From Dialogue to Dogma

If architects had written a Declaration of Independence in the 20th century, it might have begun with the words: 鈥淲e hold this truth to be self-evident, that all imitation of historical styles is repugnant and odious in the eyes of architects.鈥 This article of faith has informed much of the public conversation around the proposed enlargement of the Ch芒teau Laurier.
For example, Joanne Chianello, reporting for the CBC, wrote that agencies involved in the project would aim to protect the heritage character of the building, 鈥溾ut not to mimic the architecture of another era鈥. Buildings must evolve to meet the needs of modern times, with modern designs.鈥 The architect who designed the proposed extension, Peter Clewes, would agree with her. 鈥淲e need to create buildings of our time,鈥 he once told John Bentley Mays. Imitation, he said in the Ottawa Citizen last week, 鈥渏ust confuses history.鈥
This position is certainly defensible, but was taken a step further by Art Phillips, who represents the Ch芒teau鈥檚 owners, in the Citizen last week:
Phillips said the owners are looking at changing the shape of the roof on the two box-shaped additions in favour of a more pointed design. 鈥淲e have to look at how we can draw upon the architectural character of the hotel without trying to mimic it, because understand that we鈥檙e not permitted to mimic the heritage,鈥 Phillips said of the standards and guidelines for the conservation of historic places in Canada.
Note how Clewes鈥 鈥渨e need to create buildings of our time鈥 became 鈥渨e鈥檙e not permitted [my italics] to mimic the heritage.鈥 No such prohibition actually exists, but claiming that it does shifts the assumptions of the conversation. And this misinformation gathers steam: one comment posted in response to this article stated 鈥渢he city has a bylaw in place that states the addition can not look like the original building.鈥 This may be a parroting of a CTV news report last week that closed with the statement 鈥渢he architects say that there is a by-law that prevents them from building an expansion that mimics the original building.鈥
This really didn鈥檛 pass the smell test for me 鈥 for a start, how on earth would a city by-law define architectural 鈥榤imicry鈥? So I searched 鈥 in vain, as it turns out 鈥 for such a by-law, and also contacted my City Councillor, who shared my conviction that this was a complete fiction.
The key thing is to note how the conversation shifted in the space of just a few hours. Chianello and Clewes take a plausible philosophical position, but overstate it as fact. Phillips twists this into a requirement, which then gets elevated to the status of, quite literally, a law.
This, in microcosm, is how an interesting idea becomes rigid dogma, and how orthodoxy sweeps all before it. It鈥檚 my job to question dogma and orthodoxy, so that鈥檚 what I鈥檒l start doing in the next blog.
Peter Coffman
peter.coffman@carleton.ca