Jim Meiklejohn

The aesthetics of the building are defined by the function and are a reflection of local material, culture, environment and context.

Jim Meiklejohn

<h3>As seen in</h3><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --><img src="https://mm.issuu.com/document/okanaganlife/september_2011/spreads.gif?backgroundColor=f9f9f9&spreads=1&spreads=22&spreads=18"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" excerpt="no"]

jim-meiklejohnJim Meiklejohn

Meiklejohn Architects Inc.

Story by Karen Silvar  Photo by Colin Jewall

Behind the development scene there are architects. The Meiklejohn family has been leaving its mark on the Okanagan skyline since 1953.

Born and raised in Penticton, Cal and Jim Meiklejohn grew up with architects for parents. Following in their parents’ footsteps, Cal obtained his bachelor of architecture from the University of British Columbia and Jim obtained his from Washington State University. The brothers took over the family practice in Penticton in 1992, and have since opened an office in Kelowna. Today they employ 16 to 17 people.

An architect takes people’s ideas and gives them shape. For Jim the joy is in watching people respond positively to the spaces he and his team create. In Kelowna the Cannery Lofts, the Cardington Apartments and the Mode all bear their signature style, as do the Osoyoos Visitor Centre, Kelowna Secondary School and the soon to be built Kelowna Yacht Club.

Jim refers to this style of architecture as “regionally-appropriate modernism.” The aesthetics of the building he says are defined by the function and are a reflection of local material, culture, environment and context.

One of Jim’s favourite projects is the offices of Beelineweb.com in Lake Country. The post-and-beam design is reminiscent of the area’s historical rural buildings and was constructed using locally sourced timber and stone. The clients were personally committed to limiting their environmental footprint and building green, says Jim.

These days sustainability is designed into most developments, although financial and time constraints limit application in many projects. But where there’s a will there is a way. The Mode, a multi-family residence, uses the sun to pre-heat its domestic hot water. The original plan was not as simple and involved the recovery of waste heat from the neighbouring commercial buildings to pre-heat the domestic water, but the red tape involved with getting approval from the BC Utilities Commission halted the design. Without the developer’s commitment to the idea the system would never have been built. The condo building went on to win the first annual Mayor’s Environmental Achievement Award for Most Sustainable Development in 2008 from the City of Kelowna.

Jim’s environmental footprint is relatively small compared to most homeowners. He and his wife Shirley Ng choose to live in downtown Kelowna, close to the action and within walking distance of basic amenities and civic buildings. “We love it,” says Jim. Shirley is originally from Singapore and used to living in a city of five million where everything is within walking distance or can be reached by transit. Although the couple can walk to the office they usually take their car for work related reasons like attending client meetings.

When it comes to days off—not too many of those—the couple enjoys visiting with family and friends. They also like to tour cities and look at the buildings, streets and parks.

Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.

Team BC posts big results at Winter Games

Team BC posts big results at Winter Games

Emily Dickson of Prince George earned her third medal of the 2015 Canada Winter Games on Wednesday in the biathlon 10km pursuit, adding a gold to her silver and bronze finishes from earlier this week. Team BC’s long track speed skaters were also golden – Jacob Graham...

read more
Golden day for B.C. long track speed skaters

Golden day for B.C. long track speed skaters

Team BC’s long track speed skaters got off to an impressive start at the 2015 Canada Winter Games on Wednesday earning gold in the men’s and women’s 500m events and a silver in the women’s team pursuit. Jacob Graham of Dawson Creek and Sara Spence of Kamloops...

read more
UBC Okanagan expands animal therapy program

UBC Okanagan expands animal therapy program

Students Charlie Drummond and Christy Hui have organized BARK2GO and will station volunteers and therapy dogs in three different locations across UBC’s Okanagan campus every Wednesday. Building Academic Retention through K9s expands across campus Students are lining...

read more
Okanagan getaways: Winter staycation

Okanagan getaways: Winter staycation

Forget the headaches of foreign travel; relax and get away from it all right here in the Okanagan When family commitments sidelined all hope of a warm southern getaway, I didn’t despair — though that great honkin’ snowstorm prompted a tiny twinge of jealousy for all...

read more
Wall Street’s rigged, so Main Street suffers

Wall Street’s rigged, so Main Street suffers

The year 2015 looks promising for Okanagan business owners. Certain sectors should be excited about a low dollar and even lower gas prices. While an 80-cent dollar might hurt imports, it helps exporters and it should keep more Canadians vacationing within our borders....

read more
Wine consumption set for growth in Canada

Wine consumption set for growth in Canada

Wine drinking is on the rise and Canada is seeing tremendous market growth. Vinexpo revealed today results of its 12th study of the World Wine and Spirits Market with an Outlook to 2018, conducted by British agency International Wine and Spirit Research. Global...

read more

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.