Architectural Record
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Architectural Record
  • NEWS
    • Latest News
    • Awards
    • Interviews
    • Obituaries
    • Podcasts
      • Design:Ed Podcast
      • Sponsored Podcasts
  • OPINION
    • Book Reviews / Excerpts
    • Exhibition Reviews
    • Forum
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Videos
    • Design Vanguard
    • Top 300 Firms
    • Sponsored Content
    • Sponsored eBooks
    • From the Archives
  • CONTINUING ED
    • Editorial Continuing Ed
    • CE Center
    • CE Academies
  • PROJECTS
    • Buildings By Type
    • Reuse & Renovation
    • Museums & Arts Centers
    • Colleges & Universities
    • Multifamily Housing
    • Interiors
    • Lighting
    • Kitchen & Bath
  • HOUSES
    • Record Houses
    • House of the Month
    • Featured Houses
  • PRODUCTS
    • Products by Category
    • Record Products of the Year
    • Latest Products
  • EVENTS
    • Dates & Events
    • Record on the Road
    • Innovation Conference
    • Sustainability in Practice
    • Women In Architecture
    • Webinars
    • Ad Excellence Awards
    • Submit an Event
  • CONNECT
    • Ask RECORD AI
    • Newsletters
    • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Store
    • Customer Service
  • SUBMIT
    • Submission Guidelines
    • RECORD Competitions
  • MAGAZINE
    • Subscribe
    • My Account
    • Digital Edition
    • Current Issue
    • Firm Pass
    • Historic Archive
ProjectsBuildings by TypeAdaptive Reuse and RenovationColleges & Universities

MJMA and HDR Rejuvenate Queen’s University’s John Deutsch Centre in Ontario

By Matthew Marani
John Deutsch University Centre, Queen's College
Photo © Scott Norsworthy
The John Deutsch University Centre at Queen's University blends into its collegiate Gothic surroundings with a stone brick facade.
February 20, 2026

Architects & Firms

HDR Architecture
MJMA Architecture & Design
✕
Image in modal.

Queen’s University figures prominently in the college town of Kingston, Ontario. The school’s collegiate Gothic–dominated campus has welcomed students for nearly two centuries. Located on the northern border of the academic grounds, the John Deutsch University Centre (JDUC), has long served as the primary social hub for the institution’s undergraduate and graduate population. Though beloved, JDUC was a laggard in terms of contemporary accessibility and building performance standards and was poorly connected to the rest of the campus. In July 2025, the school completed a multiphase overhaul designed by Toronto-based MJMA and HDR that ameliorates those flaws.  

Exterior image of JDUC

At night, the structure projects a lamp-like effect. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

The project’s final budget of approximately $89 million was largely funded by the students’ union and required its approval via referendum to move forward—a prior proposal had been rejected. MJMA and HDR submitted their conceptual design in 2018 and were commissioned the following year. Pandemic-related supply chain and bidding disruptions delayed the project shortly after, with the groundbreaking taking place in 2022.

“Students felt that the prior proposal did not properly seek their input so our process increased communication through frequent engagement,” explains MJMA partner Ted Watson. “Those conversations guided our aim to balance the scale and materiality of the campus, much of it stone and wood, with a contemporary and sustainable design that includes Indigenous references.”

Image of JDUC auditorium

The new wing includes mass timber structural elements, such as glulam and nail-laminated timber, within its second and third levels. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

Image of JDUC's Wallace Hall

Wallace Hall, a wood-paneled multipurpose auditorium, is located within a hall built in 1947. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

The 93,500-square-foot complex includes a historic structure, which houses a multipurpose auditorium named Wallace Hall along with meeting rooms, offices for student clubs, and a pub.  It is conjoined with a seven-story residential tower. The former was built in 1947 to replace an 80-year-old structure lost to a fire, and the latter was added in 1964. The project scope included the erection of a stone-brick clad, mass timber and steel structure on the site’s northwest corner. That building, named the Kathleen Beaumont Hill Wing, substitutes a since demolished brutalist edifice dating from 1973, which was programmatically inflexible, inaccessible, and possessed aging MEP systems. All three buildings are threaded together by a renovated atrium and spacious routes of circulation.

The three-story Kathleen Beaumont Hill Wing rises from a steel-framed podium, which tapers upwards at its northwest-oriented, glass-clad corner entrance. The ground level, which Watson jocularly refers to as the center’s “mud room,” where one “gets the snow off their boots,” accommodates a student-run retail space and a restaurant. A grand staircase with stadium seating delivers students to the second level and its amply daylit double-height auditorium. That space is externally demarcated by canted piers of beige-colored, Roman-style stone brick, and, within, transitions to an array of soaring glulam posts and beams, a nail-laminated timber shear wall, and roof panels.

The design team placed the entirety of the auditorium’s mechanical duct work within steel framing between the timber flooring and concrete deck. It is fed supply air through steel louvres, which were integrated with solid white oak bench seatings. Above, lighting fixtures are recessed by microlam covers to create a seamless look with the glulam beams. A 13-foot-wide service core on the building’s east flank provides elevator access to all levels.

