Toronto Aga Khan Museum + Ismaili Centre | ?m | ?s | Aga Khan Dev. | Maki and Associates

There is an exhibition on at The International Centre about the Aga Khan, which might be of interest to those who are already interested in the Aga Khan Museum and Ismaili Centre Toronto projects. Learn more on their Facebook page. Note that registration is required (e-mail Ontario@raysoflight.co), and the exhibition is only on till January 4th ...
https://www.facebook.com/events/537091899711511/
 
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Aga Khan Museum collections now integrated into MIT affiliated ArchNet

This is an extremely cool web-site for architecture buffs. It focuses on the evolutions of various styles of Islamic architecture over the centuries, but being a living site, is very much engaged with current manifestations also. Anyway, the primary reason for the mention here was me noting recently that it also has integrated some works of the Aga Khan Museum, arguably moving beyond what we traditionally refer to as architecture.

http://www.archnet.org/
 
Nice piece by Toronto Star's Christopher Hume on the Aga Khan project in Toronto

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/201...re_a_dramatic_intrusion_of_elegance_hume.html

Aga Khan Museum and Ismaili Centre a dramatic intrusion of elegance
Christopher Hume

It isn’t every day, or decade, that the city gets a beautiful new museum, not just paid for and fully stocked, but located in a part of town where architectural excellence is rare.

Toronto’s next important cultural institution, the Aga Khan Museum, and the Ismaili Centre next door will open this fall on Wynford Dr. near Eglinton Ave. and the Don Valley Parkway. The two stone-clad structures sit in a formal Islamic garden adapted to one of the most visible sites in Toronto, a 6.8-hectare high point known to countless commuters.

Until recently, this was the location of the Bata Shoe headquarters, a John Parkin masterpiece from the ’60s. Its disappearance upset many; at the same time, how can one argue with buildings by one of the India’s most respected architects, Charles Correa; Japanese master and Pritzker Prize winner, Fumihiko Maki and landscape architect Vladimir Djurovic?

The trio has transformed a high-profile suburban plot into a place of high culture, spiritual renewal, social gathering and tended landscape. In a terrain of broad strokes and left-over spaces, the detail will go unnoticed until one gets out the car and wanders around the new complex. That won’t be possible for some time, but a quick tour reveals a series of large interior rooms designed for maximum flexibility. The main prayer hall, capped with a magnificent glass dome and filled with light, is the heart of the centre. Other rooms, more social than sacred, radiate out from the hall.

Connected but separate, the Aga Khan Museum is a medium-sized facility spread over two floors and a series of galleries. Some will be programmed for the long-term; others for temporary exhibitions.

The aesthetic is clean — teak floors, white walls and windows broken only by Islamic screens. The granite on the exterior, soft-looking and creamy white, provides the perfect foil for the rows of trees and black reflecting pools that have turned the site into green oasis.

To their eternal credit, the Ismailis have planted mature trees, some 10 or more metres tall. No whips or saplings here, but a fully-formed landscape. The grass has yet to arrive, as does the museum’s 1,000-piece collection. Hardhats and work boots are still required, but the big moves have been made and spaces defined.

The simple facts of the $300-million project would make it remarkable anywhere; but on Wynford Dr. it takes on special significance. Though just down the road from the Ontario Science Centre, the Ismailis are bringing architectural and cultural excellence to an area more accustomed to office slabs and condo towers. Surrounded by anonymity, the new arrival has quietly but decisively remade the neighbourhood. The quality of design and materials alone make it a landmark, but it’s also the obvious attention paid to space itself, as if it mattered for the first time, was even valued.

Imagine, planting big trees and installing benches in the garden, as if visitors might want to linger awhile and enjoy the place. Everywhere else, the city’s in a rush; the Ismaili Centre will be a break from that; gardens aren’t for anyone in a hurry.

The very idea of putting such a garden in land marooned by highways may seem inappropriate, even oxymoronic, but as an act of urban reclamation, it is unprecedented, magnificent. On the other hand, the site’s prominence comes from those same highways. It is a billboard, seen by millions, a sudden and dramatic intrusion of elegance into the usual landscape of Car City.

