- 2015.005.884
- Ficheiro
- 2001
File consists of 89 photographs of the RBC Meadowvale Campus buildings, located at 6880 Financial Drive in Meadowvale, Ontario.
Burley, Robert
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File consists of 89 photographs of the RBC Meadowvale Campus buildings, located at 6880 Financial Drive in Meadowvale, Ontario.
Burley, Robert
File consists of 2 images of the exterior of the HSBC branch at York Mills Place, 300 York Mills Road.
Burley, Robert
Bank of Montreal offices and computer lab
File consists of 27 images of the interior of a Bank of Montreal office building, including cubicles, office kitchen, meeting rooms, and computer workstations and storage.
Burley, Robert
British American Oil Company Ltd., Ontario Division
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the main Ontario Division Building office located at 800 Bay Street in Toronto. A Toronto Dominion branch bank is located on the main floor of the building, with a sign visible in one of the photographs. Interior view with workers seated at rows of desks.
B-A Oil Photo
Branch bank, Banca Commerciale Italiana of Canada
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior detail photographs of entranceway and pillars in mezzanine, boardroom and office space. The images were printed for an article in the January 1985 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the 1862 head office of the Bank of Toronto at Wellington and Church Streets, demolished to make way for the construction of the Toronto-Dominion Bank tower.
Branch bank, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view of renovation to an existing bank. Vaulted plaster ceiling in main reception area.
Ottawa, Bank of Canada head office
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architectural drawing of interior, and two construction views showing 10th floor walkways with steel beams and glass walls.
Applied Photography Ltd.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Images of the model for the former Ontario Association of Architects headquarters at 50 Park Road Toronto, Ontario. The modernist building was designed by John C. Parkin, and served as the home of the OAA from the building's completion in 1954 until 1992. The building is now occupied by DTAH, a landscape design company.
Canadian Architect
Mississauga, Branch bank (Dundas Street East and Palstan Road), Toronto-Dominion Bank
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the glass and steel single-storey elevation.
Branch bank (Bloor Street and Spadina Road), Bank of Nova Scotia
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Three interior views of customers in the main reception area of a branch bank. Four views of the glass-walled exterior, night and day.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model for the Scotiabank office tower at the corner of King and Yonge Streets in downtown Toronto. The design incorporates the historic Bank of Nova Scotia head office building at 44 King Street West, which was designed by architects Mathers and Haldenby (with Beck and Eadie), and built from 1946 to 1951. This 115 m (377 ft) tall, 27 storey building was designated under the Ontario Heritage Act by the City of Toronto in 1975. It was completely renovated with major, historically sensitive architectural design changes including a 14 story high glass atrium connecting the original building to the new, 68 storey structure.
Canadian Architect
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model and exterior views of completed glass and steel building.
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model.
Toronto, Bank of Montreal, 30 Yonge Street
Parte de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Built in 1885 for the Bank of Montreal, this branch bank was one of the few buildings in the are to survive Toronto's Great Fire of 1904. Designed by Darling and Curry, the architects who had recently completed the equally august Victoria Hospital for Sick Children on College Street, the Bank of Montreal's head office was the most striking of Toronto's nineteenth-century bank buildings. The building remained a branch until 1982. The Hockey Hall of Fame officially opened in this building, incorporated into the BCE Place development, in 1993. The new $35 million facility has almost 60,000 square feet of floor space. There is access from shopping mall concourse level at BCE Place. The Hockey Hall of Fame is a world-class sports and entertainment facility and is one of Toronto's prime tourist attractions drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. "Hockey Hall of Fame - About Us," Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum, 2010. Accessed on October 21, 2010. http://www.hhof.com/html/gi20300.shtml