A Bank Becomes an Open Architecture Firm Full of Biophilic Elements
The Sid Lee Biosquare is designed to house offices within a floating, grid-like structure and biophilic elements.
Formerly occupied by the Royal Bank of Canada, Sid Lee Architecture has created new offices for the firm as part of a larger project of revitalizing the notable Place Ville Marie complex and its esplanade. The agency is committed to the revitalization of downtown Montreal, starting with the Sid Lee Biosquare, a campus that blends the outside city with the offices inside. The interior is seen as an extension of the urban exterior thanks to its grid-like structure and biophilic elements. The grid creates open spaces while still allowing the various departments to coexist harmoniously.
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: David Boyer
Sight lines are kept open to visually link all the spaces and the people moving throughout. Not just visually, though, as the grid structure physically unites all the different spaces, levels, and people. The structure also creates mezzanines that look as if they’re floating mid-air. Green plants in varying sizes and species are placed throughout adding life to the industrial grid. Photo: Maxime Brouillet
No matter where one is standing, the eyes are led up through the white grid and to the skylights, which were stripped back to their original structure.
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Around the open central part of the space are ...
Formerly occupied by the Royal Bank of Canada, Sid Lee Architecture has created new offices for the firm as part of a larger project of revitalizing the notable Place Ville Marie complex and its esplanade. The agency is committed to the revitalization of downtown Montreal, starting with the Sid Lee Biosquare, a campus that blends the outside city with the offices inside. The interior is seen as an extension of the urban exterior thanks to its grid-like structure and biophilic elements. The grid creates open spaces while still allowing the various departments to coexist harmoniously.
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: David Boyer
Sight lines are kept open to visually link all the spaces and the people moving throughout. Not just visually, though, as the grid structure physically unites all the different spaces, levels, and people. The structure also creates mezzanines that look as if they’re floating mid-air. Green plants in varying sizes and species are placed throughout adding life to the industrial grid. Photo: Maxime Brouillet
No matter where one is standing, the eyes are led up through the white grid and to the skylights, which were stripped back to their original structure.
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: David Boyer
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Photo: Maxime Brouillet
Around the open central part of the space are ...
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