interior

LEARNING COMMONS, FACULTY OF EDUCATION, MCGILL UNIVERSITY

Situated on the first floor of the Education Building at McGill, this former library space has been reimagined to address contemporary needs of university students for dynamic, connected, social, study, teaching and learning infrastructure. The new Learning commons proposes a variety of environments designed to respond to a diversity of teaching approaches, learning needs and study styles.

The Commons is organized in a logical sequence from the main public and noisy spaces, towards more intimate and quiet study and teaching areas. Upon arrival, students enter the Multi-functional room where standing height tables offer a range of possible uses, from touch and go studying, to conversations and cocktail events. An oversized circular column embraced by the spine of the Serpentine Banquette marks the boundary between informal and formal study zones and serves as conduit for cabling to power work areas. Six partially enclosed glass study pods, divided by acoustic curtains which can be drawn in order to provide intimacy, lead from the gregarious multi-functional space through a series of other environments towards the solo together Learning lounge, conceived for students seeking more tranquillity with views onto the outdoor rooftop garden.

A high-performance partition divides the Learning lounge from the computer lab. This space, a high-tech classroom and computer lab, features wall-mounted screens, white boards, and computer workstations with a capacity of 32 equipped with dual source screens on pivoting arms in order to respond to a variety of different assignments. A separate active teaching classroom is equipped with cameras and audio recording capacity, providing simultaneous and integrated remote learning and or recording of class activities, both of the teacher’s lectures as well as of the student’s interaction. Enveloped by acoustic wall treatments, white boards, and interactive Smartboards, this classroom is equipped with mobile furniture that allows for rapid rearrangement to accommodate a variety of learning environments, from lecture style teaching to more intimate project-based group work.

In order to ensure a comfortable environment for a variety activities, lighting has been conceived to create distinct ambiances for different study modes and improve the overall lighting quality and luminance on work surfaces. In addition to the attention to light and views, ambient noise is reduced using a variety of high-performance acoustic wall treatments and ceiling tiles, including circular acoustic clouds which are suspended below the 1960’s concrete waffle slab.

This project shows that working within a high-quality 1970’s brutalist building, it is possible to create a dialogue with noble modern architecture, while responding to contemporary needs of the 21st university.


THE UNIVERSAL MOBILE CLINIC (UMC)

Since 2013, ékm has created 30 mobile clinics currently on the road or in production. These specialised vehicles form part of a wide initiative to bring health care to people who may not normally have access to the kind of health care services they need. This includes primary health care and social services for marginalized or homeless populations, as well as harm reduction services for people experiencing substance abuse.

The UMC is an efficient and versatile mobile health clinic consisting of a modular “kit of parts” installed in an affordable, maneuverable and modestly-sized vehicle that provides for a wide range of healthcare needs.

All UMC components are designed and built to be highly durable and cleanable. Measuring a modest 8 square meters, these architect-designed mobile clinics are having a huge positive impact in the communities they serve. The UMC models are greatly facilitating the humanitarian work done by a rapidly growing list of organizations across Canada.