1902 – Merchants Bank, Main Street, Winnipeg
Winnipeg’s first steel framed building at seven storeys high. Merchants Bank of Canada was taken over by the Bank of Montreal in the early 1920s.
Winnipeg’s first steel framed building at seven storeys high. Merchants Bank of Canada was taken over by the Bank of Montreal in the early 1920s.
The Strathcona block was built for Lord Strathcona as an elite residential building on the corner of Main Street and Broadway in 1902.
In 1901, a Grand Lodge of Canada Report stated that “This Grand Lodge is erecting a memorial hall in the city of Winnipeg in memory of the late Brother Thomas Scott,
Designed by local architect J.B. Mitchell who was responsible for many of the best school designs in Winnipeg.
Another fine warehouse by John H.G. Russell, the Bole Drug Building was designed specificially for pharmaceutical production.
Built to replace the earlier South Central Schools designed by Barber & Barber. Only used for twentyseven years before it was bought by Eatons,
Built at a cost of $20,000 and designed by H.S. Griffiths a British architect, the Criterion was one of many hotels established in the area to accommodate the thousands of arriving travellers.
A small free-standing office building on a domestic scale alongside the Law Courts buildings on Broadway.
The Bank of British North America at 436 Main Street is the only neo-Palladian banking hall remaining in Winnipeg,
The third location of the school, as it moved to its present location in 1903. At that time,