like Coldplay and Taylor Swift are but a few of PixMob’s clients. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -On entry, a black box collaboration room, sculpted like an irregularly cut jewel but opened up with large glazed doors on two sides, blocks the way forward sending one either right or left. To the left, an open area (replete with staff bicycles) accommodates steel stairs leading to one of two side mezzanines housing the two partners’ offices. It then narrows to pass between the black boardroom and a row of closed offices along the west wall. To the right, a dynamically angled yellow fragment wraps

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behind and over the reception desk and defines one side of the corri-dor leading to a large open area hosting technicians and program-mers. In this space another tall freestanding black monolith encloses two small meeting rooms. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Stretching across the back of the office’s front section is an interior brick wall with its aging paint still in place and punctured by original door-ways and glassless window openings. In the middle of its span, this partition appears to bisect another angled volume, this one clad in un-stained pine boards. On the wall’s front south side, the enclosed space is an office while on the north it provides storage. But most importantly, the wood “shed” also frames a kitchen/eating area, an active central piazza washed with natural light from a skylight. To its east is another open workstation area tucked under the second mezzanine while on the west is a second row of enclosed offices. A last black box is pushed back to the rear with corridors on either side connecting to the ware-house. Both in its literal colour, inside and out, and in its function this irregular pentagon-shaped room is a “black box” theatre dedicated to testing company products in sync with lasers used in the shows. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - De Lessard wanted to avoid creating a chic white office laid out in a nice rational grid. Instead, he opted for dense black, mottled wood

hues and low light to reflect the night but with a slash of eye-popping yellow. When the partners suggested near the end of the design pro-cess to replace yellow with white, he responded “you are not accoun-tants, you are not engineers, you are PixMob. The space needs to reflect the feeling of a party, a bar, a creative workshop.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Working mainly through the night with techno music and flashing event videos from PixMob’s website pulsing away, he set out to mas-sage the audio beat into a spatial plan “that reflects their feeling, their energy.” To illustrate, he draws quickly on tracing paper a random pattern of connected lines while an event video blasts in the back-ground. The result is a series of patterns appearing something be-tween a gyrating stick figure and a Japanese character. “When I am satisfied that a shape gives me the kind of general feeling I want in the space, I massage it into functioning circulation space and then install the different enclosed shapes and open spaces,” he says. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - De Lessard’s PixMob office/lab generates an appropriately informal, seemingly anarchic vibe for a company enmeshed in the helter-skel-ter of night time crowds. At the same time it delivers a high function-ing, efficient work space for a growing creative company. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

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InteriorDesign Show

Jan 21 -24 2016Toronto

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Crush™ PANEL ©2011 modularArts, Inc. Canada Patent No. 2489679 Image credit Design First Interiors

10Mob.indd 46 15-11-16 1:24 PM

Page 47: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

InteriorDesign Show

Jan 21 -24 2016Toronto

Canada’s Design Fair

Metro Toronto Convention Centre North Building

InteriorDesignShow.comSponsors

Presented by

Thurs Jan 21 Opening Night Party

Fri Jan 22 ProfessionalTrade DayPresented by

Sat Jan 23 General Admission

Sun Jan 24 GeneralAdmission

Canada’s Design Fair

Metro Toronto Convention Centre North Building

InteriorDesignShow.comSponsors

TomDixonIDS16 International Guest of Honour

Presented by

Produced by

IDS16_CDN_INTER_AD_TOM_DIXON_1.indd 1 2015-11-10 2:38 PM

Stan

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is a collection of

innovative products that create graceful architectural

features with natural gypsum components.

PANELS can be joined seamlessly over existing drywall

or other substrates.

BLOCKS stack up to create rock-solid sculptural walls.

Both products feature edges that interlock in all planes

(X,Y & Z), for fast installation and superior joint stability.

modulararts.com 206.788.4210 made in the USAOver 300,000 panels worldwide.

