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Cdn Arch on Montreal's Grande Bibliotheque

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From Canadian Architect

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Literary Layers

By: Michael Carroll

The New Grande Bibliotheque Imaginatively Embeds Itself Into the Urban Fabric of Montreal by Creating Linkages With Street Life and Underground Public Transit Nodes.

Project Grande Biblioth�que, Montreal, Quebec

Architect Patkau Architects/Croft Pelletier Architectes/Menk�s Shooner Dagenais Architectes Associes

Text Michael Carroll

Photos James Dow, Bernard Fougeres

As a resident of Montreal's Quartier Latin neighbourhood, I have observed all of the phases of the Grande Bibliotheque's development--from the 2000 Montreal Biennale's exhibition of the competition held in the basement of the derelict roller derby building that once inhabited the site--to its opening in April, 2005. During its three-year construction period, I delighted in the heroic concrete formwork involved in creating this massive structure that was subsequently skinned in a metal shell and finally shrouded in over 6,000 glass tiles. After being open for several months, on a typical weekend it's hard to find a place to read with the record-breaking numbers of visitors that average around 12,000 a day--a number up sharply from the 8,000 people (Seattle Public Library's daily count) that officials had projected--never underestimate people's thirst for books and the unconscious residual effect of well-considered, understated architecture.

In a recent walk-through of the Grande Bibliotheque with architect Patricia Patkau, and later at her lecture at McGill University's School of Architecture, she explained the intricacies of the firm's design process. Unlike a lot of contemporary form-driven practices, the work of Patkau Architects is primarily an introverted practice, focused on initial architectural gestures that are essentially a "record of forces" present just beneath the surface of things, and which are embedded within the seemingly banal limitations of program, site and budget. It is through the critical re-situating and re-seeing of these forces where architecture, as posited by Patkau, holds its most powerful potential to create futures rich with possibility.

Right from the start, the Patkaus' initial reading of the situation given Montreal's cold winter climate and the Bibliotheque's tight budget (about one-third less than Rem Koolhaas' Seattle Public Library) limited any overt architectural gymnastics. The basic result is the Grande Bibliotheque's present manifestation as an elongated six-storey metal box that houses a concrete warehouse measuring roughly 45 metres wide by 150 metres long.

As I continue my tour with Patkau, she articulates her initial concern of dealing with this potentially "dead lump of a form"--evident in some of the library's institutional and commercial neighbours--heavy, brick-faced buildings that essentially turn their backs to the street and to each other. Probably, Patkau Architects' greatest contribution to the Grande Bibliotheque design is their transformation of the potentially hermetic program of a library and the generic form of a box into a seemingly light and layered assemblage of materials and spaces that works as a library, a cultural destination and a finely turned urban intervention.

As a library, the Grande Bibliotheque is actually two if not three libraries all in one--the Children's Library, the General Lending Library, and the National Library. The Children's Library is located at south end of the building, away from the "quiet-only zones" of the building near the entry, one level below grade. It fronts a generous landscaped light well that provides daylight, a sliver of sun, and views to the adjacent Berri-UQAM metro station. In a surreal moment, as one ascends the glass-lined escalator from the metro to the library's ground floor--one actually passes through the Children's Library and catches a glimpse of its mysterious semi-subterranean condition.

Diagrammatically speaking, the General Lending Library and the National Library are two large-scale rooms lined with slatted maple screens that demonstrate very different strategies for library design. Within the General Lending Room, books are placed in the middle of the space with the main reading zones, which consist of terraced study desks and long lounges relegated to the plan's edges in order to gain full advantage of natural light and views of the neighbourhood. Users can navigate the space vertically through a central bank of elevators and stairs, or they can meander through the library's various levels via its perimeter circulation zone--what Patkau kindly calls the "goat path." In contrast, the National Reading Room, located at the northern end of the site, is more traditional. Its books--all related to Quebecoise culture--are located on the perimeter and the main reading room, whose dramatic cubic volume is placed in the centre. The wood theme of both rooms is complemented by plywood desks equipped with pencil slots and integrated green glass reading lamps designed by the renowned Canadian industrial designer Michel Dallaire.

