Étienne Gaboury, architect behind some of Winnipeg's most iconic buildings, dead at 92
Man who designed St. Boniface Cathedral, Esplanade Riel was 'a consummate artist,' says colleague
Étienne Gaboury, the renowned Franco-Manitoban architect behind some of Winnipeg's most iconic structures, has died.
Structures designed by Gaboury, whose family said he died Friday at age 92, include the Royal Canadian Mint, the Esplanade Riel, the St. Boniface Cathedral and the spiral-roofed Precious Blood Roman Catholic Church in St. Boniface.
Gaboury, who has been described as "Manitoba's greatest architect," was "a great man," said his son-in-law, Ibrahima Diallo, who spoke with Radio-Canada on behalf of the family on Saturday.
"Étienne Gaboury was not only an architect but he was also a human being with a lot of empathy, a lot of soul," said Diallo, a University of St. Boniface microbiology professor who is married to Gaboury's daughter, Lise Gaboury-Diallo, an author and University of St. Boniface literature professor.
Gaboury's death is "a big loss for us as a family, but also it's a big loss for Manitoba and for Canada, because he has built … defining buildings" across Canada and beyond, said Diallo.
"Obviously, when you look at his architectural legacy, it's very impressive," Daniel Boucher, executive director of the Franco-Manitoban Cultural Society, said in an interview with Radio-Canada.
"I think we all know what a Gaboury building is.… He was really a great architect, but he was also a great person in the Franco-Manitoban community."
'An emotional force'
In spite of his success and stature as an architect, Gaboury — who was named a member of both the Order of Manitoba and the Order of Canada — remained "a humble man," said Boucher.
Gaboury was born in 1930, the youngest of 11 children, and grew up in Bruxelles, a small community in southwestern Manitoba, where his parents were farmers, he said in a 2014 interview with CBC's Terry MacLeod.
He completed a bachelor's degree in architecture at the University of Manitoba in 1958, according to his biography on the Winnipeg Architecture Foundation's website.
One of his first major projects in the city came when he was asked to design Precious Blood in the St. Boniface neighbourhood. Built in 1969, the church on Kenny Street, with its distinctive "corkscrew" cedar roof, became Gaboury's "most identifiable work," according to the architecture foundation.
"That was the point of departure in my career in a way," Gaboury told CBC in his 2014 interview.
"In every building that I designed after that … I had that sort of image in my mind" of architecture that "must move you.… It's got to be an emotional force that will change you by experiencing it."
That sense of the artistry of architecture carried into all of his work, according to Guy Préfontaine, a Winnipeg architect who was a colleague of Gaboury's.
"Étienne was a consummate artist," Préfontaine said in a Saturday interview with Radio-Canada. "He was not a businessman. He actually almost deplored the idea of business, because … [architecture] was art, in his view."
WATCH | Winnipeggers reminisce on Étienne Gaboury and his impact:
A devotion to artistry was more important to Gaboury than following any particular style, said Préfontaine.
"He didn't go for postmodernist or modernist or some of the trappings that you see of regular architecture," he said.
It was essential to Gaboury that design "spoke of place, it spoke of culture, it spoke of art, it spoke of the human spirit. It didn't speak of styles."
'A life well lived'
Another major project came when Gaboury was awarded the contract to design a new St. Boniface Cathedral, after the original structure was mostly destroyed by a fire in July 1968.
Gaboury's new structure, which opened in July 1972, featured a smaller cathedral built within the surviving stone walls of the original — a design that also became a Winnipeg landmark.
Another major project followed in 1975, with the construction of the Royal Canadian Mint in southeast Winnipeg.
He also designed the Esplanade Riel, which crosses the Red River and connects Winnipeg's downtown with St. Boniface.
The bridge, which opened in late 2003, has become another distinctive element of Winnipeg's skyline, although the space on the bridge has struggled to maintain tenants (originally designed as a restaurant, it is now home to the not-for-profit Manitoba Technology Accelerator).
Gaboury's work extended beyond Manitoba's capital — among his many other designs were a school in Norway House in northern Manitoba and the distinctive library building in the southern Manitoba community of St-Pierre-Jolys.
He designed buildings abroad as well, including the Canadian embassy in Mexico, according to the architecture foundation.
"You can go many, many places and you will see Étienne Gaboury's work," said Boucher.
"And for the [Franco-Manitoban] community, that's very important. It gives us an identity.… We are so proud to say, 'We know Étienne Gaboury.… He is one of ours.'"
That's a legacy that will live on, said Boucher.
"We celebrate a life well lived," he said. "He really left his mark."
With files from Radio-Canada's Émile Lapointe