50 InterlockingRock® designs.

Crush™ PANEL ©2011 modularArts, Inc. Canada Patent No. 2489679 Image credit Design First Interiors

10Mob.indd 47 15-11-16 1:24 PM

Page 48: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 48

There are as many ways of defining art’s “function” as there are its styles. But when seen in a corporate setting, the definitions begin to crystalize, and we tend to agree that the role of corporate art is the expression and management of corporate identity. Admittedly, the dominant stereotype that springs to mind when using the words “cor-porate” and “art” in the same sentence is of companies building a personal gallery for the office: banks and law firms lining their hall-ways and vaults with paintings by famous (read: valuable), artists, seen mostly by partners and clients. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - While it may be true that there are still many companies that see art as an “investment,” there are many more that have become aware of what corporate art can do: function as a motivator for workers and a source of creativity. And when set against the backdrop of a growing cohort of employees for whom this kind of environment is not only appreciated but expected, smart companies focused on talent attrac-

a ago oL Lo o.k kPhotography by Lisa LoganBy Peter Sobchak

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Above Located within the new Public Health Ontario headquarters, Made Visible is a multi-storey wall installation derived from images of the SARS virus, which was chosen because it was in response to this outbreak in 2003 that PHO was established. Above Left Located within an infectious disease laboratory setting, the installation is constructed of 8,000 durable, non-porous, brushed stainless steel cylinders and coloured matte acrylic Lucite disks.

Forward-thinking companies look beyond the walls as just places to hang investments masquerading as art. Instead, they use it as a canvass to energize a workforce and spread the brand gospel.

ani .

tion and retention are realizing the office walls are not just places to post internal memos or WHMIS posters. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For 30 years American Express (Amex) had been operating its Cana-dian business from a drab, lifeless corporate environment in an equally drab, lifeless industrial quadrant in the Toronto suburb of Markham. But in April of this year, the company moved its 2,000 em-ployees to a shiny new campus in North York that not-unintentionally

11Art.indd 49 15-11-17 11:14 AM

Page 50: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

evokes a Silicon Valley feel: traditional cubicles and assigned desks have been abandoned in favour of an open environment based on hoteling, desk booking, modular spaces and systems that support a mobile workforce (a corporate mental shift Amex calls BlueWork, already being used in other global offices such as New York, Lon-don and Taiwan). - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -With business casual dress, a Montessori school, Tim Hortons, dry cleaner and convenient store all on site, every decision made about the new headquarters was focused on building a positive corporate culture. “We didn’t want to build a headquarters for a bank: we wanted to build a space that houses and cultivates youthful, creative, ambitious people,” says David Barnes, VP of Advertising and Com-munications at Amex Canada. And this extended to a desire to ani-mate the space through art. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Amex sees itself as a “service” company, with credit cards just a prod-uct that facilitates the desires and lifestyles of their customers. Many of the services are centred on “life-affirming” experiences — travel, music, shopping, what Barnes calls “passion points” — that were to be reflected in the subject matter of the art. And while the primary audi-ence for this art is employees, Amex also sees employees as cardhold-ers, and the cardholder experience is what they wanted represented through the art. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

This was the basic brief that landed on the desk of OgilvyOne, a firm whose name should be fa-miliar to many: they are the advertising agency that has produced many award-winning cam-paigns for Amex. Yet the firm shrewdly eschewed the idea of just putting up old ads on the walls: while acknowledging past triumphs, “that just

looks back, and they want to look forward,” says Alex Furrer, Chief Creative Officer at OgilvyOne Toronto. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -They understood the brief, but they had to know their physical limita-tions too: with much of the working spaces given over to whiteboards and other display technologies intended for mobile collaborative work groups, their canvass was the spaces in front of the elevators, and some small spaces in public areas like reception. Using mostly modified stock photography, the results are a riot of colour and form that explode in front of you as you exit the elevators, with feelings of movement and adventure and intrigue permeating the space. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Barnes admits that Amex could have gone to an art consultant, as many firms do when looking to integrate art into an office environ-ment, but instead decided to go to their advertising agency. “We have a long-standing relationship with the agency and trust in collabora-tion is already there,” he says. “But also mainly because this is an exercise that represents and reflects the brand and OgilvyOne is the brand agency, so they understand that very well.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - While many companies spend significant sums of money hiring firms whose skill is in carefully tailoring a brand, in some cases brand cre-ation comes from the most unexpected places. Such was the case for Public Health Ontario (PHO), a Crown corporation charged with the responsibility of studying, preventing and controlling infectious dis-50

aA agdn ni .

