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- KPMB wins 11th Governor General's Medal for Architecture
 April 27, 2010
- Manitoba Hydro Place Named one of AIA/COTE Top Ten Green Projects
 April 26, 2010
- A new look for Orchestra Hall
 April 10, 2010
- Designs Unveiled for Minnesota Orchestra Hall
 April 09, 2010
- Koerner Hall: With clever lighting, an instant opera house
 March 18, 2010
- Elizabeth Paden wins the Canada Council for the Arts Prix de Rome
 March 11, 2010
- Manitoba Hydro Place named Building of the Year
 March 05, 2010
- George Brown College bringing its bustle to the waterfront
 February 23, 2010
- Wave Effect: Jeanne Gang and architecture’s anti-divas
 February 01, 2010
- KPMB wins 2010 AIA Institute Honor Award for Ryerson University Master Plan
 January 15, 2010
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June 02, 2011
The AIA recognizes 13 projects with the 2011 CAE Educational Facility Design Award
For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – June 2, 2011 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Committee on Architecture for Education (CAE) has selected13 educational and cultural facilities for this year’s CAE Educational Facility Design Awards. The purpose of the design awards program is to identify trends and emerging ideas, honor excellence in planning and design, and disseminate knowledge about best practices in educational and community facilities.
The 2011 CAE Educational Facility Design Awards jury includes: Peter C. Lippman, Assoc. AIA (jury chair), JCJ Architecture; R. Thomas Hille, AIA, Tabula Rasa Architecture + Design; Christian Long (Educator), Be Playful / Design & Studio; David Schrader, AIA, SchraderGroup and Susan Whitmer (Researcher), Herman Miller, Inc.
13 awards were issued in three categories which include Citation, Merit and Excellence.
2011 CAE Educational Facility Design Awards recipients:
Excellence
Royal Conservatory, TELUS Centre, Toronto, Ontario Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects
The TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning is the culmination of two decades of planning and design to build a new home for the Royal Conservatory (RCM). The unique hybrid of teaching, rehearsal and performance promotes the intersection of student, professional and public life, and allows the RCM to deliver its educational and public programming locally and worldwide. The project involved the historic restorative and adaptive reuse of two Victorian masonry buildings and the addition of a major new pavilion housing practice studios, classrooms and the 1,135-seat Koerner Hall.
If you would like more information or images of these projects, please contact Matt Tinder at mtinder@aia.org.
To view the full press release, please visit the AIA website: http://www.aia.org/press/releases/AIAB089775
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