nunavut wellness hub

11.06.24 - Nunavut project by Lateral Office, co-led by Professor Mason White, graces June cover of Canadian Architect

The Inuusirvik Community Wellness Hub—an award-winning building designed by the practice Lateral Office, which Professor Mason White co-leads with Lola Sheppard—is featured on the cover of the June issue of Canadian Architect

“The building opened late last year in Iqaluit’s downtown core and was instantly beloved,” journalist Adele Weder writes in the feature article devoted to the project. “In a community that struggles with social and geographic isolation, the Wellness Hub could turn out to be the town’s most important new building in years.” 

The Wellness Hub is a compact multi-purpose community centre that brings together many services in Nunavut’s capital, such as counselling and daycare facilities, a wellness research centre, a research library, food preparation and gathering spaces.

Inspired by Indigenous vernacular structures, the building’s design was recognized with a 2023 Canadian Architect Award for the Lateral Office team, which includes sessional lecturer Kearon Roy Taylor, as well as Verne Reimer Architecture Inc. 

Professor White has long focused his architectural research on the North—among his projects have been the Canadian exhibition “Arctic Adaptations: Nunavut at 15” at the 2014 Venice Biennale, the 2017 publication Many Norths: Spatial Practice in a Polar Territory, and the ACSA Award-winning installation “Contested Circumpolar: Domestic Territories.” 

“For all their years of research, the Wellness Hub is the first completed building for Lateral Office, whose principals hold academic positions at the architecture schools at the universities of Toronto and Waterloo,” Weder writes. “Their practice has long been more focused on raising questions than chasing commissions.”  

Iqaluit is one of the fastest-growing cities in Canada and, as Weder notes, the burgeoning demand for new buildings is both an architectural opportunity and an imperative to design responsibly. 

“There is a wider conversation about circumpolar architectural typology: What is an arctic vernacular today?” says Professor White, Director of the Faculty’s Master of Urban Design and Post-Professional programs. “This building is a response to that question, but it is not the response. We’re just happy that this building can contribute to the wider conversation.” 

Read the full article online or pick up a copy of the June issue of Canadian Architect

All photography ©2024 Andrew Latreille. All rights reserved.