The Destructor Wins AIA International Design Award
The Destructor Wins AIA International Design Award
Our Destructor Initiative won an AIA International Design Award in the Unbuilt Category.
We're proud to announce that our Destructor project has won an AIA International Design Award of Merit for Unbuilt Projects!
SvN was hired by TAS to develop a groundbreaking concept for the adaptive re-use of the Wellington Destructor and its site. The project, named The Destructor Park, is a new type of mixed-use program, infrastructure and public space that re-purposes and transforms the area into a new iconic destination for the neighbourhood.
Built over Garrison Creek in 1925, the currently abandoned Wellington Destructor was once located at the edge of Toronto. It is now centrally located just west of the downtown core. SvN will transform the site from an abandoned post-industrial building into a publicly accessible hub organized around an indoor winter park, together with an event space, café and learning centre. A new pavilion along Wellington Street will reconnect the site to the city and contains working ateliers and a new Direct Energy neighbourhood energy system. Existing adjacent to the City’s Wellington Works Yard operations, a new park will also be created—one that will serve as a positive catalyst to rethink existing parks and landscape infrastructure. Of great natural and historical significance, this new project will help restore and acknowledge portions of the buried Garrison Creek and its banks.
Click here to view and download Awards Booklet.
SvN was hired by TAS to develop a groundbreaking concept for the adaptive re-use of the Wellington Destructor and its site. The project, named The Destructor Park, is a new type of mixed-use program, infrastructure and public space that re-purposes and transforms the area into a new iconic destination for the neighbourhood.
Built over Garrison Creek in 1925, the currently abandoned Wellington Destructor was once located at the edge of Toronto. It is now centrally located just west of the downtown core. SvN will transform the site from an abandoned post-industrial building into a publicly accessible hub organized around an indoor winter park, together with an event space, café and learning centre. A new pavilion along Wellington Street will reconnect the site to the city and contains working ateliers and a new Direct Energy neighbourhood energy system. Existing adjacent to the City’s Wellington Works Yard operations, a new park will also be created—one that will serve as a positive catalyst to rethink existing parks and landscape infrastructure. Of great natural and historical significance, this new project will help restore and acknowledge portions of the buried Garrison Creek and its banks.
Click here to view and download Awards Booklet.