Holocaust Monument meant to provide space for reflection
Landscape designer said monument needed space for reflection.
By: Ryan Tumilty, Metro
Published on Sun Oct 01 2017
With the traffic of both Booth and Wellington Streets nearby, Canada’s National Holocaust Memorial needed shelter for reflection and Claude Cormier aimed to provide it.
Cormier was the landscape architect on the National Holocaust Memorial that opened last week at the corner of those two busy streets.
Cormier was part of a team that included architect Daniel Libeskind and several other players to create the right space for reflection. He said that’s why monument is below street level.
“When you descend into a space somehow the context around you disappears and you become emerged in the Holocaust reality,” he said. “You descended into the monument and the landscaping is actually ascending towards the sky.”
Cormier said the landscaping around the monument is meant to be minimalist, with no large trees or flowers just small shrubs so the monument itself is the star.
“It’s not making it beautiful, but it’s creating a context for where the monument sits.”
Canada was among the last major Western countries to get a Holocaust monument. The plan to build it began in 2011 with a private member’s bill that passed just before the election.
Cormier said he hopes people appreciate the monument, and hopes it adds to the character of Ottawa.
“It will certainly be an added element to the City of Ottawa, as an element people will want to visit and reflect.”
http://www.metronews.ca/news/ottawa/2017...ant-to-provide-space-for-reflection.html