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Tagged: hole

Warming Huts 2015 winner "The Hole Idea" wins an Ontario Association Of Architects Award

By Bustler Editors|

Tuesday, Mar 31, 2015

"The Hole Idea - Now in Technicolor" at dawn. Photo credit: Leif Norman

Inspired by a 1955 classic cartoon of the same name, "The Hole Idea -- Now in Technicolor" is a playful design that evokes childhood memories of Looney Tunes cartoons, colorful playgrounds, and building snow forts. Created by Toronto-based Weiss Architecture & Urbanism, the project was one of the winning designs in the Warming Huts 2015 competition last fall.

Then this past January, the firm worked alongside Blackwell Engineering and the Canada Culvert fabrication team to complete the corrugated steel pipe construction in time for the start of Winnipeg's skating season. The Hole Idea's success continues with its recent win of an Ontario Association Of Architects Award in the Concept category.

Project info:

"Once fabricated and assembled, the colourful hut was towed out onto the ice of the Red River, placed along the city’s extensive natural skating track and then covered in two feet of snow. The structure was designed so that only the very top of the coloured pipes and the big, bright yellow opening are visible on the surface of the constructed snow bank."

Photo credit: Leif Norman

"The design was inspired by the 1955 Looney Tunes animation, 'The Hole Idea' in which an eccentric scientist develops a portable hole. Whereas the original cartoon holes were black voids, the playful holes created in the Winnipeg snow are bright orange, yellow, pink, blue, green, and purple."

Kids Playing Inside. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Fitted with a wooden bench, the large vaulted space of the hut functions as a refuge from the cold winds howling down the river. The colourful array of holes on the snow’s surface brighten up the ice the cold and wintery landscape."

Looking Up. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Since it’s placement on the river, The Hole Idea has been played with, played in, and played on. Its snow cover has been manipulated and transformed. And while children are definitely attracted to its capriciousness, it has also been heavily enjoyed by a great diversity of people, young and old."

The Green Hole. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Firm principal Kevin Weiss said that when he received the call informing that they had won, the competition organizers commented that it was refreshing to see a project designed for children. 'This comment made us think some more about the design,' Weiss recalls, 'Truth is, we didn’t design it specifically for children. Bright, colorful, and whimsical? For sure. Playful, engaging, and delightful? Definitely. But we wondered why should this be only the domain of children?'"

Kids Playing. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Weiss stated that cities are often too grey, too drab, and too utilitarian.  For the Weiss design team, the Warming Hut competition was a call to create an architecture of play, silliness, and spontaneity."

View From Atop. Photo credit: Leif Norman

These traits, perhaps childish to some, are the traits that can make urban life wonderful and are very fitting for Winnipeg’s exuberant and renowned celebration of winter living with its natural skating track, winter festivals, ice sculptures and restaurants on the river ice."

View From The Bridge. Photo credit: Leif Norman

Project Credits

Location:  Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Client: The Forks Renewal Corporation
Design Team: Weiss Architecture & Urbanism Limited - Kevin Weiss, Principal; Sophie Tremblay, Project Architect; Mina Hanna
Structural Engineer: Blackwell, David Bowick
Technical Advisor: Punch Clock Metal Works
Fabricator: Canada Culvert
Photography: Leif Norman

Related

winter ● warming huts ● tunnel ● snow ● installation ● hole ● canada

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Warming Huts 2015 winner "The Hole Idea" wins an Ontario Association Of Architects Award

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Warming Huts 2015 winner "The Hole Idea" wins an Ontario Association Of Architects Award

By Bustler Editors|

Tuesday, Mar 31, 2015

Share

"The Hole Idea - Now in Technicolor" at dawn. Photo credit: Leif Norman

Related

winter ● warming huts ● tunnel ● snow ● installation ● hole ● canada

Inspired by a 1955 classic cartoon of the same name, "The Hole Idea -- Now in Technicolor" is a playful design that evokes childhood memories of Looney Tunes cartoons, colorful playgrounds, and building snow forts. Created by Toronto-based Weiss Architecture & Urbanism, the project was one of the winning designs in the Warming Huts 2015 competition last fall.

Then this past January, the firm worked alongside Blackwell Engineering and the Canada Culvert fabrication team to complete the corrugated steel pipe construction in time for the start of Winnipeg's skating season. The Hole Idea's success continues with its recent win of an Ontario Association Of Architects Award in the Concept category.

Project info:

"Once fabricated and assembled, the colourful hut was towed out onto the ice of the Red River, placed along the city’s extensive natural skating track and then covered in two feet of snow. The structure was designed so that only the very top of the coloured pipes and the big, bright yellow opening are visible on the surface of the constructed snow bank."

Photo credit: Leif Norman

"The design was inspired by the 1955 Looney Tunes animation, 'The Hole Idea' in which an eccentric scientist develops a portable hole. Whereas the original cartoon holes were black voids, the playful holes created in the Winnipeg snow are bright orange, yellow, pink, blue, green, and purple."

Kids Playing Inside. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Fitted with a wooden bench, the large vaulted space of the hut functions as a refuge from the cold winds howling down the river. The colourful array of holes on the snow’s surface brighten up the ice the cold and wintery landscape."

Looking Up. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Since it’s placement on the river, The Hole Idea has been played with, played in, and played on. Its snow cover has been manipulated and transformed. And while children are definitely attracted to its capriciousness, it has also been heavily enjoyed by a great diversity of people, young and old."

The Green Hole. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Firm principal Kevin Weiss said that when he received the call informing that they had won, the competition organizers commented that it was refreshing to see a project designed for children. 'This comment made us think some more about the design,' Weiss recalls, 'Truth is, we didn’t design it specifically for children. Bright, colorful, and whimsical? For sure. Playful, engaging, and delightful? Definitely. But we wondered why should this be only the domain of children?'"

Kids Playing. Photo credit: Leif Norman

"Weiss stated that cities are often too grey, too drab, and too utilitarian.  For the Weiss design team, the Warming Hut competition was a call to create an architecture of play, silliness, and spontaneity."

View From Atop. Photo credit: Leif Norman

These traits, perhaps childish to some, are the traits that can make urban life wonderful and are very fitting for Winnipeg’s exuberant and renowned celebration of winter living with its natural skating track, winter festivals, ice sculptures and restaurants on the river ice."

View From The Bridge. Photo credit: Leif Norman

Project Credits

Location:  Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Client: The Forks Renewal Corporation
Design Team: Weiss Architecture & Urbanism Limited - Kevin Weiss, Principal; Sophie Tremblay, Project Architect; Mina Hanna
Structural Engineer: Blackwell, David Bowick
Technical Advisor: Punch Clock Metal Works
Fabricator: Canada Culvert
Photography: Leif Norman

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