Left Four images of the SARS virus at different magnifica-tions were deployed to ascend along with the stair, arriving at the highest magnification on the top floor. Right The relatively confined context dictated that the installation needed to be effective from a range of viewpoints and would often be visible only as a fragment or from an oblique angle. The shallow relief of the wall produces an ambiguous effect, not entirely image nor object, but serving as both from different vantage points.

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015

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52

ease. For years, toiling in nondescript laboratory facilities not far from Pearson airport, brand was not really on PHO’s mind. But with the SARS virus epidemic of 2003, PHO (which at that time was op-erating under a different name) was thrust into the public spotlight. Along with it came governmental funding and expansion, which ulti-mately resulted in relocating this year to state-of-the-art facilities along “Hospital Row” in downtown Toronto. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The new headquarters, designed by Diamond Schmitt Architects, a firm with plenty of health care project experience, are housed over four floors in the new MaRS Phase 2 building. Since the guts of this complex, like the sci-fi sounding “containment level 3” labs, are out of sight, a four-storey interconnecting stair became the central spine. This staircase, along with adjacent lounge and meeting spaces, was meant to encourage informal collaboration and interaction among scientists, staff and visitors. A continuous wall adjacent to the stair offered the architects both a headache and a blank canvas, who saw it as potential to “animate and reinforce the unity of the space,” says Joshua Cohen from Diamond Schmitt. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Originally, ideas about integrating volumetric pieces of millwork were explored (a Diamond Schmitt hallmark), but the wall and the space did not lend itself to that. In fact, the wall did not lend itself to many things, including a simple rendition of two-dimensional por-traits of the institute’s founders, which was also considered. Ulti-mately, working in concert with the scientists, the architects devised

a multi-storey wall installation comprised of almost 8,000 stainless steel rods and tubes derived from images of the SARS virus across four microscopic scales, magnifying them from 20,000x magnification, which shows hundreds of viruses on the surface of a cell, to a simulated 650,000x magnification of a single virus. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -The architects were fascinated by the transformational potential of scaling tiny microbial organisms to a monumental architectural sur-face (hence the name, Made Visible), but wanted to make sure it still speaks to the intended audience: researchers who stare at viruses all day. Abstraction was achieved using a custom algorithm that con-verts pixilated digital images into a three-dimensional array of brushed stainless steel cylinders and tubes (which loosely represent racks of clinical test tubes) on a bright Hi-Macs surface. Coloured Lucite disks recessed into the tips of the larger tubes highlight the viruses against the surrounding context. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The success of the installation was immediate. “It resonates deeply with the staff, as it refers directly to the mission and daily work of the institution, which in many cases is about magnification and identifi-cation,” says Clive Kessel, facilities executive director at PHO. “It’s really about the story that it is telling.” And in both a literal and sym-bolic way, that sentiment echoes what art – even corporate art – should be all about: make us look at something in new ways, not just be another profit item on the bottom line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

Above Cardmembers’ passions and experiences inspired the artwork that appears in elevator lobbies and other public spaces in the new headquarters for Amex Canada, including references to travel, music and adventure.

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015

IIDEXCanada is part of The Buildings Show, North America’s largest exposition, networking and educational event for design, construction and real estate, including:

Be InspiredThe best products, projects and ideas.

Be Connected30,000 attendees & 1,600 exhibitors.

Be InformedStimulating keynotes, seminars and tours.

iidexcanada.com

2015Wednesday, December 2 – Thursday, December 3

Save The Date!Wednesday, November 30 – Thursday, December 1

2016

Be at IIDEXCanada

11Art.indd 52 15-11-17 11:23 AM

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0/0 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS

IIDEXCanada is part of The Buildings Show, North America’s largest exposition, networking and educational event for design, construction and real estate, including:

Be InspiredThe best products, projects and ideas.

