Now in its ninth year, the OAA’s Queen’s Park Picks (QP Picks) program asks Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) to share their favourite buildings or other structures from their ridings to be showcased as part of an annual celebration of architecture. The Association’s Policy Advisory Coordination Team (PACT) reviews the nominations and selects a shortlist of outstanding projects to celebrate at a special reception held at Queen’s Park in Toronto in October. This year, the event was held on Tuesday, October 22, and included speeches from Attorney General Doug Downey, official opposition critic Kristyn Wong-Tam, Green Party leader Mike Schreiner, and OAA President Settimo Vilardi.
This year’s theme was “housing,” with MPPs from across all political parties suggesting exemplary places in which Ontarians live, thrive, heal, or find comfort. The theme draws on the 2024 OAA Conference topic, Housing: Pushing the Envelope, as well as some of the outreach the Association has done in its role of regulating the practice of architecture to protect the public interest. Whether heritage projects or more recent construction, these buildings represent a design philosophy that prioritizes long-term sustainability over short-term gain and recognizes the crucial role of architecture in addressing challenges and place-making within communities, offering Ontarians a place to call home.
See the picture gallery below for images from the event.
The OAA and MPPs Celebrate Ontario Architecture with Queen's Park Picks
The OAA reveals the 2024 selections for its annual Queen’s Park Picks (QP Picks) program—a collaboration with Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) across the province who share a passion for our built environment in all its many forms.
Click here.
Please click on the arrows on the image to advance the picture galley.
2024 Selections
Each year, the selection process is a painstaking deliberation by committee members at the
Ontario Association of Architects. While not all nominations can be featured here, the OAA appreciates the dedicated MPPs
who, each year, take the time to share this part of their communities with all of us.
- Carlington Community Health Centre
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2022
Architect: CSV Architects
Renovation Architect: James Edwards Architect and Frank Fentiman Architect (1992)
Nominated by: Joel Harden, MPP (Ottawa Centre) & Chandra Pasma, MPP (Ottawa West—Nepean)
- Casey House
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2017
Architect: Hariri Pontarini Architects
Nominated by: Kristyn Wong-Tam, MPP (Toronto Centre)
- Harvey Woods Lofts
Location: Woodstock, Ontario
Date of Completion: 1918, 2015 (phase 1), 2017 (phase 2)
Architect: Invizij Architects Inc.
Nominated by: Ernie Hardeman, MPP (Oxford)
- The Kensington Apartments
Location: Kingston, Ontario
Date of Completion: 1830s, 1870s, 2017
Architect: John Power and Sons (1876), Shoalts and Zaback Architects Ltd. (renovation)
Nominated by: Ted Hsu, MPP (Kingston and the Islands)
- Mikinàk Ottawa Community Housing
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2024
Engineer: Arcadis Architects (Canada) Inc.
Nominated by: Lucille Collard, MPP (Ottawa—Vanier)
- Sagatay
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2010
Architect: Hilditch Architect Inc.
Nominated by: Jill Andrew, MPP (Toronto—St. Paul's)
- Suswin Village
Location: North Bay, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2022
Architect: Larocque Elder Architects, Architectes Inc.
Nominated by: Hon. Victor Fedeli, MPP (Nipissing)
- Ulster House
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2024
Architect: LGA Architectural Partners Ltd.
Nominated by: Jessica Bell, MPP (University—Rosedale)
Bain Apartments Co-Operative (formerly Riverdale Courts)
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 1914, 1923
Architect: Eden Smith and Sons (1913), F. H. Marani (1923)
Nominated by: Peter Tabuns, MPP (Toronto—Danforth)
Few places better capture both the opportunities and challenges of affordable housing in Toronto than the Bain Co-Op, a thoughtfully designed collection of buildings and landscapes that through their 100-year history have evolved from one of Canada’s first social housing projects into a thriving cooperative community.
