Architecture Australia

Unceded: Land and design sovereignty

what do you say to a non indigenous journalist that is apologetic for not including any building you have designed in her latest article because it does not have “that look” that the non indigenous magazine editors and publishers are looking for … leaving you thinking that you have to justify your own existence to her.1

—luugigyoo patrick stewart (Nisga’a architect)

Despite significant increases in demographic diversity made visible in the global design community in recent years, the work of First Nations, Métis and Inuit architects in Canada has been historically invisible outside of the very rarest exceptions, such as the iconic works of Blackfoot architect and Anishinaabe Elder Douglas Cardinal. This should not be surprising, given that until 1961, a professional education such as architecture required one to renounce their Indigenous rights as part of the “compulsory enfranchisement” section of the Canadian Indian Act. Essentially, in order to be an architect, you needed to be

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Architecture Australia

Architecture Australia5 min read
Geelong Arts Centre (Stage 3) ARM Architecture
My first thought on seeing ARM Architecture’s Little Malop Street Redevelopment for the Geelong Arts Centre (GAC) is: Have they gone too far this time? The building is wrapped in what appears to be a white billowing curtain, complete with twisted cor
Architecture Australia6 min read
Parramatta Aquatic Centre Grimshaw with Andrew Burges Architects and McGregor Coxall
Sydney’s “second city,” Parramatta, occupies the land of the Burramattagal people, a clan of the Dharug. It was colonized in 1788, the same year as the first city. The invaders moved along the harbour to the head of the Parramatta River, where the fe
Architecture Australia4 min read
MPavilion 10 Tadao Ando Architects and Associates
MPavilion 10 is a very beautiful thing. A basically square plan is formed by six concrete walls: two sets of three, offset so that two entries – from the north and from the south – are formed by parallel pairs of walls. Inside, the pavilion has a flo

Related Books & Audiobooks