THE RIGHT ANGLE JOURNAL REFRESHED
THE RIGHT ANGLE JOURNAL REFRESHED
Welcome back to The Right Angle Journal.
We’ve come up with some new answers to old questions and we hope you’ll join us in the discussion.
Tune in next month for “Pet Architecture.”
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE:
SANCTUARY OR INVESTMENT?
In the four years since The Right Angle Journal last looked at this topic (Accommodation, Vol. 4, No. 1, Fall 2020), the world has changed. In 2020, many of us were quarantined by the COVID pandemic, stuck in our homes and trying to make them not just homes, but everything: workplace, recreational space, educational space, and with the help of online conferencing, social space. We were all trying hard to reach some sort of “accommodation” with our accommodations.
In retrospect, we were much more efficient with our architectural spaces. Instead of reserving an expensive downtown office that was empty 16 hours a day, we camped out in our homes for the whole day, letting our dining room table double as an office desk plus eating surface—sometimes both, at once. Our significant others sometimes got a little testy, but our pets loved it.
Those days seem a distant memory, but many of the COVID lifestyle changes have lingered. A lot of us still work at home, spend far too much time meeting with friends two-dimensionally on a digital screen, and we are either making up for lost time by attending every possible concert, conference and social event (and savoring the experience), or we are perpetuating the calm isolation of our sequestered lives (and savoring that experience, instead).
At the very least, we have been forced to reevaluate what “home” means to us.
"The Crescent" (Model Nos. 3084 and 3086) Sears Catalog Home appearing in the 1921 Sears Roebuck Catalog. Wikimedia Commons https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a2/SearsHome3086.jpg
ASSET OR SHELTER? THE SHIFT IN CANADIAN HOUSING PERSPECTIVES
For most of Canada’s history, housing was seen as a foundation of stability—a place for families to build lives and communities. Yet, in recent years, this understanding has shifted, with homes increasingly treated as financial assets.
A VISIT TO THE PAST
Driving along portions of Mississauga Road can feel like a scenic trip into the countryside.
TENANTS
My name is Joe Flyday. I’m the chief investigator at Fly-on-the-Wall Surveillance, Inc. I’m a private eye—technically, private eyes, since I have 10,000 of them—and there’s not much that escapes my compound vision. My job is to interview the tenants of the house. All I want are the facts.
PLACES: THE KEN SEILING WATERLOO REGION MUSEUM
As you pass the museum, you are struck by the brilliant colours of the glass panels that make up the “quilt wall.” It was the force of this colour that drew me in to explore the museum one bright spring day. I’ve always had an interest in the use of colour in modern architecture.
THE VALUE OF DIFFERENCE
I come from a family of builders. My father, the son of depression era parents, did what many Canadians did prior to the Second World War. He built.