Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Partisans (architectural firm)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

PARTISANS is a Toronto-based architecture firm.[1] The firm was founded in 2012 by partners Alex Josephson and Pooya Baktash.[2] Jonathan Friedman, a licensed architect with experience in Toronto, joined the firm as a partner in 2014.[3][4]

Quick facts Formation, Founder ...
Remove ads

History

In 2008, the founders of PARTISANS, Josephson and Baktash, were finishing their master's of architecture degree at the University of Waterloo.[5] They became close as they consulted on each other's thesis projects, and decided to go into business together.[5] Alex Josephson had previously worked as a sculptor and worked for the architect Massimiliano Fuksas in Rome before returning to Canada.[6] Both founders had previously worked at larger firms, where they were unable to be creative, and soon decided to set up their shop together.[5] Starting with small commissions from family, the pair soon started building their firm up, winning a commission from Osmington to become the lead architect of the redevelopment and expansion of Toronto’s historic Union Station’s commercial real estate “to leverage Union’s identity as a major transit hub and transform it into ‘a fluid stage for Toronto’s most ambitious culinary, cultural, design, and retail offerings."[7] Jonathan Friedman, a licensed architect with a decade of experience in Toronto, joined the firm in 2014 and is now the third partner.[6]

Remove ads

Publications

Graphic Novel

In 2014, Partisans published a graphic novel called "Suburbabylonia", a part manifesto, part satire novel.[8] The book has the appearance of dreamy images and truth-seeking spaceman hero, but beneath the surface, the authors aim to mock an off-kilter version of a Toronto-like metropolis, destroyed by unchecked building boom and ineptitude of municipal politicians.[8]

Book

In 2016, Hans Ibelings along with Partisans co-wrote a book called "Rise and Sprawl: The Condominiumization of Toronto".[2] Together they tackle the criticism of Toronto's current skyline, and how the rapid growth of downtown as well as the condominium development has changed Toronto.[2]

Articles

Remove ads

Projects

  • Grotto Sauna[9]
  • First Tower 55 Yonge (Toronto)[10]
  • Bar Raval
  • Master Planning Innisfil Mobility Orbit, Garden City Plan for 50,000 new homes Ontario
  • Toronto Biennial of Art
  • Luminato Festival of the Arts, The Hearn
  • Italian eatery Gusto 501[11]
  • revamping Union Station, Toronto’s central train terminal

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads