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Woody mammoth construction for dinosaurs

The Philip J Currie Dinosaur Museum aspires to become an internationally significant centre of paleontology Alberta, Canada but it has also broken new ground in timber construction for its architects Teeple Architects of Toronto. This 29,200 square foot museum rests on an ancient Pipestone Creek dinosaur bone bed and features a geometrically-complex roof, supported by exposed timber beams and struts that were designed as a metaphorical reference to the dinosaur bones that populate the museum. Source: Timberbiz

New technology had to be developed to construct the wood structure, and in particular, the nodes where up to eight large beams meet at a single point. So the design team pioneered a technique of laminating plywood to create structural connections.

The extensive use of wood, much of it sourced from local mountain pine beetle killed forests, the barn-like post-and-beam structure and the raw aluminum cladding are references to the Peace River Country’s history of agriculture and forestry.

Visitors to the museum move through a sequence of spaces and experiences that form an architectural narrative of the fascinating Pipestone Creek dinosaur bone-bed.

They start at a re-creation of the bone-bed to learn the story of the present-day artifacts. They then see from a glass box cantilevered into the lab space the paleontologists studying and preparing artifacts.

Two massive retaining walls push back the earth to expose the museum floor four metres below to which visitors descend to see the assembled skeletons. As they journey north, the narrative switches back and slopes further down to the Devonian Gallery exhibiting Alberta’s pre-dinosaur history.

The form of the roof can be seen as being ambiguously organic and prehistoric, while simultaneously referencing the rolling prairie landscape and the jagged white horizon formed by the Rocky Mountains to the south-west, as if the land itself was lifted up to reveal the secrets buried in the earth below.

The design has been awarded:

2017 OAA Design Excellence Award – Finalist
2016 Prairie Wood Design Award – Award of Excellence
2015 Wood Works! British Columbia – Wood Innovation Award
2015 Canadian Wood Council – Canadian Wood Design Award
2015 Wood Works! Alberta – Wood Advocate Award
2015 Wood Works! Alberta – Engineer Wood Advocate Award (awarded to Fast & Epp / StructureCraft)
2015 Architect Magazine R+D Awards – Citation