Today at 10am, HMCS Sackville made her way to Sackville landing for the summer season.
On the 4th and 5th of June, 5 teams pitched their concepts for Battle of the Atlantic Place. Bellow is how they got to that point.
A significant milestone has been reached in the plan
to commemorate the remarkable contribution by Canada in the Battle of
the Atlantic when a jury, established to evaluate design proposals for
the new Halifax waterfront landmark, compiled its short list.
Proposals were submitted from 10 consortia representing
more than 100 companies from Canada, the USA and Europe. The selected
design teams ( in alphabetical order) on the short list are:
- Barrie
and Langille with Moriyama & Teshima; - Fowler Bauld Mitchell in
association with Schmidt Hammer Larsen; - Stantec Architecture;
- WHW Architects
with Diamond Schmitt; - William Nycum Associates in collaboration
with Smith Group JJR.
Those five move to the second stage of the selection
process which requires a presentation of preliminary design ideas in
early June.
Battle of Atlantic Place, an initiative of the Canadian
Naval Memorial Trust, will be the new home for HMCS Sackville, the last
remaining Corvette – the ships critical to victory in the Atlantic.
Ted Kelly, a director on the Trust’s Board, said Sackville
is a fitting symbol of the extraordinary effort by hundreds of thousands
of Canadians, who “came from what was largely an agrarian society
to develop a capability to engage in a war at sea.”
Battle of Atlantic Place will be more than home to Sackville.
The facility will provide a memorial to more than 4,000 people who gave
their lives in the conflict and have no known grave. Perhaps most
importantly, Mr. Kelly said, “it is intended that the story of amazing
achievement of that generation of Canadians will be told in a manner
such that future generations know of the struggle and sacrifice of their
forebears in the accomplishments that shaped the character of their
country.”
Members of the evaluating jury are drawn from across
Canada. They are: Andrew Amos, engineer, senior partner in the
firm of Catalyst Engineering Consultants and Project Manager; Paul Merrick,
internationally renowned architect and founding principal of Merrick
Architects Ltd. of Vancouver and Victoria; Randy Mosher, quantity surveyor
and cost consultant based in Moncton; Jamie MacLellan, public art consultant,
Halifax; Guy Larocque, engineer, who served as director of facilities
at the Canadian War Museum; and Ted Kelly, a former
naval Captain, who heads the Battle of Atlantic Place project team.
The federal, Nova Scotia and Halifax Regional Municipal
governments, along with several corporations and individuals have made
contributions towards the development of a design concept for Battle
of Atlantic Place.
