1913 – Competition Design for City Hall, Winnipeg
In early 1913, a committee of Winnipeg’s City Planning Commission recommended that a new civic centre be built,
In early 1913, a committee of Winnipeg’s City Planning Commission recommended that a new civic centre be built,
In early 1913, thirty-nine designs were submitted in competition to design a a new civic centre,
Constructed in 1913 as part of the original Fort Garry agricultural college.
The placed entries in a competition to design new offices for the then Dublin Corporation on Lord Edward Street,
The Winnipeg Electric Railway Co., a firm which operated the city’s electric streetcar system and its first hydro-electric utility,
The Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres are the last surviving Edwardian stacked theatres in the world.
Formerly Earth Sciences Building, and later the School of Art. The building is named after one of Canada’s leading painters Lionel Lemoine Fitzgerald,
The site was previously occupied by the old county gaol which was built in the late 18th century.
Un-assuming little building built as the Court of Petty Sessions – public entrance at one end, and a room for the judge behind the bench.
Demolished in 2008, the rendered facade concealed the remains of the original ornate classical design. The interior was largely intact prior to demolition despite a report by a downtown development agency CentreVenture.
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