Québec library serves as a dynamic civic space in the heart of Drummondville

by sadia_badhon | January 14, 2020 11:53 am

Chevalier Morales and DMA architectes have designed the Drummondville Library project in Québec as part of a large, integrated civic complex within a park. Photo courtesy Adrien Williams[1]
Chevalier Morales and DMA architectes have designed the Drummondville Library project in Québec as part of a large, integrated civic complex within a park.
Photo courtesy Adrien Williams

Originating from an architectural competition[2], the Drummondville Library[3] project in Québec transposes the historical, cultural, and poetic essence of the region into a studied urban and architectural composition.

The architects, Chevalier Morales[4] in consortium with DMA architectes[5], desired to work with the entire site. They considered the library building as part of a large, integrated civic complex within a park. The main objective was to use this project as a catalyst to reverse the growing isolation the site was facing as it was getting cut off the main commercial and human-scale avenue of the city. To address this problem, they engaged a dialogue between the other projects on the site: the skating rink, and the various components of the library.

The building envelope design stems from several considerations. First, the architects created a high-performance envelope in terms of sustainable development, appropriate for a library while ensuring a certain uniformity. Translucent glass panels cover a stainless-steel envelope, ceramic glass panels control solar gain, and transparent panels offer directed views of the site and provide natural light.

Secondly, a unique specificity was given to the envelope by embedding physical traces of Drummondville within the thickness of the envelope. The architects drew inspiration from the iron slag—the blue-tinted residue is a reminder of the first heavy industry in Drummondville. The milky appearance of this industrial by-product can also be associated to the whiteness of ice. At certain moments in the envelope, the use of perforated steel creates a bluish watermark behind the ceramic or translucent glass, a reminder of iron slag. Combined with the warmth of the worked wood in the staircase and the wooden floor on the second floor, the blue tint gives the envelope a unique dimension.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.constructioncanada.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Opener-4.jpg
  2. architectural competition: https://www.constructioncanada.net/montreal-library-wins-2019-grand-prix-excellence-award/
  3. Drummondville Library: https://www.drummondville.ca/culture-loisirs-et-sports/bibliotheque/
  4. Chevalier Morales: http://www.chevaliermorales.com/
  5. DMA architectes: https://www.dma-arch.com/en

Source URL: https://www.constructioncanada.net/quebec-library-serves-as-a-dynamic-civic-space-in-the-heart-of-drummondville/