Nunatsiavut Assembly Building | |
Location Town: | Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador |
Location Country: | Canada |
Architect: | Inuit Canadian Consultants Limited |
Client: | Government of Nunatsiavut |
Style: | Postmodern with influences from Inuit and Moravian mission architecture |
The Nunatsiavut Assembly Building in Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador is the seat of the autonomous Nunatsiavut Assembly.[1]
The building opened in 2012 and is the Assembly's first permanent home since it first sat in 2008. The Assembly previously met in temporary locations around Hopedale. The building is located at Nanuk Hill with Amos Comenius Memorial School located just to the north and a new residential area to the west.
The building has 10,000 square feet (929 square metres) of space[2] with various rooms:
There is a large common room is used for community events, public meetings, and used by the Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Justice for provincial court sessions.
The Assembly building's front is an Igloo inspired topped by a half dome and rear structure pays homage to the nearby Hopedale Moravian Mission Complex (windows and steeple are borrowed from the mission but topped with a large green Inukshuk).[3]
Other elements of the Labrador Inuit culture which have been incorporated into the design include the floors being tiled with labradorite and the Assembly members taking seats at a table in the form of an ulu.[4]