- 2015.005.851
- Ficheiro
- 2000
File consists of 18 images of the interior of custom-built luxury homes by Quess Homes. Views include living rooms, fireplaces, a kitchen, libraries, and a bedroom.
Burley, Robert
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File consists of 18 images of the interior of custom-built luxury homes by Quess Homes. Views include living rooms, fireplaces, a kitchen, libraries, and a bedroom.
Burley, Robert
File consists of 1 image of the front of a 2-story home.
Burley, Robert
File consists of 21 images of the interior and exterior of a 2-story farmhouse with barn and surrounding gardens. Views include kitchen, bathrooms, living room, barn, garden, and home exterior.
Burley, Robert
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Building located at 10 Avoca Ave in Summerhill neighbourhood of Toronto, Canada. File contains 3 photographs and 1 typed note describing the apartment development: 2 exterior views of the two residential towers and 1 interior view. Stamped by the photographer: Panda photography, and one of the prints is also stamped with the Canadian Housing Design Council logo.
Panda/Croydon Associates
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the yard and patio of a 1940s residential building renovated in the 1970s. A piece of paper taped on the back of the photograph gives the location, designer, owner and the award decision from the Canadian Housing Design Council in Ottawa: Winner of the Award for Residential Design. Extract from Jury report: "This is an alteration to a fairly standard house of the 1940's, enlarged and changed so that very little of the original remains. The result is a virilic and strong arrangement of forms and colours with well-flowing spaces beautifully realted to out-door patios and terraces."
15 McMurrich street condominiums, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a design concept drawing for the McMurrich Street Condominiums, a joint venture by the Cadillac Fairview Corporation Limited and Belmont Construction Company Limited. A piece of paper is taped to the back of the photograph.
44-46 Castle Frank road, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a series of semi-detached houses. A piece of paper taped on the back of the photograph gives the location, designer, owner and the award decision from the Canadian Housing Design Council in Ottawa: National Design Award 1969. The photographer's stamp gives the studio as: N. & H. Studio.
N. & H. Studio
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Colour photographs, many adhered to a paper backing, of the exterior and interior of a private residence in Toronto, showing the renovations to the two storey brick home. Views include backyard deck, fireplace, doorhandles and stair rails.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the extension built onto the back of the Georgian heritage property. The addition won the Award for Residential Design in 1971 from the Canadian Housing Design Council. Text on the back of the photograph gives extracts of Jury report.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Design proposal for a house in downtown Toronto, one of a group of similar dwellings with an inner courtyard that acts as a buffer from the noise from street traffic.
Toronto, 484 Avenue Road apartments
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a modern residential high-rise building in one of Toronto's oldest residential districts.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the front lawn and porch of a house on Broadview Avenue. A concrete footpath has been laid from the sidewalk to the front porch, designed to circle around the base of a tree in the way.
Burrow, Gordon
Alexandra Park housing cooperative
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Two photographs of the exterior of a low-rise public housing development. Built between 1964-68 by the Ontario Housing Corporation. The housing complex is located in the city block bounded by Dundas Street, Spadina Avenue, Queen Street West and Bathurst Street. A stamp on the back of the photograph gives the photographer as Roger Jowett.
Jowett, Roger
Myers residence, 19 Berryman street, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Two story residence designed by Barton Myers for his own use in Toronto's Yorkville area. The house fills a narrow urban lot, approximately 25 x 188 feet. There is a central courtyard with greenhouse roof. An article on the house was published in the April 1972 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a townhouse complex. Stamp on back gives the photographer as Edward Jones.
Jones, Edward
Bay Charles towers, 55 Charles street west, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a high-rise residential apartment building. One interior view of pool area. Some photographs are stamped with the photographer's name: Fiona Spalding Smith.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Belmont House, 55 Belmont street, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Print of an architectural elevation. Design for Belmont House Home for the Aged, built in 1966.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a mid-rise apartment building. Photograph is stamped "Photograph by Leonard Tomiczek Photography", and also "Received Mar 2 1961 Jackson Ypes Associates".
Tomiczek, Leonard
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Aerial views of the Gothic Revival castle located at 1 Austin Terrace in Toronto, and a small colour photograph of the base of the Baldwin steps, named for the original landowner and former premier of Ontario Robert Baldwin, a public pathway which connects two sections of Spadina Road and is often used by visitors to the historic castle.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Before and after photographs of a factory conversion to townhouse complex.
Crombie park apartments/ St Michael's Catholic School
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a mid-rise apartment building, in red brick, located at 25 Henry Terrace in Toronto. The building is constructed of four blocks, attached by elevated walkways, and houses residential apartments as well as a Catholic school.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Folder contains 2 b&w photographs of the Currie residence in Claremont, Ontario. Detail view of upper storey windows, clad in cedar shingling. Exterior view of backyard during winter, brick chimney and cedar shingling visible.
Canadian Architect
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of two phases of development of a townhouse complex. Single and multi-storey buildings are pictured, as well as interiors.
