The South Campus and The Oaks
Design Principles
- View the Oaks property and the southwest quadrant
of the campus as one contiguous area and link it
visually and physically with outdoor spaces and
buildings.
- Seize opportunities to expand existing buildings to
take advantage of indoor connections to the rest of
the Campus.
- Through the design of interfaces with the rest of the
campus and compelling green spaces, tie the Oaks
into the life of the Campus.
- Design new buildings to carefully integrate with the
natural environment.
- Preserve areas of the Oaks property in its natural
state and provide pedestrian access for the campus
community to respectfully enjoy the site.
- Preserve the Oaks Mansion and its architectural
integrity.
- Support the Urban Greenway project with
connections to the Atlantic School of Theology, Robie Street and Gorsebrook Avenue. • Introduce additional landscaping at the southeast
corner in front of the Rice Residence.
- Fill the gap between the Tower and the Rice
Residence to link the Tower to the rest of the
campus.
- Create a north-south pedestrian route through the
Vanier Residence from Gorsebrook Avenue, past
the south-west corner of the Field, to McNally and the Student Centre.

Residence Terrace (OS9)
The residence terrace located to the east of the Loyola
Residence and south of the proposed C-6 building is
intended for use by campus residents. The Residence
terrace incorporates flexible and fixed seating and lawn and
gardens areas to provide locations for campus residents to
study, relax or meet with friends in a quiet passive setting.
New Residence (S-1)
This building should not exceed 6 storeys in height and could
include a new daycare on the ground floor, taking advantage
of the Children’s Garden proposed south of this building as
a relatively quiet area of the campus.
Children’s Garden (OS10)
The Children’s Garden provides an outdoor amenity space
for children adjacent to the proposed daycare.
Loyola Extension (S-2 & OS11)
An extension of the Loyola building is proposed to replace
the house known as 5907 Gorsebrook Avenue, currently
hosting External Affairs. This 4-5 storey building could
contain a variety of academic, office or research uses with
the key advantage of a direct connection to other buildings
on campus.
Sobey South Building (S-3)
The proposed Sobey South Building is a 4-5 storey building
linked to the Sobey Building by a highly transparent overhead
pedway. Sobey West Building Addition (S-4)
This building provides additional expansion space for the
Sobey Building. It should be designed so as not to overwhelm
the pedestrian realm on Robie Street and provide a clearer
pedestrian access to the Sobey Building from Robie Street.
The building should have a transparent façade design on
the ground floor. Sobey Building Parking Lot
A pocket surface parking lot of about 60 spaces will be
created to the west of the Sobey Building and will partially
replace parking spaces lost from the removal of the
Gorsebrook parking lot. The parking lot should provide a
visually attractive face to Robie Street. It will be important
to retain as many of the existing trees as possible between
the new lot and the Sobey building. Special consideration
will be provided to ensure sufficient buffering between this
parking area and adjacent private residential properties on
Robie Street. Consideration should be given to berming,
tree planting and low level landscape treatments that shield
views to parked cars. The Oaks Mansion, Addition and ‘Stanfi eld Garden’
(S-5 & OS12)
The Stanfield Mansion should be completely restored and
used for prestige University uses such as a research institute
and/or event space. An addition to the Mansion designed as
a glass conservatory or a “winter garden” for special events
would open onto a restored open space north of the house
called the “Stanfield Garden”.
The Urban Greenway
The Urban Greenway is proposed to traverse the Oaks
Property from west to east, terminating at a new pedestrian
and cycling bridge over the rail tracks. New trails should
be created to link the Greenway to the remainder of the
Campus.
Oaks Complex (S-6 & OS13)
The Oaks provides prime space for premium uses that do
not generate large traffic volumes and can benefit from a
unique location in a natural setting. It is therefore proposed
that the main building to be erected on the Oaks property
be considered for research uses, with opportunities for
conference uses, and be limited in height to 2-4 storeys so
as not to substantially exceed the tree canopy.
The S-6 building will be adequately set back and buffered
with landscaping from adjacent private properties. Views to
the site from surrounding areas will maintain the sense of
the site as a heavily wooded area. Construction practices in
this area will require special provision for tree-preservation.

3D View of the South Campus and Oaks Property seen from the south.
|