Prix de la présidence pour les médias en architecture | Page 2 | Institut royal d'architecture du Canada

Prix de la présidence pour les médias en architecture

This award recognizes exceptional architectural innovation. Potential areas for innovation include research and development, applied use of new technology and adaptation of existing technology. Innovation can also be demonstrated by new project delivery and construction methods, advanced design processes and fresh approaches to details and materials. 

Prix d'excellence— Lauréate 2017

Récipiendaire: 
Annmarie Adams
Ville: 
Montréal
Province / Territoire: 
QC

L’article d’Annmarie Adams intitulé Canadian hospital architecture: how we got here, qui a été publié dans le numéro du 15 mars 2016 du Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) résume en deux pages près de deux siècles d’architecture d’établissements de soins de santé au Canada.

Cet article présente une recherche universitaire dans un format accessible et souligne le pouvoir de l’architecture d’améliorer les soins de santé, un sujet d’intérêt vital pour les Canadiens.

Awards of Excellence — 2017 Recipient

Récipiendaire: 
John Bentley Mays

The Globe and Mail

Ville: 
Toronto
Province / Territoire: 
ON

For four decades, until his death in September 2016, John Bentley Mays was one of Canada’s most insightful and influential observers of architecture.

In addition to the numerous articles that he wrote for Canadian Architect, Azure, and other magazines, he authored a weekly column in the Globe and Mail newspaper on the topic of residential architecture.  Mays explored his subject with boundless curiosity, while still imparting to readers – industry leaders and the general public alike – his deep knowledge of architecture along with history, context, and theory.

Awards of Excellence — 2017 Recipient

Récipiendaire: 
Annmarie Adams
Ville: 
Montreal
Province / Territoire: 
QC

Annmarie Adams’ article, “Canadian hospital architecture: how we got here,” published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) on March 15, 2016, explains nearly two centuries of Canadian healthcare architecture in two pages.

The article presents academic research in an accessible format and underlines the power of architecture to enhance healthcare, a subject of vital interest to Canadians.

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