Sunday, November 15, 2009

SUMMER SWINGS!






Grand House as playground:
photos from a fourth-year landscape installation this summer!

snaps by: Andrea Hunniford.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Home/land Security

Home/land Security Opening Saturday November 21st at 6 pm - beginning at the School of Architecture and ending up at the Grand House for an outdoor film showing!




The Grand House is ecstatic to be participating in the Home/land Security Exhibit curated by Jeff Thomas. The main exhibit is at the UW Render Gallery on the main campus of the University of Waterloo, in co-ordination with Andrew Hunter. The exhibit engages the work of local artists on issues of homeland, public land, private land, land rights and security, and ideas of land ownership; notably engaging a Six Nations perspective.
In support of this work, the Grand House is currently hosting an installation by Jamelie Hassan, and will also be the site of a film screening outdoors on Ainslie Street, on Saturday November 21st. The screening is being held in co-ordination with the exhibit opening and a panel discussion on the work at the School of Architecture. Join us! More details to follow.

Following is a statement by Jamelie Hassan on her installation work.

Crown Land Beware

Prior to my conversations with Jeff Thomas about his Home/land Security project, I had been in an antique market in St. Jacob's and saw a fragment of a wooden fence with black text that read CROWN LAND BEWARE on it. I bought the fragment to consider it in a future work. Later a group of us involved in the Home/land Security exhibition met in Cambridge with Jeff Thomas and Andrew Hunter. Laura Knap was at the meeting and suggested we make a visit to Grand House Student Coop to consider this location as well for potential exhibition site - I was struck by the Grand House site, in particuliar the "ghost" steps. I had been thinking about the use of wooden survey sticks which are white with red tops - I kept coming back to this idea as Jeff talked about surveyors & mapping - public space, private property and land issues. I was thinking of ways to use the survey marker sticks within a stucture somehow on the obsolete steps at the student’s housing co-op. I decided to create a gate-like barrier/screen with wooden sticks which I painted red and white and install this structure at the based of the steps. The structure includes the found CROWN LAND BEWARE fragment and also a half wheel wooden fragment which I found in a flea market in London. This structure was built with the technical assistance of Ron Benner.

Three original found survey marker sticks were installed in the UW Render gallery, situated with a photo from family archives and photographs I took of the The National Museum of Beirut, with a soldier guarding this site. In Lebanon the security barriers - which continue to be in use - are painted red & white. There is an obvious link with security measures.

-- Jamelie Hassan, London Ontario.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Grand House [hearts] North House


Best of luck to GH Members Chris Black, Andrea Hunniford, and Andrew Haydon; to our fellow UW architecture and engineering folks, our beloved electrician Robin (Red Electric), and the rest of the team as they head to the Washington Mall with their cutting-edge solar-powered house. You guys are doing amazing work! 

Our small but sincere corn harvest


Planted and lovingly tended by our resident Sasketchewanian.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Defining Innovative

The Grand House is featured this month to define "innovative" at the University of Waterloo. Check out our article on the UW website !
In other less surprising news, the garden continues to produce many zucchinis.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

The Grand House meets Papua Indonesia



Our t shirt recently made it to the other side of the world on the back of one Dave McKinley, a long-time GH carpenter. Dave recently completed a few weeks of volunteer work in a very rural area of Papua Indonesia! (How much do you wish you were in this photo?)

Monday, June 15, 2009

Gardening Sunday!!

Breakfast to fuel up before the big day.



Susan, John, and Ava survey the scene.



The first task was to move out the sand pile left over from plastering.





Melissa and Giuseppe work on the path. Melissa : "I feel myself returning to my Irish potato farmer roots".





12 cubic yards of topsoil to be ferried about by wheelbarrow and raked out for the garden areas. The rest of the soil area on site will be remediated and improved with plantings.



Terraced beds are built into the hillside, and wheelbarrow loads of topsoil are brought down site to fill them in about 6" deep. Reena, John, Lauren and Kit finish up the morning's work.



Straw is spread above the beds as mulch; the small mounds of earth on the slope are for creepers like squash, cucumbers, and zucchini.



Gravel left over from the rainwater tank installation, and reclaimed p.t. timber steps make a good path. Anna and M'lex finish it up.



John and Chris tackle the weeds beside Roseview Ave.





Andrew and Anna against a late afternoon sky threatening rain.



We put down newspaper and topsoil over the weeds, to ready for Chris's corn plantings (interspersed with zucchini plants). Put it in the history books: Man from Sasketchewan plants his first corn seeds in Cambridge Ontario.



Laura nestles in some pepper and tomato seedlings



Our new snaky path and gardens! We couldn't believe how much we accomplished in the day.



Rainwater tank - backfilling and first collection!

Thursday, June 11: The beginning of another day of major transformation. Before.





Ferrying more gravel down the site...





The overflow pipe in place.



Once sufficiently covered in pea stone, the cistern is completely swaddled.





The inflow pipes are put in place.











It was raining as we hooked up the pipes... which meant the instant gratification of getting water in the cistern right away!
(this inflow setup was obviously temporary).
On the right, you can see the trickle of water coming from the filter overflow.



The gravel over and around the cistern is complete.



.. the final grading, at last. 2" of rigid insulation (4' wide) went in over the length of the inflow pipe - you can just see it peeking out at the far left.




Big thanks to our project sponsors:

Unit Precast for donating their labour (co-ordinating and installating the pump system)

ZCL for donating the massive fibreglass tank!

...

and to our excavators and earthmovers, Alltask Property Improvement.

Rainwater Tank Hookups

The plumber and electrician met on site with the folks from Unit Precast / RH20 to co-ordinate their systems. On the left (below) is the filter chamber, and on the right is the tank access manhole.







the pump



installing the inflow pipe



looking down into the tank



the tank outflow connection, through which water is sent back to the building



Here is the filter system in place. The white pipes are the overflow . The upper pipe is an overflow at the filter - about 5% of the inflow water drains away immediately, to get rid leaves and any other matter that might find its way along the eavestrough. The lower pipe is an overflow directly out of the tank. (Inflow pipes still to come.)



Big thanks to our project sponsors:

Unit Precast for donating their labour (co-ordinating and installating the system)

ZCL for donating the massive fibreglass tank!