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Carlington Community Health Centre
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2022
Architect: CSV Architects
Renovation: James Edwards Architect and Frank Fentiman Architect (1992)
Nominated by: Joel Harden, MPP (Ottawa Centre) & Chandra Pasma, MPP (Ottawa West—Nepean)
How do you turn a 1928 public school into a community health centre and affordable housing for seniors? This was the challenge set out for the architects behind the Carlington Community Health Centre (CCHC), a showcase for effective mixed-use development that addresses the needs of its residents and community while also integrating highly sustainable design practices.
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Casey House
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2017
Architect: Hariri Pontarini Architects
Nominated by: Kristyn Wong-Tam, MPP (Toronto Centre)
Casey House’s new facility radically redefines what it means to provide compassionate healthcare, with a building that is highly functional, but is also full of love and profoundly humane.
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Harvey Woods Lofts
Location: Woodstock, Ontario
Date of Completion: 1918, 2015 (phase 1), 2017 (phase 2)
Architect: Invizij Architects Inc.
Nominated by: Ernie Hardeman, MPP (Oxford)
Harvey Woods Lofts stands as a testament to the transformative power of adaptive reuse, reanimating a historic knitting factory into 80 new affordable housing units and showing us along the way the advantages of reusing our existing buildings to address the housing crisis.
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The Kensington Apartments
Location: Kingston, Ontario
Completed: 1830s, 1870s, 2017
Architect: John Power and Sons (1876), Shoalts and Zaback Architects Ltd. (renovation)
Nominated by: Ted Hsu, MPP (Kingston and the Islands)
At the corner of Brock and Wellington Streets in Kingston’s historic downtown, you’d be forgiven for not immediately noticing a contemporary apartment building that was completed in 2017. Stitching together three historic buildings, the Kensington Apartments is a striking example of how historic preservation and increasing our housing supply can go hand in hand.
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Mikinàk Ottawa Community Housing
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Date of Completion: 1905
Architect: Arcadis Architects (Canada) Inc.
Nominated by: Lucille Collard, MPP (Ottawa—Vanier)
With a gap in affordable housing and an opportunity for new urban development in Ottawa’s east end, Ottawa Community Housing (OCH) embarked on an ambitious plan to create a new community from scratch while adhering to leading sustainability standards.
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Sagatay
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2010
Architect: Hilditch Architect Inc.
Nominated by: Jill Andrew, MPP (Toronto—St. Paul's)
Sagatay, meaning “new beginning” in Anishinaabemowin, perfectly describes this transitional housing project that transformed an existing medical building into a safe place to plan the next stage of one’s life—a new beginning for both its residents and the organization behind the project.
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Suswin Village
Location: North Bay, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2022
Architect: Larocque Elder Architects, Architectes Inc.
Nominated by: Hon. Victor Fedeli, MPP (Nipissing)
What does it mean to build a home? At Suswin Village, the answer is a careful balance of individual autonomy and strong community support that allow residents to grow, learn, and succeed.
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Ulster House
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Date of Completion: 2024
Architect: LGA Architectural Partners Ltd.
Nominated by: Jessica Bell, MPP (University—Rosedale)
Familiar yet incredibly new, Ulster House is a self-initiated prototype for middle-density housing that provides condominium living for five families within the scale and form of a typical Toronto single-family lot.
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These projects form our
Queen’s Park Picks 2024 series. We hope you enjoyed learning more about them. Check out last year's series
here or the
full series on
the blOAAg,
or view the map below to learn more about great buildings across the province!
Queen's Park Picks - Past and Present
Spanning nine years, the Queen’s Park Picks represent most regions in Ontario. The architecture is varied, ranging across multiple eras and styles of architecture. Some of the QP Picks were nominated because they were an MPP’s favourite building, some were important community or cultural landmarks, and some may simply have been a built space your local MPP wanted to know more about. Put together, they create a growing database of compelling examples of our province’s built environment.
You can click on them to learn more about the project, or expand the map by selecting the top right corner to get even more background. The 2024 selections are featured in forest green.