1912 – Free Exposition Building, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Developed as the Hall of Industry for the Winnipeg Industrial Bureau. Taken over by the Board of Trade in 1918,
Developed as the Hall of Industry for the Winnipeg Industrial Bureau. Taken over by the Board of Trade in 1918,
Originally constructed as the Horticulture and Biology Building for what was then the Manitoba Agricultural College.
Founded in 1912 as Kelvin Technical High School, the name was later changed to Kelvin High School.
Located at the intersection of three major thoroughfares in downtown Winnipeg, the Lindsay Building is one of a handful of terracotta office towers erected during the city’s pre-World War I development boom.
This student residence was the largest of the original campus buildings. Facing northeast towards the Administration Building,
Entry in architectural competition that was open to all architects who were British subjects. The competition was won by Francis Worthington Simon and the building constructed by 1920.
The Union Trust Tower occupies an unusually long and narrow site at the corner of Lombard Avenue and Main Street.
Beautiful church with a wonderful tower, the United Westminster Church is a great example of English Gothic by John H.G.
Illustrations of the winning design in an architectural competition to design provincial government building. The design as constructed differed only very slightly from these drawings published in September 1912.
From The Building News, May 10 1912: “In this preliminary competition, in which the Government of Manitoba invited designs for a building of the estimated cost of £400,000.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.