Fleet, Max
Dundas/Sherborne residential building
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the rear garden area of an unknown residential building near Dundas and Sherbourne Streets in Toronto. A paved walkway separates the building from the rear entrances to neighbouring homes and apartments.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a two-storey brick townhouse complex, with one view of a shopping arcade on the main level of a section of the buildings.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a wood-construction, with wood paneling inside and out. Interior shots show hallway, dining and kitchen areas.
Jowett, Roger
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the exterior of a planned community in Toronto, with both high rise and townhouse structures. Views of the highrise block under construction. One interior view of a living room and dining room inside one of the two-storey townhouses.
Green, Seymour
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a house at 4 Old George Place in Toronto. The style is influenced by Japanese, West Coast Canadian and Native Canadian architecture, with sloping rooflines and durable materials that integrate with a natural setting. The structure is made of red brick, interspersed with cedar sections and glass panes.
Jowett, Roger
37, 39 & 41 Heath Street West, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of Victorian row houses originally built in the 1880s, altered in 1981. The house was first owned by Alfred Hoskin, a barrister, and is referred to in the Canadian Architect magazine issue for October 1985 as "Hoskin House".
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a flat-roof building clad in grey stone, with a central window feature.
Samson, Ian
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a house renovation. The tall Victorian home was clad in grey shingle and pale wood, and the interior space was opened up and rounded statement walls painted green complement exposed metal piping. Views of dining room, kitchen, living area, bathroom and bedroom.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of a townhouse designed by Jerome Markson (owner & architect), showing living room with fireplace and wood panneled ceiling, and exterior views of brick patio in the rear of the house.
Canadian Architect
Don Mills, Apartments on Windfield Farms land
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of two high rise towers, taken from across a field.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model and exterior view of finished high rise residential condominium located at 480 Queens Quay West in Toronto, designed with stepped levels and walls of glass windows.
Lenscape Incorporated
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of townhouses, showing pathways between buildings, garages, and courtyards.
Manors of Brandywine : Scarborough
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of three storey townhouses with central grassy courtyard.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Aerial view of the 51 storey mixed-use office and residential tower located at 44 Charles Street West in Toronto.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the mid-rise condominium complex in the St. Lawrence Market neighbourhood, with central courtyard and street-level shopping arcade. One interior view of shopping concourse and one aerial view of area prior to development.
Mauran residence, 95 Ardwold Gate
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a wood and glass two storey building, with cantilevered terraces and roof overhang. Exterior walls are all of cast-in-place concrete.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the exterior of a high rise apartment building that has been retrofitted by Westeel. The new exterior cladding is advertised as thermally efficient and durably constructed, and was featured in a Spec Sheet for Preformed Metal Siding in Canadian Architect magazine for July 1985.
Caledon Hills, Armstrong Vacation Home
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a two storey residential home.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of single-storey row houses, in winter. A sticker on the back of the photograph reads: "Honorable Mention/ Heritage Village/ Highway #7/ Unionville, Ontario/ Napev Construction Ltd.,/ Sievenpiper, Architects". Residential complex for senior citizens, part of the larger Unionville Home Society campus. See http://www.uhs.on.ca/
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the exterior of a building under construction, and two interior views looking out through the steel support beams, designed with 3 cubes balanced on their points on a rectangular concrete base. The idea was licensed from Dutch architect Piet Blom by Toronto entrepreneur Ben Kutner. Designed from prefabricated steel and glass, the houses were supposed to take advantage of otherwise unusable property space in Toronto like laneways and rooftops. The house has since been abandoned and the cubes are used for commercial signage.
Conway, William
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Black and white photographs of the exterior of a home, taken at night and during the day. Stamp on back of photograph with architect's name, Jerome Markson. Markson was awarded a 25 Years Award in 1993 for his work on the Moses residence by the Ontario Association of Architects and Canadian House and Home magazine.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the exterior of the house, taken from the landscaped back yard.
Ottawa, Blackburn Hamlet Costain Estates
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
View of a residential neighbourhood, with the houses facing central pedestrianized pathways rather than a street.
Don Mills, Row Housing -Missing
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a multi-storey townhouse complex, showing yards and parking. The stacked residences have a bachelor apartment or garage under the two storey housing units above.
Shawcroft, B.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Regent Park South : interior and exterior
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of apartment building.
Fleet, Max
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a townhouse complex, with bachelor apartments or garages on the lower level and two storey dwellings stacked above.
Shawcroft, B.
Southill Village : Don Mills : Interiors
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Fleet, Max
Victoria Park ave. row housing : Scarborough
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Toronto, 250/260/270 Queen's Quay West
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photoprint of model buildings. 1 photograph is airview of the constructed buildings. Verso: The Canadian Architect Magazine 1985 Award of Exellence to James A. Murray, Norman Hotson, Alfred C. Roberts. B&W. photograph of the buildings and York Quay Park at lake Ontario.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
St. Lawrence neighbourhood, Toronto - MISSING
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Aerial views of the St. Lawrence neighbourhood, a group of townhouses clustered around interior loop roads buffered from adjacent traffic arteries by higher density apartments containing street level retail arcades and with a linear promenade park strip along its entire length. The images were reproduced in an article on the St. Lawrence neighbourhood in the June 1981 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.