Image of JDUC inteior

A skylight was carved through the roof and floor plate to provide daylight to student government and engagement spaces. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

The atrium, sandwiched between the new wing and the existing structures, was rehabilitated with an expanded skylight, and new ceilings, lighting, and finishes. A similar treatment was applied to a space buried in the eastern portion of the 1947 building, where a skylight and atrium was carved out through the roof slab and floor plates to brighten spaces used by the student government that were formerly devoid of daylight.

Looking for quick answers on architecture and design topics?
Try Ask RECORD, our new smart AI search tool.
Ask RECORD →

Image of JDUC atrium

The existing atrium was rehabilitated with new finishes and an expanded skylight. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

Throughout the existing structures, contemporary building systems were installed; fireproofing was applied to floor slabs and columns; an accessible elevator was installed; and furnishings and details were refreshed. Notably, JDUC utilizes existing, shared campus-wide chilled water and steam loops for heating and cooling.

Programmatically, the auditorium and atrium include spaces dubbed by the design team as “teaching circles,” which resemble Indigenous sharing circles, and “teaching thresholds” named after the Seven Grandfather Teachings of the Ojibwe, an Algonquin-speaking tribe living in the region.

An integral aspect of JDUC’s rejuvenation was the redesign of its surrounding landscaping, which largely consisted of hard surfacing, and a haphazard pathway into campus shared by service vehicles. Now, JDUC is surrounded by rain gardens and native plantings, including Canada wild rye and river birch trees, and the service road has been transformed into a plaza.

Image of JDUC cafe.
1
Image of JDUC pub.
2

A coffee shop is located on the top floor of the new wing (1); and a pub is found in the 1947 structure's ground floor. Photo © Scott Norsworthy

For Donald Chong, HDR design principal, the years-long effort was an act of conservatorship and invention. “Our role as architects was to contribute something intergenerational for the students, and to act almost as a steward of the campus,” he explains. The tally of the design team’s intervention, from the contextually appropriate insertion of a new structure and landscaping to the rehabilitation of popular, but flawed buildings, deftly meets those goals.

Axonometric drawing of JDUC

Axonometric drawing courtesy MJMA & HDR; click to enlarge.

KEYWORDS: Canada Ontario

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Matthew marani

Matthew Marani is a senior editor at Architectural Record. Previously, he served as program manager at The Architect’s Newspaper and has several years of experience as a freelance writer specializing in urban planning, historic preservation, and architectural technology. Matthew is a born and raised New Yorker and holds an MSc in Architectural Conservation from the University of Edinburgh.

Post a comment to this article

Report Abusive Comment

Subscription Center
  • Create an Account
  • Start a Subscription
  • Manage My Account
  • Sign Up for Newsletters
  • Visit Customer Service
  • Update Preferences

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the Architectural Record audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of Architectural Record or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • TAMLYN XtremeTrim Exterior Trim
    Sponsored byTamlyn

    Designing Cleaner Panel Facades: Why Exterior Trim Details Matter

  • Building with Vapor Barriers
    Sponsored byReef Industries, Inc.

    Vapor Barriers Help Control Moisture in Tighter Building Designs

  • Duct Interior with Prodeq System
    Sponsored byHenry, a Carlisle Company

    Designing Resilient Water Containment Systems

DESIGN:ED Podcast
Listen to Architectural Record’s DESIGN:ED Podcast

Events

June 16, 2026

Focus on the Façade: Exploring Steel, Timber & Fire-Rated Curtain Walls and Channel Glass Systems

Credits: 1 AIA LU/HSW; 1 AIBD P-CE; 0.1 ICC CEU

Explore modern façade and glazing systems that enhance daylighting, fire safety, and thermal performance while expanding architectural design possibilities.

June 18, 2026

Rebooting the Aging Office Building

Credits: 1 AIA LU/HSW; 1 AIBD P-CE; 0.1 ICC CEU; 1 PDH

Explore façade retrofit strategies and award-winning design concepts that can transform aging office buildings into healthier, higher-performing workplaces for today’s hybrid workforce.

View All Submit An Event

Products

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

See More Products

Popular Stories

SanDiegoAirport

Top 300 Architecture Firms of 2026

Coronado Bridge

The Architect’s Guide to San Diego

Dusk House

Design Vanguard 2026: ONO

Hikma Community Complex

Design Vanguard 2026: Mariam Issoufou Architects

West Village Penthouse

Design Vanguard 2026: Brent Buck Architects

Focus on the Facade - Free Webinar - June 16, 2026

Related Articles

  • Belfountain House

    On a Sloping Site in Ontario, UUfie Extends the Roof of a Chalet to Create a Playful Retreat

    See More
  • Mulmur Hills Farm

    Turkel Design Creates a Family Getaway at Mulmur Hills Farm in Ontario

    See More
  • Riverdale

    A Family Enlists Hariri Pontarini to Realize a Sprawling Lakeside Getaway in Remote Ontario

    See More
×

The latest news and information

#1 Source for Architectural Design, News and Products

SUBSCRIBE
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Submit
    • Store
  • ACCOUNT CENTER
    • Create an Account
    • Start a Subscription
    • Manage My Account
    • Sign Up for Newsletters
    • Visit Customer Service
    • Update Preferences
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • Linkedin
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing