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
Projects

Val Notre-Dame Abbey by Atelier Pierre Thibault

Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada

By Josephine Minutillo
As in most spaces within the Val Notre-Dame Abbey in Saint-Jean-de-Matha, nature permeates the refectory, where the monks gather for meals in complete silence.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
As in most spaces within the Val Notre-Dame Abbey in Saint-Jean-de-Matha, nature permeates the refectory, where the monks gather for meals in complete silence.
Photo © Alain Laforest
The aluminum-clad roof of the church extends over the monastery entrance. There, a one-story structure on the cloister's north side welcomes visitors.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
The aluminum-clad roof of the church extends over the monastery entrance. There, a one-story structure on the cloister's north side welcomes visitors.
Photo © Alain Laforest
The monastery is nestled within a wooded site at the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
The monastery is nestled within a wooded site at the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains.
Photo © Alain Laforest
The church's east-facing apse features a 30-foot-high glazed wall with views onto nature.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
The church's east-facing apse features a 30-foot-high glazed wall with views onto nature.
Photo © Alain Laforest
During predawn and late-evening offices, the glazed wall, now black, matches the church's dark slate flooring.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
During predawn and late-evening offices, the glazed wall, now black, matches the church's dark slate flooring.
Photo © Alain Laforest
Each of the second floor's cells features a private terrace abutting the lower level's green roof. White concrete panels clad the church and outer cloister.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
Each of the second floor's cells features a private terrace abutting the lower level's green roof. White concrete panels clad the church and outer cloister.
Photo © Alain Laforest
The light-filled corridors of the upper level end with open views of the surrounding foliage.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
The light-filled corridors of the upper level end with open views of the surrounding foliage.
Photo © Alain Laforest
The cloister's sunken garden, a fortuitous result of the site's high water table, retains existing plantings. A covered gallery offers older monks a place to enjoy the outdoors without contending with
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
The cloister's sunken garden, a fortuitous result of the site's high water table, retains existing plantings. A covered gallery offers older monks a place to enjoy the outdoors without contending with the ice-covered terrain during Quebec's harsh winters.
Photo © Alain Laforest
Visitors walk past the cedar-clad guest wing to enter the church and monastery. The regular placement of columns along the gallery contrasts with the random arrangement of windows above.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
Visitors walk past the cedar-clad guest wing to enter the church and monastery. The regular placement of columns along the gallery contrasts with the random arrangement of windows above.
Photo © Alain Laforest
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
Image courtesy Atelier Pierre Thibault
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Atelier Pierre Thibault
Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec, Canada
Image courtesy Atelier Pierre Thibault
As in most spaces within the Val Notre-Dame Abbey in Saint-Jean-de-Matha, nature permeates the refectory, where the monks gather for meals in complete silence.
The aluminum-clad roof of the church extends over the monastery entrance. There, a one-story structure on the cloister's north side welcomes visitors.
The monastery is nestled within a wooded site at the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains.
The church's east-facing apse features a 30-foot-high glazed wall with views onto nature.
During predawn and late-evening offices, the glazed wall, now black, matches the church's dark slate flooring.
Each of the second floor's cells features a private terrace abutting the lower level's green roof. White concrete panels clad the church and outer cloister.
The light-filled corridors of the upper level end with open views of the surrounding foliage.
The cloister's sunken garden, a fortuitous result of the site's high water table, retains existing plantings. A covered gallery offers older monks a place to enjoy the outdoors without contending with
Visitors walk past the cedar-clad guest wing to enter the church and monastery. The regular placement of columns along the gallery contrasts with the random arrangement of windows above.
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
Val Notre-Dame Abbey
October 16, 2010

Architects & Firms

Atelier Pierre Thibault

The Christian monastery, among the most paradigmatic of building types, has for centuries retained the basic formula of a square plan around a cloistered garden. Nevertheless, since the Middle Ages, these complexes, including their church buildings, were often progressive examples of Western architecture. But long after religious communities ceased being the most influential patrons of the built environment, their leaders continued to support Modern architecture. And Modern architects have jumped at the chances, so few and far between, to interpret the building type in their own way. In the 1950s, both Le Corbusier and Marcel Breuer designed monastic buildings: the former, the Dominican monastery of Sainte-Marie-de-la-Tourette near Lyon, France; the latter, the lesser-known Benedictine complex for Saint John’s Abbey and University in Minnesota (and later, its sister institution, Annunciation Priory in North Dakota). In each case, the community leaders were looking for a bold design.

