Created for the Harbour View residential towers in Toronto’s Concord CityPlace, Adrian Göllner’s View Screens bridges the gap between art and design. Positioned to partially obscure the entrances to garage driveways, these low-relief steel screens may look like simple latticework fences upon first glance, but they conceal a deeper meaning in their forms. Taking inspiration from the name of the condo complex, Harbour View, and the project’s intention of both enhancing and shading that scene, Göllner produced his unique, interlocking pattern by transcribing the word “VIEW” in Morse Code. View Screens offer an excellent example of how public art commissions can be seamlessly integrated into urban development programs.

View Screens
Adrian Göllner
b. 1965
- Powder coated steel
- 2006
- 1.5 m x 2 m
- 9 Spadina Avenue, Toronto