Old Mill Towers, 39 Old Mill terrace, Etobicoke
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Aerial view of the apartment tower, showing Humber river and nearby Old Mill Inn. A stamp on the back of the photograph gives the architect as Raymond Mandel, and the photographer as Jack Mitchell.
Mitchell, Jack
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the townhouse complex, showing yards and patios, parking and courtyards.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Illustration of a housing complex with brick high-rise tower and townhouses, constructed at 260 Heath Street West in Toronto.
Canadian Architect
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a low-rise residential co-operative housing complex located at 1974 Victoira Park Avenue in Toronto. A piece of paper adhered to the verso of the photograph gives deails of the 1962 CHDC National Award competition for Multiple housing.
Newton, Neil
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of a high-rise apartment building with concrete balconies, and one photograph of the model. One photograph of the streetcorner (in colour) shows a 3-dimensional geometrical sign.
Panda/Croydon Associates
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior photographs of an art-deco low-rise apartment building in a manicured landscape, with ivy-covered cottages behind the main gate. Completed around 1939-41, this apartment complex covers a 5.5-acre site located in the Leaside nieghbourhood of Toronto at 1477 Bayview Avenue. The apartment buildings are grouped around a large, central courtyard, landscaped by Dunington-Grubb and Stensson. The building plans eliminated long corridors by having separate entrances and stairways serving four to six apartments, and each apartment extends from one side of the building to the other. Architectural drawings for The Garden Court Apartments are in the Page and Steele Collection at the Archives of Ontario. Five original drawings for the landscape survive in the Dunington-Grubb/Stensson Collection at the University of Guelph.
Kettle, John
Toronto, Tartu College [student residence]
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a high rise residential building. A piece of paper adhered to verso gives details of the Canadian Housing Design Council Award for Residential Design that this building received in 1971. Extract from Jury report: "The jury admired the planning approach which resulted in the living groups formed by the plan of this building. It is a good, competant structure which is clean in appearance, positive and strong. Its relationship to the street is very good." Designer: Elmar Tampold, J. Malcolm Wells Architects. The building is located at the corner of Bloor Street and Madison Avenue in Toronto and is a co-ed housing complex for post-secondary students, founded by the Estonian community in Toronto.
Panda/Croydon Associates
Toronto, St. Lawrence neighbourhood apartments
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the exterior of an apartment complex, including aerial views, walkways between buildings and construction views. Two illustrations show the proposed central green space between buildings and the placement of the apartments on a map.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of a remodelled 3-storey, semi-detached Victorian home, showing hallways with transom windows, stairwells, kitchen banquettes, shower stalls, and one exterior view of a Juliet balcony.
Burley, Robert
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Additions and alterations to a single family home, completed with stucco and decorated with a Southwest theme.
House, Sainsfield avenue, Toronto
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view of living room and dining area, and exterior view of entrance to house.
Jowett, Henry Roger
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a townhouse complex. Exteriors of the two and three storey buildings are pictured, as well as interiors. The housing plan was devised by Roy P. Rogers Enterprises Ltd. and based on the success of Chatham Village in Pittsburgh, USA, a planned community established in 1932 as a "social and economic demonstration." In Southill Village, the first unit type was two storey with a split-level entrance, the second was similar but the entrances are emphasized through two floors as a contrast. The third unit type had a flat roof and the last type was a split-level building which appears to be a one-storey building from the street.
Fleet, Max
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior photographs of brick townhouse complex, showing walkways and lawns.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architectural illustration of a high rise apartment complex.
Victorian house with concrete garage addition, [Toronto]
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
New concrete garage at base of Victorian home.
Evans, Steven
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Single-family dwelling. Exterior views of brick and wood home in landscaped property; interior views of living room.
Jowett, Henry Roger
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographic reproduction of an architectural elevation on postcard backing. The original stucco cottage built in 1853 was renovated twice by the original owner, Paul Kane. It was owned by the Kane family until 1903, then it was briefly used as a church hall by the Evangelical Church of the Deaf. The property was leased by the Church-Isabella Residents Co-operative Inc. in 1985 and incorporated into a larger residential development.
(Information taken from Toronto Historical Board plaque on property.)
The Oaklands Condominium and Housing Project
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Construction of a townhouse/apartment complex with 4 storey apartment building and adjacent rowhouses. Both interior and exterior are pictured.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a single family dwelling, a Queen Anne Victorian townhouse with third storey addition and 1960s interior remodeling. Rounded, stuccoed walls and wood panneling can be found in the interior.
Jones, Edward
Regent Park Apartments, South Complex
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior perspective view of apartment building, night scene. Built shortly after the Second World War, Regent Park was a leading-edge design, providing affordable housing to 7,500 people.
James, Arthur