July 7, 2006
Stone works breathe
life into unlovely city centre
Landmark project at
Iqaluit Square will be focal point and gathering place for crowds large and
small
JACKIE
WALLACE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Mary
Crnkovich (right) and her colleague Jo Hodgeson work quickly to secure a boulder
in the shadow of the forklift that is helping the women piece together the design
of Iqaluit Square.
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Prodded gently by a forklift,
a boulder larger than an adult seal balances precariously as the stones of Iqaluit
Square fall precisely into place.
Mary Crnkovich, a mason
from Ottawa who specializes in fitting stones together without concrete, is
deep in the dust of this painstakingly slow process.
As the forklift tips and
holds a boulder in place, she and her colleague steady the rock by shoveling
dirt at its base to hold it in place. They step back to make sure it is perfectly
placed, and check the line of where other rocks will follow. It's a project
taking shape one rock at a time.
These stones will create
a 30-by-60 metre ellipse that will host gatherings of up to 1,000 people. It
will be the centre of the future public gathering place in front of the elder's
qammak.
The ellipse, with a stage
built at its centre, will be finished by the end of this summer, and a wall
surrounding the square will be completed by the end of next summer.
The project is intended
to beautify the otherwise dusty and garbage-strewn streets of Iqaluit and kickstart
the identity of the city's downtown core. The stage will be a venue for performance
and the stone wall will have broad openings to welcome visitors into the space
and act as a bench.
"The spirit of the
square is a public gathering place for one person or many people," says
Clarissa Lo, the city's assistant planner.
Crnkovich was brought to
Iqaluit by the city to work on the project. "No mortar is being used between
the rocks," says Lo. "They are held together by gravity." This
is meant to suggest a traditional use of stones, such as the piling of rocks
for an inuksuk.
The design of the project
aims to be meaningful and traditional. The largest stone of the ellipse will
point north toward the rest of the territory.
The construction methods
of a Thule sod house will be used to lay the stone slabs that will pave the
way from the largest opening in front of the elder's centre and that will be
used to build the stage inside the ellipse.
The city is also using
sculpture to bring life to the Iqaluit's main drag. Passing by the college's
central arts and crafts centre, Crnkovich's handiwork is evident again as she
and her team work on a stone slab platform that will display a group of sculptures
centered around the concept of the sea.
And right next door, an
unused area in front of the post office will become home to two bird sculptures
by the end of the summer.
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