1913 – Second Placed Entry 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,
From The Building News, February 16 1912: “Mr. Leonard Stokes, P.R.I.B.A., has been appointed by the Government of Manitoba to act as assessor in the competition for the new Government Buildings in Winnipeg.
Designed by Edward W. Pugin and George Ashlin, this magnificent cathedral, which dominates Cork Harbour from land and sea,
This church is considered as one of the best designed by R.M. Butler and was commissioned at the same time as his church in Newport which it resembles.
Fine stone house with decorative bargeboards and porches. Sadly missing their original window design.
St. Thomas Church, a designated New York landmark, was built from 1911 to 1913,
Designed by Hector Guimard who is better known for his work on the Paris Metro, this synagogue down a narrow street was built for a Polish-Russian Jewish group in 1913.
Andrew Carnegie, the wealthy industrialist, was asked in 1902 to consider sponsoring offices and a library for the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
In early 1913, thirty-nine designs were submitted in competition to design a a new civic centre,
Built as a Presbyterian Hall, and now home to a branch of the British Legion and an Orange Lodge.
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