TABLE OF CONTENTS Mar 2010 - 1 comment

Sparkle and shine

Lux Design gives a pair of university dental offices the old razzle-dazzle.

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By: David Steiner
2010-03-01

If you're a university student and your teeth hurt, or need a polish, you'll want a dentist nearby. Students are busy, their mobility is frequently restricted and schools often help pay dental costs. With this captive audience in mind, Dr. Dean Gaber opened two dental clinics: one at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont., and the other at the University of Waterloo (also in Ontario). Both are located in their respective university student centres and neither are what you'd expect.

A typical dental office is a strange kind of space, neither cozy -- given its intimate purpose -- nor stylish, which might be expected, considering the high cost of service. Up front is a reception area likely displaying outdated magazines, with workaday drilling rooms somewhere at the back. The decor is often prosaic: beige paint, a plastic laminate reception desk, an ominous wall of charts and records and inexpensive drop-in-panel ceiling tiles everywhere above.

Gaber created Campus Dentist so students could get their teeth attended to in an atmosphere of "sparkle, shine and glamour," in the words of his interior designer, Isabelle Glinka. Lux Design, Glinka's boutique design firm, was hired to turn the bones of each space -- already fitted with the necessary walls, chairs and plumbing -- into a kind of after-hours dentist lounge. Gaber anticipated that students would be taken by "bright, white and simple," with sassy accessories and a sophisticated vibe. In both clinics, a small area is made spacious by the exposed concrete slab above. Ducts and overhead services are left exposed and painted either white (Waterloo) or black (McMaster -- where the slab is 20 feet above, making the clinic feel far larger than its 485 square feet).

The clinics share a distinct visual identity despite their different size and shape: blizzard white walls, a custom reception desk with a mirrored front and a few Philippe Starck furnishings. Both entries are marked by a large mirror in an ornate frame and sheer white curtains, hung against the white walls, making everything feel softer. A perfect white plaster hand, cupped or pointing, is mounted on a wall of every operatory as a quirky coat hook. For glamour -- often absent from the T-shirt- and sweatpant-clad university crowd -- a series of Baroque-inspired chandeliers are hung in the short hallways.

The chandeliers at McMaster, custom made by Bob King in St. Catharines, Ont., generated the clinics' style. Gaber ordered them before any design work began -- "I have a chandelier fetish," he confesses -- and showed them to Glinka, so she and her team would understand the theme. During the initial technical design, Gaber requested chandeliers for task lighting. It wasn't feasible, though, so giant fluorescent light boxes were hung above each operatory chair, contradicting the delicacy of the rest of the decor. It would have been magnificent, had it been possible, for students to lie back and have their dental work done by the light of an ornate glass chandelier. CI

Photos

In Dr. Garber's McMaster University dental clinic, a large, ornately framed mirror opens up the space, while sheer white curtains allow light to filter softly through. The marble-topped desk is fronted in mirror and black metal.
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Caption: In Dr. Garber's McMaster University dental clinic, a la...
A pair of custom chandeliers at McMaster add a touch of glamour.
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Caption: A pair of custom chandeliers at McMaster add a touch of...
At the University of Waterloo location, ducts and overhead services are left exposed and painted white.
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Caption: At the University of Waterloo location, ducts and overh...
What could be more appropriate for a dental office than the Tooth Stool by Philippe Starck, here in triplicate? The low lounger sofa, covered in a stylized meta
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Caption: What could be more appropriate for a dental office than...
The low lounger sofa, covered in a stylized metallic damask, was custom made to fit a curving wall in the Waterloo location.
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Caption: The low lounger sofa, covered in a stylized metallic da...


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Reader Comments

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Tyson Cartier

Thanks for the info. I once knew a dentist named Hamilton. He was a really good family friend. Then we moved and we lost contact. I talked to him recently again and found out that he's still a dentist even after his mid-life crisis. It's nice to know people.

Posted February 27, 2013 08:34 PM


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