 

The same was not true for the Cistercian monks of Notre-Dame-du-Lac Abbey in Oka, outside Montreal. Their existing building, a late-19th-century stone structure designed to house over 150 monks at its peak, had become far too big for the community’s diminished population, reduced to just under 30 monks at the start of this century.

In the intervening years, the surrounding area also changed — from a place of peace and solitude to a highly trafficked corridor, in conflict with the order’s call for its monasteries to be located in areas remote from human intercourse.

Recently, when a community of Czech Cistercians relocated from France back to their homeland, they chose John Pawson as their architect, finding his Minimalism compatible with their ascetic lifestyle and traditional architecture [Record, September 2007, page 132]. The French- Canadian Cistercians at Oka instead sought a greater connection to nature, and saw in Pierre Thibault an architect whose sensitivity to the landscape, best exemplified in his residential projects [Record, July 2007, page 184], perfectly suited their way of life.

The Quebec architect was selected to build the new complex, Val Notre-Dame Abbey, at Saint-Jean-de-Matha, 80 miles northeast of Oka, following a 2004 competition. Though the monks were open to forms that deviated from that well-known paradigm — several such buildings were constructed after the order’s constitution reforms of 1969 — Thibault’s winning submission for a low, sprawling structure hidden among the trees maintained the ideal plan, with the church on the north side and the cloister immediately south of it.

Much of Thibault’s design adheres to traditional layouts to accommodate the tight programmatic requirements. For instance, the guest wing is on axis with the refectory, so that the common kitchen between the two serves both the monks and their guests. (Despite the order’s desire for seclusion, hospitality is one of its missions, and the monks often host visitors on short retreats.) The simple, unadorned elevations of the church and outer cloister, originally designed with stone but executed in white concrete panels, also follow tradition.

Thibault’s pared-down Modernism and preference for natural materials and basic construction details retain a touch of the vernacular. From the outside, his buildings, including the monastery, appear like found objects in nature, an achievement in itself. But it is from the inside that his architecture comes alive. At the monastery, the space that does so more than any other — through light, sound, and a spectacular 30-foot-high window onto nature — is the church. It is here that the monks spend most of their day, beginning at 4 a.m., with the first of seven daily offices.

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

The order’s rules dictate that the church face east, as Christ is seen in the rising sun. Thibault’s decision to terminate the apse in an entirely glazed wall, while not heretical, is certainly unorthodox. Throughout the day, the view changes dramatically; over the course of a year, even more so.

During predawn services, the wall appears solid black. Daylight hours treat churchgoers to a view where the slender trunks of silver birch trees peek out from the warmer months’ dense foliage or winter’s bare, snow-covered branches. A stray deer or coyote, and once even a bear, has wandered past during services. Birds have been known to add their song to the monks’ chanting.

Since chanting plays such a large role in the offices, Thibault paid special attention to the space’s acoustics. The nave’s permeable walls feature rows of wild-cherry planks, each slightly more inclined as they get higher so that the sum of the various angles forms a vaulted shape from bottom to top.

Thibault’s office designed the stalls by the altar where the monks face each other during services, and the pews where up to 120 visitors can be seated. The two are deliberately separated to avoid interaction between the monks, who enter and exit the church via side aisles, and the lay community.

