The gymnasium at George Brown College in Toronto was in desperate need of an upgrade. Originally built in the 1970s, the gym was due for an overhaul. “All the exercise equipment was stuck in the same small space with no natural light. The only people who used it were gym rats,” says Yew-Thong Leong, Principal Architect with SSG Architecture. “We were asked to put an addition adjacent to the gym. The college’s recreational needs had changed. They wanted a yoga studio, among other things.”
One of the challenges the project posed was the need to add a modern addition to a historical building. “When you’re building an addition to a historical building, you have to do it in such a way that it can be removed, and steel allows for that,” Leong says. “The new building is entirely made of steel.”
He adds that steel was also chosen for its strength and relatively light weight. “We left all the steel exposed. We wanted there to be a level of honesty about the design. We painted the steel pure white. It has a halo effect from the amount of light coming in – it simply glows.”