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Professor Joseph Orozco helps students work on their business ideas at the Entrepreneurship Hatchery, which will move to the Centre for Engineering Innovation & Entrepreneurship (photo by Sarah Collaton)

Centre for Engineering Innovation & Entrepreneurship selects architect

New building targeted to open in 2016

The University of Toronto Engineering's new Centre for Engineering Innovation & Entrepreneurship (CEIE) has moved one step closer with the selection of Toronto-based Montgomery Sisam Architects (MSA) and U.K.-based Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios as architects for the new building.

The CEIE will serve as the hub of U of T Engineering鈥檚 collaborative learning and interdisciplinary research, with interactive spaces for learning and design, as well as a number of multidisciplinary research centres and institutes. The building will also serve as a home for the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering鈥檚 recently launched , which encourages and supports engineering students interested in launching entrepreneurial ventures.

Located on St. George Street, adjacent to iconic Convocation Hall, the 15,000 square metre CEIE is targeted to open in 2016.

The new building 鈥渨ill encourage informal and spontaneous interaction; for it is often through chance encounters that innovation occurs and entrepreneurial thinking flourishes,鈥 said Robert Davies of Montgomery Sisam Architects. 鈥淪uch encounters most often happen in the 鈥榮paces in between鈥, the halls, stairways, lobbies and passages. Set teaching spaces should be standardized and flexible to allow for change in the future whereas the shared public spaces; lounges, club space should be unique, dynamic and memorable environments.鈥

The CEIE is the central component of U of T Engineering鈥檚 $200 million fundraising effort, part of Boundless: the Campaign for the University of Toronto. Through its interdisciplinary and collaborative intent, the Centre encapsulates Engineering鈥檚 campaign goals and future, including developing global engineering leaders, nurturing engineering innovation and entrepreneurship, transforming biomedical engineering and human health, advancing information communications technology and reshaping the future of energy, the environment and sustainability.

U of T Engineering Dean Cristina Amon is looking forward to working with Montgomery Sisam Architects and Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios on the project.

鈥淭hese two firms, with their experience in designing innovative research, learning and teaching spaces, have shown they have the vision to create a signature building that will foster the boundless energy and creativity needed for the future of engineering in Canada,鈥 Amon said.

Founded in 1978, Montgomery Sisam Architects (MSA) is a mid-sized architectural firm based in Toronto. MSA has designed such buildings as the Island Yacht Club and the Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Centre and has won more than 65 provincial, national and international awards, including the 2011 Architectural Firm Award from the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada.

The firm has extensive ties with the University of Toronto. Many of its architects 鈥 including Davies 鈥 are U of T alumni. MSA has worked on other U of T projects, including the revitalization of the St. George Campus Exam Centre, and the Arts and Administration building and Joan Foley Hall at U of T鈥檚 Scarborough campus.

Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, also founded in 1978, is based in London, England, and has an international reputation for design quality, for pioneering environmental expertise and a radical architectural approach. It has designed more than 60 educational buildings, in England and around the world.

Engineering Professor Emeritus Ron Venter, who chairs the project planning committee for the Centre, said the joint proposal from the two firms was very impressive.

鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to be working with a local company that understands our vision and an international firm with a global reputation for sustainable, groundbreaking educational buildings.鈥

He noted that MSA has developed several projects in similar urban settings and has particular strengths in addressing community concerns.

鈥淭he architects and the university will work closely with the university community, our neighbours and the City of Toronto as the Centre is designed and built. The end result will be a signature building that we can all be proud of.鈥

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