Commissioned by the city of Edmonton, O-day'min Park, designed by the architecture practice gh3*, transforms a former parking lot into a vibrant public space designed to invigorate life in the city center. Located in the Warehouse Campus district, the park and its pavilion reflect the neighborhood's transition from a low-density industrial area to a dense, mixed-use residential community.

The domed roof, combined with its striking red finish, makes the pavilion an iconic structure, recognizable from various points within the park. The choice of color is not accidental: "O-day'min" means "strawberry" or "heartberry" in Anishinaabe, a name given by local elder Theresa Strawberry, symbolizing warmth, connection, and cultural continuity in the landscape.

With a covered area of ​​270 sqm, the project developed by gh3* incorporates essential services such as accessible restrooms, storage areas, maintenance spaces, and a multipurpose room for community programs, concessions, and events. Open and transparent in character, the pavilion enhances views and passive surveillance, creating a legible, welcoming, and safe public environment. The expansive roof extends beyond the enclosed volume, generating a generous outdoor space that invites gathering, relaxation, and activity throughout the year.

The proposal is part of a broader urban revitalization strategy: the transformation of a previously paved site into a multipurpose park that seeks to strengthen the connection between people and the land. In constant dialogue with its indigenous roots, the pavilion establishes itself as a place of refuge, encounter, and shared urban life throughout all seasons.

"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.

"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.

Project description by gh3*

Located in downtown Edmonton’s rapidly evolving Warehouse Campus district, O-day’min Park transforms a former surface parking lot into a vibrant new public space. Commissioned by the City of Edmonton, the park helps catalyze the neighbourhood’s transition from low-intensity industrial lands into a dense, mixed-use, residential community. The park and its pavilion represent early, highly visible public investments intended to establish identity, support downtown living, and signal a new standard for the public realm.

The O-day’min Park Pavilion, designed by gh3*, delivers  essential infrastructure through the expressive presence of a contemporary landmark. Its bold geometric vaulted roof and complete deep-red exterior create an immediate point of orientation within the park. The colour references the park’s name  -  O-day’min, meaning “strawberry” or “heartberry” in Anishinaabe  -  a name gifted by local Elder, Theresa Strawberry, and signals warmth, gathering, and cultural continuity within the landscape.

"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.
"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.

Open and transparent, the pavilion reinforces long views and passive surveillance, shaping a public place that feels legible, welcoming, and safe. An expanded architectural canopy extends beyond the enclosed program, forming a generous sheltered outdoor room that supports gathering, pause, and year-round activity. By day, the pavilion reads as a light, permeable extension of the landscape. By night, it becomes a luminous civic marker - a visible signal of public life and shared space.

Compact at 270 square metres, the pavilion provides essential amenities including universal washrooms, storage, maintenance space, and a multipurpose room for community programming, concessions and events. Its footprint and geometry are derived directly from the spatial and structural logic of the larger park, conceived as a cohesive design system. The primary entrance and gathering space face the park’s central plaza - known as the Warming Zone - strengthening intuitive orientation and creating a natural point of convergence.

"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.
"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.

The pavilion’s vaulted roof amplifies its civic presence, extending coverage to approximately 400 square metres and transforming a small building into a space of urban scale. The form recalls the celebratory character of historic park pavilions while subtly referencing Edmonton’s modernist architectural lineage through a contemporary reinterpretation of the barrel vault.

Sustainability is embedded in the design through a high-performance building envelope, deep roof overhangs that reduce solar gain, and electric heating that positions the pavilion for future low-carbon operation. Wood framing is used wherever feasible to balance material efficiency and constructability.

"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.
"O-day’min" Park by gh3*. Photograph by Raymond Chow, OAA, FRAIC.

More than an architectural object, the pavilion is part of a broader act of urban repair. The conversion of paved land into a multi-use green space strengthens the relationship between people and land. Indigenous references are woven throughout the park, from the strawberry-shaped central lawn to the pavilion’s red exterior. Barrier-free and transparent, the pavilion serves as an inclusive civic amenity -  a place of shelter, gathering, and shared urban life in every season.

More information

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Architects
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gh3*. Lead Architects.- Pat Hanson, Raymond Chow.