Be Connected30,000 attendees & 1,600 exhibitors.

Be InformedStimulating keynotes, seminars and tours.

iidexcanada.com

2015Wednesday, December 2 – Thursday, December 3

Save The Date!Wednesday, November 30 – Thursday, December 1

2016

Be at IIDEXCanada

11Art.indd 53 15-11-16 4:57 PM

Page 54: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 54

Takes a lickin’

For those friends of yours that like to carry

their smartphone through the Amazon jungle, the rugged

Nanuknano by Plasticase is

just the item for them. These small

handheld cases hold personal belongings

in shock-resistant polycarbonate resin

shells that come with a PowerClaw latch, a valve for pressure

control and elastomer over moulding providing both

internal protection and exterior shock absorption, making

them practically indestructible. plasticase.com

This year, don’t give ugly Christmas sweaters, or a fruitcake. They’re not funny, and no one wants them. Instead, give good design to those on your list. And we’re here to help with these killer gift ideas.

wa eG ei vCompiled by Peter Sobchak

Page 55: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

55 11/12 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS

I want to ride my

bicycle The VELLO bike,

a handmade, high-performance

compact urban bicycle designed especially

for urban commuting by Valentin Vodev, was

the recipient of Red Dot: Best of the Best 2015. Its magnetic

folding system enables the rear wheel to be brought forward with a rotary movement - within a second

and without needing to bend. A patented foldable mudguard

protects clothing, and to prevent theft, the bike is branded with

a personal codification system that is linked

to the profile of the owner on the VELLO website.

valentinvodev.com

This year, don’t give ugly Christmas sweaters, or a fruitcake. They’re not funny, and no one wants them. Instead, give good design to those on your list. And we’re here to help with these killer gift ideas.

omw se eyl

Page 56: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 56

Count-down is on

Normann Copenhagen has launched

a Christmas candle designed by the

Danish designer Anne Lehmann. This simple

and minimalist look is highlighted by a motif of rows of

numbers where the font alone forms the pattern. The

Christmas candle burns for a total

of 88 hours, allowing for plenty of pleasant

time counting down the days until

Christmas Eve. normann-copenhagen.

com

Page 57: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

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Industry comes to the table Steel Vessels by

Max Lipsey for TH Manufacture are made

from steel rests on a geometrical stand made of

wrought iron, meant to look like a salvaged

industrial tank. thmanufacture.com

Page 58: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 58

It happens in threesWith Tripod Glasses for TH Manufacture,

designer Maarten Baptist has rejected the bother of a single

stem. The “tripod” collection of three-

footed glasses in borosilicate is

seditious. In the hand, they force the fingers to work. At rest they

seem to dance. As troublemakers

of the dinner table, tripod glasses

play with the tradition of the placed goblet. thmanufacture.com

Page 59: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

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C’est Chic!

With around 20 contemporary

designers and crafts-men from Quebec

available on its online store, Chic & Basta

creates a link between lovers of beautiful

objects and those who make them. Among

the roster of designers are exclusives from madebyild, Marie-

José Gustave, Materia Prima, S. Chapados, Sainte Marie design

textile, and Toma glassware (shown). en.chicbasta.com

Page 60: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 60

No half-caf here!

High-end Italian coffee machine maker Lelit

has introduced the new MARA PL62 espresso machine, which boasts

a 1.5 litre – 53 oz copper boiler with

heat exchanger and thermo-siphon on the legendary grouphead

E61 of 58 mm; a double manometer to check the boiler’s pressure; separate pilot lights;

water level control in the tank; anti-burn steam and water wands, and

other features that allow aficionados to prepare superior quality espres-sos and cappuccinos in the comfort of their own

home or office. Avail-able at Montréal-based EDIKA Inc. edika.com

Page 61: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

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Soul foodA lover of jazz,

designer Eric Hibelot has adapted the early

graphic codes of the Blue Note label designed by Paul Rans – the circle and the hyphen – into contemporary

dishware for TH Manufacture.