Because of the changing nature of emerging information technologies, the library in general is designed as a warehouse with its ducting and conduits housed in raised floors that allows flexibility over time. The present spatial layout demonstrates a fluid relationship between machines, books and reading, rather than a strict categorization of space. The result is a kind of layered immediacy, which means a library user can browse the stacks, photocopy, surf the net and read within any one zone of the library. However, despite the design intention to limit difference, the result is not a generic, de-territorized space but a series of highly differentiated spaces with subtle yet contrasting characters.

Libraries have a potentially introverted aspect implicit in their "genetic makeup." However, the Grande Bibliotheque--given la scene Quebecoise--touts itself as not only a centre for information services but also a place of culture. As a response to this, Patkau Architects capitalized on every aspect of the program that could be placed outside the controlled zones of the reading rooms to give the library a more public face and increase its cultural content. Along the library's 115-metre-long concourse that runs parallel to rue Berri, a variety of public spaces can be directly accessed, including a small bookstore, an exhibition area, a lecture theatre, meeting rooms, and a street-facing caf� that has yet to be implemented. However, one of the project's more explicit cultural features, an exterior amphitheatre for the city's many summer festivals on the north side of the complex, was unfortunately axed during the project's lengthy revision period.

As a basic box, the Grande Biblioth�que is not a bad one. Rooted to its site, it attempts to expand into the plane of the city and the metro through connections to both the immediate and extended context of the site. Any heaviness in its form is ameliorated with the lightness of the translucent glacial green glass tiles that clad the building and give it a refreshing fragility. As well, some exterior walls are cranked slightly to soften its form, and along rue Berri, the facade basically delaminates to reveal the depth of the Bibliotheque's architectural layers. Its translucent glass tile exterior hovering in front of the metal-clad wall gives way to long expanses of transparent glass curtain wall that reveals, especially at night, a multi-storey slatted maple screen that in turn frames a vertical bank of stairs and elevators--whose own internal mechanisms are exposed to add to the visual complexity of the whole architectural composition. Even along the uncompromisingly flat avenue Savoie fa�ade that stretches 150 metres, the exterior glass panels stop and start to reveal punched windows, elongated ribbons of glass and at street level, a series of second-hand bookshops (with retractable canopies) and display vitrines that hopefully will eventually blossom and animate this very colourful Montreal laneway.

The Grande Bibliotheque from both inside and outside, in plan and section, is a finely calibrated, layered construction that creates zones of compression and expansion that work at both the micro and macro level. Whether it is the construction details or the overall spatial planning, a consistent strategy seems embedded in every aspect of the design. The result is a highly systematic building with a nuanced design sensibility that is not about making a loud architectural statement up front. The strength of the Bibliotheque's considered design is that it remains background--a silent, smooth infrastructure to support the myriad of tasks at hand--in the most delightful way possible.

Michael Carroll is an adjunct professor at McGill University, a cofounder of atelier BUILD, and a recipient of the 2004 Professional Prix de Rome in Architecture.

Client Bibliotheque Et Archives Nationales Du Quebec

Architect Team Patkau Architects: Laura Arpiainen, Greg Boothroyd, Michael Cunningham, Michael Elkan, Samantha Hayes, John Patkau, Patricia Patkau, Peter Suter, Craig Simms, Nick Sully. Croft Pelletier Architectes: Marie-Chantal Croft, Eric Pelletier, Jean Chretien, Benoit Ruelland, Michel Thompson, Olivier Grenier, Cedeanne Simard, Remi Hovington Jr. Menkes Shooner Dagenais: Yves Dagenais, Gaetan Roy, Stephan Chevalier, Yvon Lachance, Luc Doucet, Dominique Dumais, Catherine Belanger, Guillaume Delorimier, Luc Montpetit, Mana Hemami, Andrea Macelwee, Alex Parmentier, Christine Giguere, Alain Boudrias, Harvens Piou.

Consulting Architect Gilles Guite Architecte

Architectural Support Jodoin Lamarre Pratte Et Associes Architectes

Structural Regroupement Nicolet Chartrand Knoll Limitee / Les Consultants Geniplus Inc.

