Hugh Westren | Royal Architectural Institute of Canada

 

Hugh Westren

Hugh Westren Portrait

1933 - January 18, 2024

In 1973 Hugh Westren while working during the day at NORR, won the RAIC competition to be the editor of the first Canadian Handbook of Practice for Architecture, consisting of 4 volumes: Business, Design, Contract Documents and Construction. Hugh wrote the 1,400-page document at night after dinner on his dining room table. The first set was issued five years later in 1978. Hugh Westren was made a Fellow of the RAIC in 1984 mainly for his efforts in conceiving the Canadian Handbook of Practice, a standard that today’s generation of Architects refer to as CHOP.

John “Hugh” Westren passed away peacefully on January 18, 2024. Born in Toronto in 1933, Hugh attended UTS and North Toronto C.I. After 4 years of hands-on labour in the construction trades and starting a family, Hugh concluded that construction management was his vocation and enrolled in the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Toronto. Upon graduating in 1962, he accepted a contract administration position with Adamson Associates and in 1971 he joined Neish Owen Roland Roy (NORR). At NORR, Hugh initially ran the site office for Terminal 2 Stage 2, Stage 3 conversion at Toronto Airport before moving for 3 years to manage the new Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, Nepal. Upon his return to NORR, Toronto as an Associate and Director of Contract Administration, Hugh participated in over 18 hospital projects in Ontario. One of Hugh’s favourite projects was Montfort Hospital in Ottawa. Through these years Hugh not only lead NORR in Project Management but taught Project Management Practice at Ryerson Polytechnical University (Toronto Metropolitan University).

When Hugh retired from NORR in 1998 to become a practicing artist in California, it was the end of an era for NORR. While the profession is left with the standard Hugh created, CHOP we at NORR had Hugh. For those who worked at NORR and still work at NORR we have the deepest of respect for Hugh as a teacher, mentor, facilitator, mediator, manager, organizer, lecturer, writer, story teller and friend. Anyone who listened to Hugh’s OAA registration course and Ryerson courses is a better architect today.