Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/3276
Title: Deconstructing the threshold: a new architectural language for the three nations border crossing
Authors: Warner-Smith, Christopher
Keywords: architecture;border crossing;threshold;deconstructivism;First Nation;identity;port of entry
Issue Date: 8-Apr-2019
Abstract: Deconstructing the Threshold: A New Architectural Language for the Three Nations Border Crossing confronts the philosophical framework of the international border between Canada and the United States. By identifying three fictions, following Peter Eisenman in his essay “The End of the Classical: The End of the Beginning, the End of the End,” the thesis categorizes the language of a border crossing into three fictions: Identity (Meaning), Truth (Threshold) and History (Borders through Time). By understanding these fictions to be the message that Ports of Entry (POE) are designed to convey, how can they be deconstructed, to be read by groups of people who do not acknowledge the border? The study site and location of a building proposal is located at the Seaway International Bridge Crossing spanning between Cornwall, Ontario and Rooseveltown, New York. The site plays an important role in the ideas presented in the thesis as the site is the location of Akwesasne First Nation, unceded Mohawk territory which is bisected by this border, reinforcing the idea of borders as abstract constructs. As borders are not percieved in the same way by everyone this thesis poses the question - how can a threshold become a space that embodies the idea of shared collective difference?
URI: https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/3276
Appears in Collections:Architecture - Master's Theses
Master's Theses

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