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Observations on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights

For those who have not had the pleasure of visiting Winnipeg or the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, the museum is worth visiting just for the architecture.

By Dakota Paul

Date

October 4, 2018

For those who have not had the pleasure of visiting Winnipeg or the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, the museum is worth visiting just for the architecture. According to Wikipedia, the museum opened in 2014, at a final cost of $351m.

Awe-inspiring Stone

Three varieties of ancient stone play significant roles in the building, each of which were sourced from different parts of the globe.

Alabaster: The Museum’s ramps are clad in translucent white alabaster quarried from Spain. It is beautifully patterned with veins that might suggest blood vessels or other organic forms. The architect has described the ramps as “a ribbon of circulation” through the building. “Alabaster”, he notes, “has mythic associations both sacred and utilitarian.”

Tyndall Stone: The building entry’s “roots” and the upper floor “mountains” showcase Manitoba’s own Tyndall stone. This cream-coloured, mottled limestone was quarried near the town of Garson. It’s commonly used throughout the province as a building material for landmarks such as the Legislative Building. It contains small fossils of prehistoric marine creatures.

Basalt: The columns in the Stuart Clark Garden of Contemplation are made from basalt that formed millions of years ago, when volcanic lava cooled rapidly into pillar-like structures. These columns have a hexagonal, or other polygonal, shape. The Museum’s basalt comes from Inner Mongolia.

An array of ramping bridges wrapped with backlit alabaster

The Garden of Contemplation, with its reflective pools, medicinal plants, winged cloud, and landscape of volcanic basalt.

One of the Museum’s four “roots”, covered with tall prairie grasses

By the numbers:

Here are some other impressive statistics from this epic project:

  • 24,155 square metres (260,000 square feet) of total building area
  • 4,366 square metres (47,000 square feet) of exhibit space
  • 3,540 person-years of employment in the project
  • 378 piles and 136 concrete caissons to support the building
  • 18,000 square metres (193,750 square feet) of Tyndall stone in the Roots
  • 5,400 tonnes of steel in the framework of the Cloud
  • 773 metres (2,536 feet) of white alabaster-clad ramps
  • 3,200 metre-square plates of alabaster on the ramps
  • 1,669 pieces of glass (1,335 in the Cloud, 334 in the Israel Asper Tower of Hope)
  • 600 tonnes of basalt in the Stuart Clark Garden of Contemplation
  • 35,000 tonnes of concrete
  • 2-metre (17-foot) ceilings, on average
  • 100-metre (328-foot) Israel Asper Tower of Hope, higher than Manitoba’s Golden Boy and the Peace Tower in Ottawa

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