1883 – St. John’s College, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Anglican college founded in 1850, and re-established in 1866. Later affiliated with the University of Manitoba.
Anglican college founded in 1850, and re-established in 1866. Later affiliated with the University of Manitoba.
Built in the boom years of the early 1880s, the cost of this new church,
A complete Victorian fantasy of a city hall, this the second City Hall for Winnipeg was mired in controversy for its entire lifetime.
Constructed as the Winnipeg Post Office and Customs Office, it was only used as such until 1908, when a new post office building was constructed on Portage Avenue.
Armstrong’s Point was intended as an enclave of palatial residences for the new rich merchant classes of the booming Winnipeg in the late 19th century.
Browne most often employed brick in his symmetrical compositions; his work at Strevel Terrace, 1889-90 can be recognized by their absence of applied decoration and by the projecting horizontal band courses of brick that surround his buildings.
Constructed on Portage Avenue in two stages. Demolished in 1959.
Designed by local architect George Creeford Browne, the three-storey building was expanded in 1902, and further renovations were made in 1911 and 1920.
Mulvey School No. 3, completed in late 1895 and largely resembling its predecessor which was destroyed in a fire,
Constructed in 1896, and designed by local architect Charles H. Wheeler, this three-storey brick structure was erected by the firm of Kelly Bros.