Toronto École Secondaire Greenwood | ?m | 4s | Conseil Scolaire Viamonde | Snyder

AlbertC

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École Secondaire Greenwood

This renovation and addition project reimagines an existing secondary school, located at Danforth and Greenwood in Toronto, into a new 21st century French language public secondary school for the Conseil scolaire Viamonde.

The existing school building was designed by Toronto architects Fairfield and Dubois. It opened in 1971 as the Vocational School for Girls and features exposed concrete finishes typical of the Brutalist style. Our challenge was to reimage the school to provide a welcoming, modern, and daylight-filled learning environment. This vision is about ‘Dreaming Big’ – the design respects the simplicity, structural integrity, and rationality of the original building, while adding strategic areas of glazing, and opening up interior spaces to meet the Board’s programmatic requirements and student-centered approach.

Extensive renovations and a 5,000 sq.ft. addition will accommodate over 500 students in grades 7-12. The design includes an enlarged regulation-size third floor gymnasium flooded with natural light and tree-top views, a rooftop play area, a flexible Student Commons including a stage and retractable theatre seating, a new, light-filled Learning Commons, as well as specialty classrooms for sciences, technology, music and the arts.


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An article from March 2022.

Work is reportedly on schedule, and they plan to open in Sept 2023:



A couple images from the article:

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Totally unsympathetic to the original building, and yet also really ugly.

Nothing says “welcoming and modern” like galvanized aluminum and some randomly composed angles.

While I don't disagree with either of your assertions; the existing building was utterly indefensible.

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That could pass for prison.

And a poorly maintained one at that.

It's a shame they gave the job of 'fixing' it to a firm that has produced too many mediocre schools and gave them a budget that even a better firm would struggle on to achieve the objectives at hand.
 
I can say I am glad they're keeping the shape. Not so hot on the reclad though...feels like they're trying too hard on it.
 
I don't like what it is; but I didn't like what it was....

I think I'd come down on the side of 'No' on the basis that one not ought to spend significant sums of money to achieve little or no discernible value.

The building in its former iteration was already a train wreck; but not much, if anything has changed for the better.

Sigh
 

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