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Project team
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Design Lead.- Pat Hanson OAA AAA FRAIC.
Job Captain .- Richard Freeman Bsc, March.
Design Team.- Charlotte Keskinen-Keith Bas, March / Petra Bogias OAA / Joel DiGiacomo Bas, March.
Landscape Integration.- Elise Shelley OALA.

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Collaborators
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Landscape Architects (Design).- CCXA.
Landscape (Prime Consultants).- gh3*.
Local Landscape Architect.- Aecom.
Indigenous Consultants.- City of Edmonton.
Engineers (Structural / Mechanical / Electrical / Civil).- Aecom.

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Client
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City of Edmonton.

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Builder
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PCL Construction.

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Area
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Interior.- 270 sqm.
Roof 400 sqm (Pavillion).
Total park area.- 24,500 sqm.

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Dates
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November 2025.

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Location
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Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

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Manufacturers
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Metal Cladding panels.- 5mm Aluminum Plate Panels by Flynn Group of Companies.
Metal/glass curtain wall.- Clearwall Curtain Wall System by Kawneer.
Roofing.- Pigmented PMMA membrane, Soprema.
Glazing.- Guardian UltraClear by Guardian Industries / Vitro Starphire by Vitro Architectural Glass.
Cabinetwork and custom woodwork.- 19mm Stained Marine Grade Plywood by Milltech.
Solid surfacing.- ¼” Laminated Corian by DuPont.
Polished Concrete floor.- WR. Meadows.
Interior Lighting.- Lumenxerx Via 2 Prism.
Exterior Lighting.- Lumenwerx Via 2 Seal.

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Photography
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gh3* is an award-winning Canadian architecture practice led by Pat Hanson and Raymond Chow and founded in 2005 in Toronto. gh3* has completed projects at every scale, from small park pavilions and private houses to large civic and transit infrastructure, most recently Canada's first natural swimming pool for the City of Edmonton.

gh3*’s work has been published widely and has received numerous awards. Notable project awards include Governor General medals for the Borden Park Natural Swimming Pool, the Borden Park Pavilion, Real Time Control Building #3 and the Photographers Studio over a Boathouse. gh3* was named one of the World’s Twenty Most Innovative Companies in 2020 by Fast Company for their projects related to urban water.

Pat Hanson (Principal BFA MArch OAA AAA FRAIC) is a founding partner of gh3*. Under her leadership, the firm has established a reputation for design integrity across a range of building typologies and through all scales of practice.  Exemplary projects include the internationally-recognized June Callwood Park in Toronto, the Trinity College Quadrangle at the University of Toronto, and the Governor General's Medal-awarded projects Borden Park Pavilion in Edmonton and the Boathouse Studio on Stony Lake, Ontario.

For over 30 years, she has led clients and interdisciplinary design teams. She currently serves on the Toronto Waterfront Design Review Panel and is a senior advisor for Building Equality in Architecture Toronto (BEAT), which supports diversity and women in the design fields. She has lectured on the work of gh3* in Europe and North America and has taught at the University of Toronto and the University of Waterloo. In 2016, Pat was recognized by the international arcVision Prize for Women and Architecture.

Raymond Chow (Principal OAA RAIC MArch BArch) He has worked across multiple jurisdictions and through scales of practice that range from small renovations to large multi-stakeholder institutional projects.

Raymond joined gh3* in 2006 and became principal in 2015. He became an associate of the Ontario Association of Landscape Architects in 2013 and is currently working toward full registration as a landscape architect. A strong advocate for BIM and for design practice connected to industry, Raymond oversees gh3*’s digital modelling processes, rendering, and all other technical interfaces. He is currently the project architect for the Natural Swimming Pool in Edmonton, the Storm Water Control Facility at Toronto’s waterfront, as well as several large-scale residential projects.
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Published on: March 27, 2026
Cite:
metalocus, AGUSTINA BERTA
"Warmth, encounter and cultural continuity with the landscape. "O-day’min" Park by gh3*" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/warmth-encounter-and-cultural-continuity-landscape-o-daymin-park-gh3> ISSN 1139-6415
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