Macy DuBois

Gazell Macy DuBois M. Arch, P. Eng, PP-FRAIC, PP-RCA, FAIA (hon) (20 December 1929 – 9 November 2007) was an American-born Canadian architect who designed several landmark Toronto buildings.[1][2]

Early life

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, DuBois earned a Bachelor of Science in Engineering (cum laude) at Tufts University in 1951, and served in Europe and Asia with the U.S. Navy from 1951–54.[3] DuBois retired as Lieutenant, Junior Grade and commander of the minesweeper USS Kite with the Korea Service Star and United Nations Battle Star.[4]

Career

Uncertain about a career in engineering, DuBois attended an American Institute of Architects (AIA) conference in Boston, and was inspired to attend the Harvard Graduate School of Design, graduating in 1958.[2] In his final year, he entered the Toronto City Hall design competition with three other student collaborators.[5] Selected as one of 8 semi-finalists from a field of 510 entrants, he moved to Toronto to work on the second round and, although his design was not ultimately selected, soon relocated permanently.[1][5]

DuBois worked briefly for John B. Parkin and Associates (1958–59), then joined Robert Fairfield Associates in 1960, which was renamed Fairfield+DuBois when he became a partner in 1962. The firm went through several name changes as partners joined and left, finally becoming The DuBois Plumb Partnership after partnering with Helga Plumb in 1979 until their retirement in 2001.

His first major project, begun in 1959,[6] was the combined residence and teaching facility of New College, University of Toronto, with a curved interior courtyard inside a rectilinear facade.[7] It was well received, winning a local architectural design award after completion of phase II, and is considered one of the finest buildings on the campus.[8][9]

Having been told soon after arriving in Toronto that exposed concrete "just won't work because of our climate", DuBois determined to prove otherwise in his second significant project, the Central Technical School Arts Centre.[10] Occupied in 1963, it was an internationally recognized success, establishing his reputation designing academic buildings.[11]

The Expo 67 Ontario pavilion

Probably his most-photographed building was the Ontario pavilion at Expo 67, an irregular tent-like structure made of computer-designed fabric stretched across a steel framework. A little too imaginative for some, who claimed the model "looks vaguely like a bat strangling under a white sheet"[12] or "a model of a sort of tent city or a mess of paper triangles or mentally disarranged envelopes",[13] it was greatly admired by almost everyone who actually saw it.[14][15] Dubois wanted a natural landscaping for the pavilion and worked with landscape architect Dick Strong on a design featuring massive granite blocks, of differing size.[16]

DuBois went on to design many institutional buildings, including a large portion of Lakehead University, and win numerous awards. Generally in the modern style, he tempered the brutalism of Le Corbusier, with inspiration from Alvar Aalto, Louis Kahn and Frank Lloyd Wright.[17][18] To these influences, he personally added sensitivity to the application and environment, building on a human scale, and the use of interior spaces that are useful year-round.[19]

His only significant residential project, The Oaklands condominium and townhouse development in Toronto, is an excellent example. Earning a Governor General's Award in 1983,[20] the citation credited "Scale with surroundings well conceived; calm of the complex's interior street; considerable value obtained with limited budget.[21]

As his career matured, DuBois contributed a great deal of time to foster the profession of architecture. His energetic service to the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada earned him the presidency of the society from 1982–83,[22] and he also served as president of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts from 1988–91.[23]

His last public appearance was at the launch of the book Concrete Toronto on November 1, 2007, only a few days before his unexpected death.[2][24]

Major awards

DuBois received numerous honours and awards for his work, the most notable being:

Projects

Lakehead University Academic Building (upper right)

Prominent buildings designed by Macy DuBois include:[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Brett Popplewell (November 13, 2007). "An architect of Toronto; Visionary Macy DuBois loved the city's proximity to the great outdoors". Toronto Star. pp. A10. Retrieved 2007-11-21.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Michael McClelland and Graeme Stewart (eds) (2007). Concrete Toronto: A Guidebook to Concrete Architecture from the Fifties to the Seventies. Coach House Books. pp. 88–111. ISBN 978-1-55245-193-9.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "DuBOIS, Macy". Contemporary Architects. Chicago: St. James Press. 1987. pp. 245–7. ISBN 0-912289-26-0.
  4. E. W. Whelpton. Who's Who In Canada, 1975–76. Toronto: International Press Limited. p. 398. ISSN 0083-9450.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "City of Toronto Archives:Toronto's New City Hall". Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  6. Macy DuBois (December 1965). "Phase I: New College, University of Toronto". The Canadian Architect 10 (12): 47–58. ISSN 0008-2872.
  7. McClelland, page 100
  8. Klaus Dunker (2000). East/West: A Guide to where people live in downtown Toronto. Coach house Books. ISBN 1-55245-927-6. Retrieved 2010-01-28. New College, designed by Macy Dubois and built in two phases during the 1960s, was and remains one of the finest buildings on the University of Toronto campus.
  9. Harvey Cowan (April 11, 1970). "Concern for people marks buildings chosen for awards". Toronto Daily Star. p. 15.
  10. McClelland, page 94
  11. McClelland, page 95, photo of New York Times article, July 11, 1965.
  12. Don O'Hearn (March 3, 1965). "Ontario's Whatsit for Expo". Sudbury Star. The other day they showed off a model of the provinces's building for the 1967 Montreal fair. It is quite something?[sic] It looks vaguely like a bat strangling under a white sheet.
  13. "Ontario is Just Tents". Orillia News Letter. March 4, 1965. To protect our readers, we have refrained from publishing pictures of Ontario's $5 million (count 'em) pavilion designed for the Montreal (repeat Montreal) Exposition—it depicts a model of a sort of tent city or a mess of paper triangles or mentally disarranged envelopes.
  14. Ray Timson (April 19, 1967). "Ontario's a winner hands down over Quebec in Expo pavilion". Toronto Star. p. 1. Ontario has clobbered the bejabers out of Quebec on the site of Expo 67. To contrast the pavilions of the nation's two leading provinces is simply no contest. Ontario wins it hands down.
  15. "These are the best dozen pavilions at Expo". The Telegram (Toronto). April 29, 1967. p. 7½.
  16. McClelland, pages 107-109
  17. Jackson, page 247
  18. McClelland, pp. 100, 106
  19. Jackson, page 247, "The work of DuBois...has been based on the accepted credo of the early modern movement, which stressed rational planning, structural order, and a straightforward attitude to design."
  20. "RAIC—Governor General's Medals Recipients". Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  21. "Nine Architects Receive Governor General's Medals". RAIC Bulletin: 4–5. August 1983.
  22. "RAIC Past Presidents". Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  23. "Royal Canadian Academy of Arts—Presidents". Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  24. Urban Shocker (2007-11-02). "Looking for specific architectural details—Urban Toronto Forum". Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  25. Central Technical School Arts Center. "Central Tech announcement" (.PDF). Central Technical School Arts Center. Retrieved November 24, 2007.
  26. Public Works Canada; Energy, Mines and Resources Canada (1980). Winning low energy building designs. Ottawa: Public Works Canada = Travaux publics Canada. pp. 14–17. ISBN 0-660-50675-0.
  27. http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/hou_az_acd.jsp
  28. Linda Collier (March–April 1979). "Teamwork and Genius Make New Building One of North America's Most Economical and Innovative". Toronto Construction Association News: 20–26.
  29. http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=10230&pid=0

Sources