thmanufacture.com

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Now you see me

The clever folks at molo have come up with a new felt tote to accompany their fanning paper stools. Made from grey wool felt, the

tote fits a compressed fanning paper stool to be carried off the

shoulder and go wherever you go. molodesign.com

63

Page 64: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 64

Turn the pageFolio, a new range

of storage tins, is the latest collection by

homewares company, Jay. Designed to

mimic the appearance of outsized reference

books, distinctive 1950s typography has

been combined with a bold snapshot graphic to illustrate each tin’s intended

purpose.lifeofjay.com

Page 65: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

65 11/12 2015 CANADIAN INTERIORS

Proper prose

Inspired by the analogue pleasures

of manual processes, the Ink stationery

range by Tom Dixon is a tribute to the

creation of the written word and the

hand-drawn image. A collection of bright, bold blank notebooks for writing, sketching and general jotting,

Ink products comprise crisp, gold-edged

papers in a hardback binding, with

a geometrically patterned cover.

tomdixon.net

Page 66: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

Text and photos by David Lasker

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015

2 4

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Herman Miller refreshedHerman Miller held a press preview and reception for the A&D community to launch its renovated Toronto showroom on Wellington Street West. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1—From Herman Miller’s world HQ in Zeeland, Mich.: Kimberly Oliver, senior manager, communications and media, global marketing; Matthew Buccilla, global presence marketing; and Timothy Straker, VP, global customer experience. 2— David Tallo, projects manage- ment lead; Kathy McLaughlin, facilities co-ordinator; and Zul Bidin, production assistant, Ontario College of Teachers. 3— Xdesign project manager Elizabeth Beninger; project designers Lee Photovath and Jennifer Fouquette; and Yuritza Rodriquez, associate, interior design. 4— Ella Mamiche, principal, ZAS Architects + Interiors; Roma Kozinska, career counsellor, York University Career Centre; Ja-nusz Kozinski (seated), dean, Lassonde School of Engineering, York University; and Paul Stevens, senior principal, ZAS. 5— Herman Miller Toronto’s Sabrina Ash, A&D associate; Jeff Barrett, business development manager; Katya Filippetti, marketing manager; John Roberts, A&D director; Stephanie McPhee, A&D rep.

superkül at SteelcaseThe cool architecture firm superkül designed Steelcase’s showroom, known as the Worklife Centre, atop the Sun Life Centre. So where better to launch the firm’s new coffee-table book? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1— superkül principals Meg Graham and Andre D’Elia. 2— superkül’s Shea Gallagher, project manager; Kenneth Wong, architectural designer; Larry Silva, project manager; Wendy Wisbrun, associate; Ian Douglas, associate; Joanne Myers, senior architectural designer; Deborah Wang, senior architectural designer; Mark Ross, architectural designer; and Gil Komet, senior architectural designer. 3— superkül client couple Peter Schneider, VP business and legal affairs at entertainment media producer and distributor Cineflix, and Richard Almonte, English professor at George Brown College; and Rowley Mossop, principal at Innovia (management consulting for architects and engineers). 4— Lighting designer Suzanne Powadiuk; Glenn MacMullin, associate, Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects (KPMB); and Heather Dubbledam and Drew Mandel of their respective self-named architecture firms.

4

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Ray Design’s new digsNew name, new location. Ray Design, formerly Raymond Chiappetta Associ-ates, held a housewarming party to open its new digs in Toronto’s west end. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1—Ray’s Kate Thomson Curcio, designer; Tulin Artan, associate and design director; Dana Barbetta, designer; Joe Trozzo, principal; Isabelle Talbot, principal; and Jessica Primok, junior architectural technologist. 2— Ray’s Nicky Chan, CAD and 3D specialist; Alberto Cimini, project co-ordinator; Shawn Pinto, systems admin-istrator; Matthew Bruk, project manager; and Johnny Dang, project co-ordinator. 3— Erin Brand, partner at brand strategists Parcel Design; Humanscale’s Fay Paterson, A&D rep, and Nicole Powell, account develop-ment rep; and Kori Garcia, project manager, Parcel Design.

