Ron Arad Architects . David Adjaye Associates
Addressing the challenge and responsibility of creating a public monument which evokes a shared set of experiences relating to the holocaust and its survivors -experiences which defy abstraction or simplification- is fundamental to our proposal. It must also honour the victims and survivors of events which took place a great distance away from Canadian soil, and which are now reaching the edge of living memory.
Shunning direct didactic or symbolic content, our proposal centres on an array of thin walls or foils, 14m in height and 20m in length, spaced 120cm apart from each other -just enough for a visitor to pass through in single file. Passage through the monument is a shared experience only from a distance, and in retrospect, once others have journeyed through it as well.
There are 23 textured, tinted and articulated concrete foils in total, facilitating 22 pathways -one for each country in which Jewish communities were decimated during the Holocaust. Their combined impact, an interplay between robustness and frailty, cohesiveness and fragmentation. The narrow passages pull the eye upwards, through canyon-like undulations which frame the sky above.
National Holocaust Monument Ottawa
2014
Ottawa, Canada
Monument
Client: The National Capital Commission (NCC)
Executive Architect: Barry J. Hobin & Associates Architects
Structural Engineer: Adjeleian Allen Rubeli Limited
A design collaboration between Ron Arad Architects and David Adjaye Associates, with Art Strategies Inc & Tatar Art Projects.