Annmarie Adams


Annmarie Adams is an architectural historian and university professor. Currently she is the Chair of the Department of Social Studies of Medicine and is the former Director of the School of Architecture at McGill University. Adams specializes in healthcare architecture and gendered space. At McGill she teaches courses in architectural history and research methods. She is the inaugural holder of the Stevenson Chair in the History and Philosophy of Science, including Medicine. She is a board member of the Society of Architectural Historians and the Vernacular Architecture Forum.

Career

Adams focused on domestic architecture in the 1990s and turned to hospital environments about 2000. A paper comparing the intentions and experience of women and children in suburban California established research questions to which Adams would return repeatedly. How do buildings express behavioral expectations and do users of houses simply do what they are told? She followed this up with studies of wartime housing in Canada; privacy and girlhood in 19th-century Quebec; and sick children and maternal care. She and colleagues contributed to an award-winning website, Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History, by showcasing the role of a Montreal house in an unsolved double murder. Her more recent works examine Art Deco architecture and hospitals; and the architecture of the Montreal Neurological Institute and neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield.
Adams has received numerous awards for her academic work including the President's Medal for Media in Architecture from the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada, the Hilda Neatby Prize from the Canadian Historical Association, the Jason Hannah Medal from the Royal Society of Canada, and a Woman of Distinction award from the Montreal YWCA.
She has served in administrative roles including as Curator of the Osler Library and Director of the Institute for Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies at McGill University in 2010-11.