Bruce Kuwabara
Bruce Bunji Kuwabara, is a Canadian architect and a founding partner of the firm KPMB Architects. He is an invested Officer of the Order of Canada and recipient of the RAIC Gold Medal. He is Board Chair of the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal.
Life
Born in Hamilton, Ontario in 1949, Bruce Kuwabara studied architecture at the University of Toronto and graduated in 1972.Upon graduation, Kuwabara joined the teaching studio of George Baird, an architect and architectural theorist. Baird was influential to Kuwabara's interest in ideas of city building and the narrative concept of architecture. It was in Baird's studio that Kuwabara also encountered many of the most influential architects of the time, including James Stirling, Arata Isozaki, and Leon Krier. Following the apprenticeship with Baird, Kuwabara joined Barton Myers Associates where he was an associate for 12 years. Barton Myers, who studied under the leading American architect, Louis Kahn, inspired Kuwabara, and his future partners who were also associates of BMA – Thomas Payne, Marianne McKenna and Shirley Blumberg - to think about the city, and how to integrate strategies of urban infill and consolidation.
Honours
In 2011, Kuwabara was made an Officer of the Order of Canada "for his contributions, as an architect, to our built landscape and for his commitment to professional excellence". He is the recipient of the RAIC 2006 Gold Medal. The medal recognizes Kuwabara's contribution to the profession of architecture and is Canada's highest honour bestowed by the profession on an individual. In his acceptance speech, Kuwabara offered a personal reflection contrasting the memories of growing up in the post-World War II climate as a Japanese-Canadian with the later inspirations of his mentors and seminal events that determined his vocation as an architect. His reflections of the collaborative nature of architecture and an overview of his practice is featured in a special supplement published by Canadian Architect in the June 2006 issue, with essays by George Baird and Larry Richards who wrote: "From his collaborative contributions on large urban projects with Barton Myers in the 1970s to his conceptions for complex city fabric insertions during the past decade…, Kuwabara has demonstrated remarkable leadership as an accomplished architect-urbanist with a very particular sense of the design and health of cities." Bruce was elected into the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 2005.Sustainable design
Long before the environment was considered a priority issue in Canada, Kuwabara was studying and prioritizing strategies for integrating sustainability with architectural design. His involvement as the design principal for the Canadian Embassy in Berlin presented the opportunity to study and integrate international strategies for reducing energy consumption and developing a healthy, sustainable work environment. These lessons would greatly influence future projects in Canada, particularly Manitoba Hydro Place in downtown Winnipeg.Manitoba Hydro Place is one of the most energy efficient large-scale office towers in the world and establish a model for extreme climate design in Canada and internationally. This project is the product of a collaboration with Transsolar and Smith Carter Architects + Engineers. The project was realized through a formal C-2000 Integrated Design Process to achieve 60% reduction in energy consumption with a signature design and catalyze the urban revitalization of the downtown. The building exceeded original goals for LEED Gold and was certified LEED Platinum in 2012.
Architecture and education
Kuwabara and KPMB have supported the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design, at the University of Toronto as well as contributed to its curriculum. Specifically, Kuwabara helped to establish the Frank Gehry Chair for International Visitors in Architectural Design, as well as to the Faculty's ongoing building renovations. As co-chair of the University's Design the Future campaign, Kuwabara played a key role in spearheading funding for the Gehry Chair. In recognition of his contribution, he was presented with the Arbor Award for "outstanding personal service to the University of Toronto and its divisions."Selected work
Selected work includes:2018: Chip and Shannon Wilson School of Design, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Richmond, British Columbia
2017: Remai Modern, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
2017: Global Center for Pluralism, Ottawa, Ontario
2017: Kellogg school of Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
2017: Julis Romo Rabinowitz Building & Louis A. Simpson International Building, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
2016: Bay Adelaide East Tower and Podium, Toronto, Ontario
2015: Pan/Parapan American Games Athletes' Village / Canary District, Toronto, Ontario
2015: St. Michael's Cathedral Block Master Plan, Toronto, Ontario
2013: Bridgepoint Active Healthcare, Toronto, Ontario
2013: Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario
2013: Orchestra Hall Renewal, Minnesota Orchestra, Minneapolis, Minnesota
2012: George Brown College, Waterfront Campus, Toronto, Ontario
2012: The Joseph L. Rotman School of Management Expansion, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
2011: Vaughan City Hall, Vaughan, Ontario
2011: Gluskin Sheff & Associates, Toronto, Ontario
2011: Centre for International Governance Innovation Campus, Waterloo, Ontario
2011: The Power Plant Gallery, Toronto, Ontario
2011: Maple Leaf Square, Toronto, Ontario
2010: TIFF Bell Lightbox and Festival Tower, Toronto, Ontario
2010: Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa Ontario
2009: Le Quartier Concordia Phase 2: John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec
2009: Block 24 E, Railway Lands West, Toronto, Ontario
2009: Manitoba Hydro Place, Winnipeg, Manitoba
2009: One Bedford Residential Development, Toronto, Ontario
2008: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Phase 1A: Alternate Milieu, Toronto, Ontario
2008: SugarCube, Denver, Colorado
2008: Japanese Canadian Cultural Center, Toronto, Ontario
2007: Ryerson University Master Plan, Toronto, Ontario
2006: Gardiner Museum, Toronto, Ontario
2005: Canada's National Ballet School, Toronto, Ontario
2005: Art Gallery of Hamilton, Hamilton, Ontario
2005: Le Quartier Concordia Phase 1: Engineering/Computer Science and Visual Arts Complex, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec
2005: Canadian Embassy, Berlin, Germany
2004: Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, Don Mills, Ontario
2003: , McGill University, Montréal, Québéc.
2003: James Stewart Centre for Mathematics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario
2003: Centennial College Applied Research and Innovation Centre, Scarborough, Ontario
2002: Ravine House, Toronto, Ontario
2001: Jackson-Triggs Niagara Estate Winery, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario
2001: Star Alliance Lounge, Zurich, Nagoya and Los Angeles
2000: Richmond City Hall, Richmond, British Columbia
2000: Cardinal Ambrozic Houses of Providence, Scarborough, Ontario
2000: Goodman Theatre, Chicago, Illinois,
1999: Chinese Cultural Centre/Community Complex, Scarborough, Ontario
1998: McKee Public School, North York, Ontario
1997: Ammirati Puris Lintas, New York City, New York
1997: Indigo Books and Music, Burlington, Toronto and Kingston, Ontario
1996: Grand Valley Institution for Women, Kitchener, Ontario
1994: Design Exchange, Toronto, Ontario
1993: Kitchener City Hall, Kitchener, Ontario
1991: King James Place, Toronto, Ontario
1991: Reisman-Jenkinson Residence, Richmond Hill, Ontario
1987: Marc Laurent, Toronto, Ontario
Work in progress
Landscape of Landmark Quality, University of Toronto, Toronto, OntarioJack Layton Ferry Terminal and Harbour Square Park, Toronto, Ontario
University of Lethbridge Destination Project, Lethbridge, Alberta
11 Wellesley, Toronto, Ontario
Ronald O. Perelman Center for Political Science and Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
20 Washington Road, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
Publications
- George Baird, Thomas Fisher, Mark Kingwell and Mirko Zardini. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser, 2013.
- Lambert, Phyllis, Detlef Mertins, Bruce Mau and Rodolphe el-Khoury. The Architecture of Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects. Basel, Berlin, Boston: Birkhäuser - Publishers for Architecture, 2004.
- Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg. A monograph in the Contemporary World Architects series. USA: Rockport Publishers Inc., 1998.