1909 – Roslyn Apartments, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Eccentric apartment building designed by Irish architect William Wallace Blair in a strange Queen Anne inspired style.
Eccentric apartment building designed by Irish architect William Wallace Blair in a strange Queen Anne inspired style.
Interesting little church with a very unusual corner tower. The stonework has a vaguely Scottish Baronial feel but the red tiled cupola instead of a spire is unusual and endearing.
Fine Chicago-style building of six storeys. Of steel frame construction, it allowed for large window openings.
The Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface is a university college affiliated with the University of Manitoba and located in Saint Boniface, the French-speaking area of Winnipeg.
The present structure at 389 Main Street is the third Bank of Commerce Building to stand on its site.
Originally built as a Presbyterian Church, this large brick building is quite clumsy in design.
Designed by Winnipeg school architect J. B. Mitchell, and named after highly decorated British Field Marshall,
The McLaren family were a prominent Winnipeg hotelling family owning a number of establishments including the Brunswick (Main and Rupert),
This large stone and stucco building with the half-timbering over the upper levels, was the last home of Mark Fortune.
A stark and obvious example of the Exchange warehouse developed in two stages (which many were) – the original four floors received a vastly different treatment than the final three stories whiuch were added circa 1910.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.