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Diamond Schmitt restores University of Windsor’s Faculty of Law building

Open Up a Little

Diamond Schmitt restores University of Windsor’s Faculty of Law building

The Ron W. Ianni Building is to the campus’s northern edge on the corner of Sunset and University Avenues. (doublespace photography)

University of Windsor’s Ron W. Ianni Building is a brick building with recognizable Brutalist motifs located on the Ontario campus’s northern edge. The building, which houses the law school, was completed by Gordon S. Adamson & Associates in 1974. After years of wear and tear, the beloved facility deserved an upgrade.

Diamond Schmitt Architects, together with local office Di Maio Design Associates Architect, recently renovated the Brutalist structure ahead of the upcoming school year. The designers sought to increase natural light, improve accessibility, and add collaborative teaching and learning spaces while preserving its late modernist integrity.

interiors of university of windsor law building with concrete ceiling and new furniture for studying
Brutalist elements were largely retained. (doublespace photography)
skylights draw natural light into the interiors of the building
Goals of the renovation sought to increase natural light, improve accessibility, and add collaborative teaching and learning spaces. (doublespace photography)

“Transforming the University of Windsor’s Law Building is so much more than a renovation,” said Duncan Higgins, a principal at Diamond Schmitt. “The approach was to embrace the brutalist architectural character of the facility and its history on campus, while creating an open and collaborative space that offers flexibility for diverse modes of learning and supports the pedagogies of the 21st century.”

A Surgical Procedure

The Ianni Building encompasses approximately 68,000 square feet in a brick, 3-story envelope with exposed concrete. Punched windows vary in shape and size across the building’s faces. These fenestrations give passersby vignettes into the Faculty of Law’s inner workings.

Plantings and foliage were added throughout the brick and concrete building.
Terraces were upgraded. (doublespace photography)

The Ianni Building’s former mechanical room was opened up into a sun-filled space for studying. The former student commons, previously a sunken conversation pit with a tiled floor, was raised to be accessible to all students.

Opaque partition walls, that formerly divvied up breakout areas, were replaced with glass partition walls. This made the building more legible and navigable, the architects shared.

The stacks and study carrells inside the Ianni Building were relocated to the top and bottom floors. This opened up the central floor for a better entry condition, as well as reserve collection and active student workspace.

An open, convenience stair now connects all three floors. Other accessibility upgrades included a new elevator and all-gender washrooms located on each floor.

The mock court room inside the Faculty of Law building now has many windows.
The mock trial room previously had no windows. Now, it has several. (doublespace photography)

A law school would be incomplete without rooms for hosting mock trials. The Ianni Building’s Don Rodzik Moot Court previously had no windows and relied on artificial lighting. But new fenestration now pours natural light into the classroom-slash-courtroom. A new shoreline-inspired ceiling design inside the mini-Moot Court, a separate room, references the building’s proximity to the Detroit River.

Indigenous-led smudging ceremonies can now take place in the the Moot Court as well. The law school curriculum at University of Windsor places strong emphasis on working with Ontario’s Indigenous Peoples, namely the Three Fires Confederacy of the Ojibwa, Odawa, and Potawatomi.

All of these upgrades prepare the building, and the Faculty of Law more broadly, for the next fifty years.

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