Mechanical/Electrical Regroupement Bouthillette & Associes Inc. / Groupe Hba Experts-Conseils Inc.

Lighting Consultant Nbbj

Acoustic Consultant Legault Davidson

Theatre Consultant Scenoplus

Elevator Consultant Kja Inc.

Building Envelope Consultant Patenaude Consultants Inc.

Code Consultant Technorm Inc.

Landscape Scheme Consultants

Builder Herve Pomerleau Inc.

Area 33,000 M2

Budget $97.6 M

Completion April 2005

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Screened Glass Elevation Along Rue Berri

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The Publicly Animated Concourse Is the Real Beating Heart of the Library, From Which Patrons Can Access a Multitude of Culturally ...

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Open Stair Circulation Provides Physical and Visual Access to Layers of Stacks.

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Night and Day Comparative Images of the Building Facade.

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Voluminous Multi-Storey and Top-Lit Reading and Work Areas Defy the Traditional Hermetic Spaces Associated With Libraries.

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Photograph Captures the Sectional Dynamic of the Library; the Wood Screen Separates the Open Public Space of the Concourse From th...
 
Thank you Wylie. This looks like a fantastic building; I'd like to spend some time in it.
 
I really like the building also, and am secretly wishing that the Reference were replaced.
 
Now, let's not be hasty here. Even the Grande Bibliotheque's most thoughtful defenders wouldn't recommend that Toronto trash Moriyama's Tallest Freestanding Chunky Chocolate.

You might as well secretly wish that we replace all our old Carnegie Libraries as well...
 
I don't know...it's alright, but to be honest I don't see what's so impressive about it.
 
Dumb architects would have said the same about Carnegie libraries 50 years ago.
 
The Toronto Reference Library is fine and good! It works.

--

There was a rollar derby building here?? Sometimes I wish I could be transported back to like 1965 and see all this weird ungentrified city stuff, just for a bit.
 
Good thing Im not a dumb architect.

Well, if you were a smart architect, you wouldn't say things like "I don't see what's so impressive about it"...
 
Well, if you were a smart architect, you wouldn't say things like "I don't see what's so impressive about it"...

Are you sure?

As a designer I can appreciate things like quality, use of materials, etc...but that doesn't mean the design, overall, is appealing. I'm sure it's impressive in some aspects, but from what I've seen the design, aesthetically, does not impress me.

Of course, if I had a detailed look perhaps my opinion would change...but as it stands, I don't find the design too impressive.
 
More than anything else, when I see these images I am reminded that the prevailing aesthetic in Canada for the last fifteen or twenty years has been a kinder, gentler stylistic extension of Modernism. This could just as easily be a glimpse at our City Room, or our Ballet School, or into a sleek aA lobby, as it is a look at a Patkau building in Montreal.

A critical mass of these buildings is now being constructed across the country and provides an elegant, neutral ground against which the occasional Alsop, or Libeskind, or Gehry will stand out in foppish* counterpoint. Commercial faux rubbish can be dropped from the equation, since neither serious critical consideration nor the benediction of time will be kind to it.

* thanks adma.
 
Well, if you were a smart architect, you wouldn't say things like "I don't see what's so impressive about it"...

Oh Adma... always making silly comments...
 
More than anything else, when I see these images I am reminded that the prevailing aesthetic in Canada for the last fifteen or twenty years has been a kinder, gentler stylistic extension of Modernism. This could just as easily be a glimpse at our City Room, or our Ballet School, or into a sleek aA lobby, as it is a look at a Patkau building in Montreal.


The City Room of the Four Seasons Centre came to mind almost immediately upon seeing the 2nd pic.
 
a series of second-hand bookshops (with retractable canopies) and display vitrines that hopefully will eventually blossom and animate this very colourful Montreal laneway.

i haven't been to the library since winter ended, but last i checked those bookstores didn't exist yet. it's a shame because the laneway's retail space is designed to create a quasi-outdoor book market.
 
i haven't been to the library since winter ended, but last i checked those bookstores didn't exist yet. it's a shame because the laneway's retail space is designed to create a quasi-outdoor book market.
Is this the laneway they are talking about (between St. Denis & the Bib)?

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