Nunavut's newest cultural centre rethinks the basics of building in the Arctic - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:39 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Nunavut's newest cultural centre rethinks the basics of building in the Arctic

The design process for Kuugalaaq included consulting with Cambridge Bay elders who shared information about traditional Inuinnait gathering spaces.

Cambridge Bay cultural centre replicates feel of igloos and skin tents

inside a wood-paneled round room with high ceilings and large windows
Inside Kuugalaaq, Cambridge Bay's new cultural centre. In designing the space, those involved spoke to local elders and asked them how they remember feeling in traditional gathering spaces. (Kitikmeot Heritage Society)

A new cultural centre in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, will provide space where elders can share traditional skills such as how to prepare meat and animal hide, and how to sew.

The Kuugalaaq campus was designedusing Inuinnaitdesign principles which were then combined with new building technology. The spacewill help community members pass on traditions and preserve their culture.

Emily Angulalik, the executive director of Pitquhirnikkut Ilihautiniq the Kitikmeot Heritage Society said elders have dreamed of the space for many years, though the project started to fully take shape eight years ago.

"That's the aim of our elders wherethey want to pass on their culture, their language, through the skills that they have," she said.

The opening ceremony scheduled for Sept. 6 was meant to be "like a homecoming for our elders," Angulalik said.

Design based on tradition

The design and build involved community input and local construction workers. The building itself is roughlyhexagonal, with a series of rooms organized around thecentral gathering room.

"From the exterior, it looks a little space-age due to the number of solar panels on the building," said Brendan Griebel, the project lead.

outside of a circular building
The outside of Kuugalaaq includes many solar panels. The building should be able to operate off-grid within a few years, according the project leader. (Kitikmeot Heritage Society)

The interior is spacious with a vaulted ceiling, and is informed by Inuinnait traditional gathering spaces.

"We put years of research into this, going backto looking at the ways that Inuinnait lived in harmony with their landscape," Griebel said.

'[We] use certain architectural principles like how light moves, how heat moves, and we worked with this last generation of elders who grew up in these traditional igloos and skin tents and had them speak to how they remember physically feeling in these spaces."

An aerial view of Kuugalaaq in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut shows the building's hexagonal shape. The space includes a central gathering room with a few other rooms, such as a kitchen and meeting room, surrounding it.
An aerial view of Kuugalaaq in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut shows the building's hexagonal shape. The space includes a central gathering room with a few other rooms, such as a kitchen and meeting room, surrounding it. (Kitikmeot Heritage Society)

Griebel said it's made with sustainability and energy efficiency in mind. The building includes newly designed wall panelling that is non-flammable and doesn't get mouldy. It also has more than 60 electronic monitors that measure the performance of the building's materials, technology and design. For example, Griebel said it will show how the building stands up in cold weather when 60 people are drum dancing inside.

"A lot of the funding has kind of supported our attempt to rethink the very basics of a building in the Arctic and kind of get out of these models that have been structuring houses since the 1950s and we know don't work anymore ... to find something that's a better fit for the Arctic," he said.

Mentorship

Kuugalaaq will offer an in-house elder-in-training program, which will offer mentorship to Inuinnait adults so that they can become the next generation of Elders.

"[The program will be] continuing the pattern of intergenerational knowledge transfer that has been at the heart of Inuinnait life," reads a statement from theKitikmeot Heritage Society.

The grand opening of Kuugalaaq happens Sept.6, and will include an open house of the facility, drum dancing and food from the land.

With files from Shannon Scott