Gilad at MolteniIsrael-born, New York-based product designer Ron Gilad, whose clients include Molteni, was in town to lecture at the Design Exchange and then be feted at a reception at the Molteni and Dada store. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1— Hariri Pontarini Architects’ Alan Wong, senior designer, and Eric Truong, designer; Jessica Nicholson, designer at commercial design firm Launch by Design; portrait painter Parastoo Mahmoudi; and Kasra Eslah-chi, architectural designer at Core Architects. 2— Diane Abrera, intern architect at Core Architects; Naim Siyoufi, residential interior designer; Jessica DeFrancesca, director, Nardinis spa; and Joseph Ng, CEO and co-founder at Umoro, makers of health and wellness products. 3—Anne Vos, owner, Super Orange (which holds Canadian distribution rights for high-end furnishings companies including Molteni and Dada); his wife, Shauna Levy, Design Exchange president and CEO; Italy’s Andrea Molteni, representing the family firm; and Ron Gilad. 4— Jenny Francis of her self-named architecture and design firm; Molteni Toronto’s Ro-man Cholasta, business development; Maryse Fafard, sales and market-ing; and Roman’s father Milan Cholasta, director.

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Hariri Pontarini at Rye Hi Ryerson University’s Paul H. Cocker Gallery kicked off its exhibit Embodied Light: The Bahá’í Temple of South America, with a standing-room-only lecture by temple designer Siamak Hariri of Toronto’s Hariri Pontarini Architects (HPA), followed by a cocktail party. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1—Cassandra Pollack, owner of marketing firm Crimson Design; and Hariri Pontarini staff members Vanessa Guillen, communications director, and architects Lindsay Hochman, Miren Etxezarreta-Aranb-uru and Alejandra Martinez. 2— HPA founding partner David Pontarini and Tahir Mohammed, who was principal client rep for York University’s HP-designed Schulich School of Business and now retired. 3— Andrew Davies, executive director, Number Nine, which uses art and design to bring awareness to environmental issues; and Luigi Ferrara, dean, Centre for Arts, Design and Information Technology, and director, Institute Without Boundaries at George Brown College. 4— Ryerson department of architectural science interim chair Jurij Leshchyshyn; Marco Polo, professor and undergraduate program director; HPA founding partner Siamak Hariri; and Ryerson architecture professor Masha Etkind.Miller.

A yA | A VAN I Kitchens + MonogramThe future of kitchen innovations was discussed, cabinetry displayed and wine enjoyed at the AyA Showroom and Monogram Design Centre in To-ronto’s Castlefield Design District, hosted by Designlines. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •1— Designers Amy Dillon and Heather Raininger of AyA Kitchens and Baths. 2— Esther Benaim, owner, Great Cooks. 3— Nicole Clark and Rachel Finamore of Faulhaber Communications. 4— Scott Eunson of Scott Eunson Studios, Dave Marcus of AyA Kitchens and Baths and Philippe Meyersohn, general manager of marketing and training at GE Appliances.

La Boite ConceptThe Spoke Club hosted the Canadian launch of France-based La Boite Concept’s LD series. This is a compact integrated hi-fi system contained within the work surface of a small side table or writing desk. The loudspeaker component doesn’t hide its true nature: midrange-driver cones and tweeter domes are proudly on view, without a camouflaging grille cloth, to enhance the wide dispersion of sound and add a tech-y visual appeal. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1— Furniture designer/maker Derek McLeod; architect Steven Casey, associate at KPMB; Mark Haagsma, co-principal at L2 Design Studio, La Boite’s Canadian importer and distributor; and Roland Ulfig, owner of residential and small-scale commercial firm Rub Design. 2— Interior designer Lilly Liaukus, co-principal at L2 Design Studio and Haagsma’s wife; Philippe Genty de la Sagne, Paris-based export manager at La Boite Concept; and Cityline interior design expert Shai Deluca and his Cityline producer, Fiona Clark. 3— Marjan Hekmati, architectural assistant at Emami Design; Roksena Nikolova, in-terior designer at Figure3; and Elahe Karimnia, architect and visiting scholar at University of Toronto.

