Of
the
thesis
entitled: An
Index
of
Bearings
and
Groundworks:
Architectural
lessons
on
foundation
building
in
Van
Tat
Gwich’in
Territory
Abstract:
The foundation mediates the relationship between a building and the land. It is a connection that is particularly challenging to ground in frozen soils.
Bridging the Arctic Circle in the Northern Yukon, Van Tat Gwich’in territory is situated between overlapping realities of the North and the South. The lives and knowledge of the Peoples who have inhabited this place for millennia are entangled with a shifting land, one that experiences both changing seasons and increasing warming trends. Distanced professional ‘experts’ also engage these critical issues of environmental change through research and design. Within this dynamic context, holes exist in the dominant, arborescent decision-making models for foundation systems framing design as a problem, with solutions that privilege techno-scientific knowledge.
This thesis is a constellation of work informed by architectural research, conversations, and time spent over the course of two summer seasons in Old Crow, Yukon, and my experience out on the land with local citizens who live close to it. Written from the position of a ‘not-knower’ – a visiting student of architecture and the land – this thesis offers a series of questions, attunements, and prompts for the designer. The work culminates in an index of annotated deep sections that detail the reciprocal relationships between what is above and below the ground’s surface. An Index of Groundworks and Bearingssuggests a deeper reading of the foundation as a site of dialogue between buildings, the hands and minds that build, and the land. These exchanges, both voiced and silent, involve multiple ways of knowing and relating to the land. The index is a non-comprehensive illustrated inventory of foundations encountered in this region that float above the shifting ground or search for stasis deep below grade. It explores a multiscalar meshwork of projected abstractions and foundational relationships with the land that architecture might build on. Ultimately, the intention of this thesis is to open the visiting architect’s awareness of different ways to touch the land, while questioning the foundations of architectural practice itself.
The examining committee is as follows:
Supervisor:
Anne Bordeleau, University of Waterloo
Committee Members:
Jane Hutton, University of Waterloo
Adrian Blackwell, University of Waterloo
External Reader:
David Fortin, Laurentian University
The
committee
has
been
approved
as
authorized
by
the
Graduate
Studies
Committee.
The
Defence
Examination
will
take
place:
Wednesday
October
4,
2017
1:00
PM
ARC
Loft
A
copy
of
the
thesis
is
available
for
perusal
in
ARC
2106A.