The 2022 Governor General’s Medals in Architecture recipients have been announced. The 12 projects represent a variety of building types and sizes — from a commercial mixed-use space to a cottage to various institutional building configurations. They include a reimagined theatre, a forest pavilion, a stormwater facility, and a history and dialogue centre.
The biennial awards by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) and the Canada Council for the Arts (CCA) recognize and celebrate excellence in recently built and desgined projects completed by Canadian architects.
Winning projects come from across the country—from five Canadian provinces, along with two recipients from New York and New Jersey, USA.
The following are the 2022 recipients:
- 60_80 Atlantic Avenue, Toronto, ON, BDP Quadrangle
- Forest Pavilion, Winnipeg, MB, Public City Architecture
- Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre, Vancouver, BC, Formline Architecture
- Julis Romo Rabinowitz Building & Louis A. Simpson International Building, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, KPMB Architects
- Les Rochers, Bassin, QC, la Shed Architecture
- Point William Cottage, Muskoka Lakes, ON, Shim-Sutcliffe Architects
- Reception Pavilion of the Québec National Assembly, Quebec, QC, Provencher_Roy & GLCRM Architects
- Cherry Street Stormwater Facility, Toronto, ON, gh3* and R.V. Anderson Associates Limited
- The Brearley School, New York, NY, KPMB Architects
- The Idea Exchange Old Post Office, Galt, ON, RDH Architects (RDHA)
- Tom Patterson Theatre, Stratford, ON, Hariri Pontarini Architects
- Village at the End of the World, Kingsburg, NS, MacKay-Lyons Sweetapple Architects
“The projects represented in this year’s recipients of the Governor General’s Medals in Architecture illustrate design excellence in a variety of building typologies through their contextual response, sustainability and creativity. The thought and consideration of our award-winning Canadian architects taken in each project demonstrates their ability to produce dynamic spaces that are not only beautiful, but enlivening and enriching, enabling us to learn and grow,” said John Brown, president of the RAIC.