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images courtesy of Faulhaber Communications

BEHIGHLYINSPIRED IN PARIS

PARIS / JANUARY 22-26, 2016 / SEPTEMBER 2-6, 2016P A R I S N O R D V I L L E P I N T E

PROMOSALONS - CHRISTELLE REY - TEL : + 1 514 861 5668 / 1 800 387 2566 - [email protected]

SAFI ORGANISATION, A SUBSIDIARY OF ATELIERS D’ART DE FRANCE AND REED EXPOSITIONS FRANCE / TRADE ONLY / DESIGN © BE-POLES - IMAGE © DR - ZIMINDMITRY

WWW.MAISON-OBJET.COM

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Page 69: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

BEHIGHLYINSPIRED IN PARIS

PARIS / JANUARY 22-26, 2016 / SEPTEMBER 2-6, 2016P A R I S N O R D V I L L E P I N T E

PROMOSALONS - CHRISTELLE REY - TEL : + 1 514 861 5668 / 1 800 387 2566 - [email protected]

SAFI ORGANISATION, A SUBSIDIARY OF ATELIERS D’ART DE FRANCE AND REED EXPOSITIONS FRANCE / TRADE ONLY / DESIGN © BE-POLES - IMAGE © DR - ZIMINDMITRY

WWW.MAISON-OBJET.COM

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Page 70: Canadian Interiors November December 2015

over & out

Tell us about how you started out. In six months I’ll be cel-ebrating 20 years in the art profession as a ceramicist. I did a Bachelor in Fine Arts and eventually switched to ceramics — I needed to learn the technical skills because all of my formal training has been in fine arts. I decided that functional dishware was a very pragmatic way of doing art and realized that if I wanted to make a living out of it I needed to get the right clientele. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - When you say artwork dishware, do you mean not for use? It’s dishware, but I do still consider it a form of art. So after that I started doing dishware for chefs in Montreal, particularly a Japa-nese restaurant called Soto. The Japanese have a culture of chefs working with a potter in a lifelong relationship. If you develop that relationship, it stays, and I just really like that. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - You’ve also done decorative ceramics for interiors. How did that start? Yes, that really started in 2000. It had been four years since I’d opened my studio and I was getting a little antsy. I felt like I needed to do larger pieces and I was thinking of muralists like Jordi Bonet. So I actually showed my mural at SIDIM. I didn’t have a client yet, but they had lots of texture and expression. I think it was some-

thing that was easy to translate into luxury interiors. So I got my first backsplash that I did for a Japanese restaurant. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Where did the idea for suspension ceramics come from?I thought, “Okay, I’ve covered the walls, where should I go next?” and thought “I haven’t done water yet,” so I put ceramics in a reflective pool at a trade show [and discovered] I can make ceramics float as well. I was doing the design shows, which has always been very good for me, and I started working on suspensions. I thought I would suspend some ceramic pieces in mid-air. That got me some contracts. I never showed products, I always showed conceptual spaces that were a little more difficult for the common person to understand immediately what you are selling; but it definitely triggered the right reactions for the right kind of client who were saying “I like the way you think, I like your universe. Let’s discuss something, I have this space.” They got it, they were like “Okay, you understand space and you want to work within it, so you know lobbies, atriums and things like that.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The good thing is having a competitive edge from the experience, and now I know how to install all sorts of things in complicated spaces. The sky’s the limit. We did a Revel casino in Atlantic City with a 90-foot drop and huge platforms, 20,000 aluminum pieces, because the pieces were much too big for the weight of ceramics; they would have been breakable and a massive headache. That’s the kind of thing that I can do because of the years I’ve had ahead of the game. It’s good because it is reassuring for clients: they know that whatever the complexity of a space, we can work things out. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

CANADIAN INTERIORS 11/12 2015 70

In her Montreal studio, Pascale Girardin creates luxury dishware and award-winning architec-tural design pieces for the hospitality industry, including large-scale installations at the Print-emps Hausman in Paris and the Four Seasons Place in Pudong, Shanghai.

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— full interview canadianinteriors.com

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