The new monastery is a third the size of the former building at Oka, yet its cloister is larger. The full-height, triple-glazed units of the inner cloister’s lower level offer constant views of the garden and of passing monks on opposite sides. In the dark of night, small recessed lights placed a foot above the floor along all four faces of the cloister appear like floating candles in the glass reflections, an especially poignant vision when the monks are in procession to the first office of the day.

Thibault retained the existing plantings within the garden, whose sunken appearance happened quite by accident. The site’s high water table was discovered only after construction documents were completed. To address this unforeseen setback, Thibault raised much of the building by several feet.

While it might come as a surprise to some, the building incorporates state-of-the-art, 21st-century technologies, including a sophisticated, computerized building management system that monitors, among other things, the 14 geothermal wells located below a nearby parking lot. But then again, monasteries were among the first buildings to harness electrical power at the turn of the last century.

It was the monks’ desire to make the building’s environmental footprint as light as possible, so that the monastery not only exists in nature but respects it. Locally sourced wood was used for most of the structure and cedar cladding. Roofs over the lower levels, including by the individual cell’s private terraces, were planted. A drainage system collects rainwater and recycles gray water.

The biggest design challenge, however, had nothing to do with formal or practical concerns. The life of a monk is a contemplative one, where spirituality takes precedence over everything else. By connecting the interiors to the outside and, more important, by capturing light — both natural and artificial — Thibault created spaces with floors and walls that feel immaterial, the antithesis of Le Corbusier’s and Breuer’s brute concrete. The monastery’s inhabitants treasure this quality most. In the words of one monk, “La lumière est l’espace. It is the same thing.”

People

Architect
Atelier Pierre Thibault

Principal and designer:
Pierre Thibault

Design team:
Jean-François Mercier, André Limoges, Vadim Siegel

Engineers:
Mechanical/electrical:
Dupras Ledoux Ingénieurs
Nicolet, Chartrand

Structural:
Knoll Ltd

Consultants:
Green roof:
Les Toits Vertige

Landscape:
Atelier Pierre Thibault

 

Products

Wood structure:
Nordic Engineered Wood

Roofing:
Soprema

Acoustical surfaces:
Decoustics

Elevator:
Schindler

 
KEYWORDS: Canada

Share This Story

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

Josephine minutillo

Josephine Minutillo is editor in chief of Architectural Record. Trained as an architect, she began writing for RECORD in 2001 while practicing architecture, and has held several positions at the magazine over the past two decades. Her articles have appeared in many international publications. She has been an invited critic at Washington University in St. Louis, The Cooper Union, Columbia GSAPP, Pratt Institute, The City College of New York, and Yale University.
Instagram: @josephineminutillo_

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 10, 2026

Rethinking Stormwater – The Power of Porous Paving

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

Learn how porous paving systems support stormwater management, reduce heat island effects, and enhance sustainable site design performance.

June 11, 2026

Very Early Warning Fire Detection for Mission-Critical Facilities

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

Examine advanced fire detection strategies that support uptime and enhance safety in data centers and other mission-critical facilities.

View All Submit An Event

Products

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

See More Products

Popular Stories

Practice Matters illustration

What’s in a (Firm’s) Name? Thinking About Succession and Legacy

Coronado Bridge

The Architect’s Guide to San Diego

Practice Matters illustration

By the Numbers: Counting America's Architects

House on a Hill

Design Vanguard 2026: Forma

Crane Cove, ONO

Design Vanguard 2026 Winners

Broader Sustainability of CMU - Free Webinar - May 21, 2026

Related Articles

  • Pierre Thibault’s Les Abouts House sits quietly in a wooded meadow Residential Quarterly

    See More
  • Pierre Thibault's Les Abouts House Sits Quietly in a Wooded Meadow

    See More
  • Kolumba, Art Museum of the Archdiocese of Cologne, by Atelier Peter Zumthor

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • Architectural Record - October 2025

    Architectural Record October 2025 Issue

  • 3dthinking.jpg

    3D Thinking in Design and Architecture: From Antiquity to the Future

See More Products
×

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