Toronto, Canada 
Gehry International
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
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| Photo © Courtesy of Thomas Mayer | 
Frank Gehry transforms the Art Gallery of Ontario in part by rediscovering his (and its) past. 
At the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), 
Frank Gehry plays hockey with  architecture, turning it into a game of speed and balance. From a  curving glass entry 
facade that catches the motion of streetcars  trundling along 
Dundas Street to a switchback ramp in the lobby and then  a corkscrew stair in the 
museum’s central courtyard, Gehry—a hockey  fan—gets things moving, slows them down, then picks them up again. At  the same time, his extreme makeover of the venerable Toronto institution  reasserts the original 1918 building’s north–south axis as a  stabilizing force and the primary path for visitors to follow as they  enter the museum and orient themselves.
 
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| Photo © Courtesy of AGO Photo Resources/Sean Weaver | 
Gehry’s first building in the city where he was born and grew up (he has  done a couple of interiors there, too), the AGO brings the notion of  time and memory into subtle play. The architect’s maternal grandparents  lived just a couple of blocks away, and he often played in 
Grange Park  adjacent to the museum. He vividly remembers his first visit to the AGO  (then called the 
Art Gallery of Toronto) when he was eight years old and  speaks fondly of seeing a 
John Marin seascape in Walker Court, the  colonnaded space at the center of the museum’s original building, by  Darling & Pearson. Over the years, though, the prominence of Walker  Court in the overall scheme had diminished as the museum expanded  piecemeal. In an expansion that opened in 1993, 
Barton Myers moved the  museum’s main entry to the east side of the block, away from the  historic axis running through Walker Court and the Grange, the  19th-century mansion that served as the institution’s first home. While  the Myers design brought the entrance close to the busy intersection of  Dundas and McCaul Streets, it introduced a new circulation pattern that  was less direct and more confusing. One of Gehry’s first decisions was  to return the museum’s entry sequence to the axis he remembers from his  childhood, albeit one that now starts at an entirely new Dundas Street  facade and lobby.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Thomas Mayer | 
By bending wood in various ways throughout the project, the architect  evokes in an abstract way the feeling of hockey sticks and the boards  that envelop every rink’s skating surface. His new Dundas Street  elevation stretches over the sidewalk to embrace pedestrians in a  two-story-high glass, steel, and wood canopy that frames views of the  houses across the street and curves overhead to bring the sky into the  composition. At the east and west ends of the building, Gehry “tore off”  pieces of the canopy to interrupt the 450-foot-long expanse and create  surfaces angled toward the street intersections that can be used for  banners announcing exhibitions. Although the facade’s web of curving,  glue-laminated-wood beams injects a dynamic note onto the street, the  exposed structure has a rugged, decidedly 
Canadian, quality to it.  Nothing precious here. “I wanted to create a proscenium experience,”  says Gehry, describing how the entry canopy frames views of the scenery  and action along Dundas Street. The sweeping facade certainly engages  the fabric of the city in a way that earlier incarnations of the AGO  never did, but the narrow concrete steps and lack of benches make  sitting and lingering here less enticing than it could be.  
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
In his initial scheme for the project, Gehry envisioned a series of  towers on Dundas Street housing most of the new gallery spaces. But this  design proved too expensive, so he created the curving facade—which  reviewers and locals alike have greeted with cheers—and added a large  gallery block on the back of the building, fitting steel columns through  the existing structure and stacking new floors above the old ones. On  the second floor of the long front addition, he created a 50-foot-high  sculpture gallery that serves as one of the museum’s “wow” moments.  Douglas fir louvers run along the top portion of the curving wood ribs,  creating an animated play of light and structure. Gehry wants the  louvers to come all the way down to the floor to make the space “less  pompous,” but the museum likes the way they are now because they reveal  more of the double layer of wood elements shaping the Dundas Street  facade and allow extra light to enter from the north.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
The 88,000-square-foot tower on the back of the building looms over the  diminutive redbrick Grange, establishing a juxtaposition of scales and  materials that is a bit jarring at first. Gehry says he “painted” his  blocky new structure with blue-titanium cladding, which “works  beautifully on gray days.” And he massed his tower so it roughly matches  the height of Will Alsop’s addition to the Ontario College of Art &  Design hovering on the east side of  Grange Park. Along with an apartment tower to the south and the Alsop  building, the Gehry tower does indeed help define the park at a bigger,  more urban scale and works better the longer you look at it. 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
Inside the new Dundas Street addition, Gehry designed a lobby with a  snaking accessibility ramp made of 5-foot-high panels of Douglas fir.  With the ramp, he not only turned a necessity into an attraction, but  offered visitors walking on it sneak peeks into galleries one story  below where donor Kenneth Thomson’s collection of ship models is  displayed in Gehry-designed vitrines. In Walker Court, Gehry covered the  space with a new glass roof and used the daylight to direct visitors  through the museum. He also inserted a mezzanine level around the court  to provide access to temporary exhibition spaces and galleries for  Thomson’s collection of Canadian art (his European art collection is on  the ground floor). Walking from the second to fifth floors, visitors  take a wood-clad corkscrew stair that ascends right through the court’s  glass roof and is suspended from the new tower on the back of the  museum. To connect the top two floors, Gehry designed a curving  “barnacle” stair that cantilevers out from the south face of the tower  and offers dramatic views of the park. “Frank created a journey through  the building,” states Matthew Teitelbaum, the AGO’s director and C.E.O.  “His design is about the experience of moving from one space to  another.” Rather than grabbing attention just with its forms (both  inside and out), the AGO seduces by creating an athletic tension between  motion and repose.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Iwan Baan | 
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| site plan--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
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| ground floor plan--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
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| second floor plan--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
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| fourth floor plan--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
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| section A-A--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
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| detail--drawing Courtesy of Gehry International | 
| The People Architects: Gehry InternationLocation: Toronto, Canada
 Project Team:
 Aaron Turner
 Adam Wheeler
 Anna Marie Flaherty
 Apurva Pande
 Cara Cragan
 Colby Mayes
 Craig Gilbert
 Dave Hardie
 David Pakshong
 Doug Glenn
 Doug Pierson
 Elizabeth Grace
 George Metzger
 Heather Waters
 Henry Brawner
 Jason Tax
 Jeff Guga
 John Passmore
 Julie Lai
 Karen Tom
 Laura Bachelder
 Laura Killam
 Lauren Taylor
 Leif Halverson
 Leon Cheng
 Lisa Cage
 Monica Valtierra Day
 Natalie Magarian
 Nathalie Kull
 Patrick Hwang
 Peter Buffington
 Randy Jefferson
 Rogan Ferguson
 Ronald A. Rosell
 Stephen Traeger
 Su Kim
 Susan Beningfield
 Zach Burns
 |  | The ProductsCurtain Wall for Art Gallery: Ontario  is Oldcastle Glass | 