And let’s not forget, the centre has underground parking for 650 cars, another 150 at grade. That will have to do until the subway arrives.
 
This is an incredibly powerful addition to Toronto's culture scene. I do wish it was located a little more centrally, but I can understand why it isn't (too expensive).


I just wished its being built on Portlands. Perfect location for this magnificent architecture! ;)
 
The $100,000 Moriyama RAIC International Prize was recently announced by the Royal Architecture Institute of Canada. The first award ceremony will be held at the new Aga Khan Museum in Toronto.

Links:

Prize Web-site said:
The Moriyama RAIC International Prize is one of the world’s largest and most prestigious cash prizes in architecture. It is awarded every two years.

The winner receives CAD $100,000 and a handcrafted sculpture designed by internationally renowned Canadian designer Wei Yew. Depicting abstractions of the Canadian landscape, no two pieces will be entirely alike.

The Prize is awarded to an architect, an architecture firm or an architecture collaboration from anywhere in the world for the design of an outstanding building or project. It may also be awarded to a non-architect for an exceptional contribution to architecture. The winner is selected through an open, juried competition.

The Prize includes a process for selecting three finalists before a winner is determined. The three finalists will be invited to attend the Gala where the Moriyama RAIC International Prize winner will be announced.

Three individual cash scholarships of CAD $5,000 will be awarded to three deserving students in Canadian Schools of Architecture, one in each of the finalists’ names. The jury will select winning students through an essay writing competition. Winners will be announced at the Gala.

Prize Web-site said:
The Moriyama RAIC International Prize Gala will be the first private function at the Aga Khan Museum in Toronto. During the reception, guests will view the three finalists’ displays and visual representations of their submissions. Following the reception and dinner, guests will enter the beautiful, high-ceilinged theatre to enjoy live entertainment, bid on an exciting set of live auction items and watch the evening culminate with the announcement of the Moriyama RAIC International Prize winner.

At the closing reception, guests will have the opportunity to network, meet the finalists and Prize winner and explore the newly opened Aga Khan Museum.

Prize Web-site said:
The Aga Khan Museum, which is due to open in Fall 2014, will be the venue for the inaugural Moriyama RAIC International Prize Gala, taking place on October 11, 2014. The Museum is located in Toronto and will be dedicated to the acquisition, preservation and display of artifacts from various periods.

The Aga Khan Museum was designed by architect Fumihiko Maki with Maki and Associates and is part of the Wynford Park complex. The complex also includes the Ismaili Centre, which was designed by architect Charles Correa Associates. Moriyama & Teshima are the architects of record for the Wynford Park complex of buildings located on a 17-acre site on Wynford Drive in Toronto.

The Aga Khan Museum is the ideal venue given Moriyama & Teshima’s work on the Wynford Park complex and His Highness the Aga Khan being awarded the prestigious RAIC Gold Medal in December, 2013 for his extraordinary achievements using architecture as an instrument to further peaceful and sustainable community development around the world.
 
Photos from various tweets (click links for credits and associated comments):

https://twitter.com/NotTemina/status/459077395090132992/photo/1/large
Bl74dWMCUAAdEFJ.jpg

https://twitter.com/NotTemina/status/459077467257307136/photo/1/large

https://twitter.com/nikiCesta/status/418091134095605760/photo/1/large

https://twitter.com/mattgallowaycbc/status/459717859380588544/photo/1/large

https://twitter.com/CEO_TorontoFdn/status/459450448097705984/photo/1/large

https://twitter.com/mattgallowaycbc/status/459716402392219649/photo/1/large

https://twitter.com/SultanAlQassemi/status/445832490398146562/photo/1/large
 
Can't remember if this was already posted previously, but likely worth a re-post anyway. This is the video produced for the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Gold Medal Ceremony that was held honoring the Aga Khan. The video includes some images of the AKM, but also some broader context about what the Aga Khan has done in the architectural arena globally. It is quite fascinating actually:

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Very uplifting space.

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