- 2009.002.898
- Dossier
- Sept 1976
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
157 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Artist's illustration of the addition to Manulife's head offices at Bloor and Jarvis Streets in Toronto.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Fait partie 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.
Manors of Brandywine : Scarborough
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of three storey townhouses with central grassy courtyard.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the interior lobby/hallway in the hospital located at 520 Sutherland Drive in Toronto. A half-wall in wood panneling separates the space.
Guaranty Trust Computer Centre
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model of a 6 storey office building, designed in pre-cast concrete with blue-metal panelling and stainless steel banding details.
Lenscape Incorporated
Fait partie 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
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a 3 storey office building, from the side, showing white infill panels on a curtain wall.
Jowett, Henry Roger
Jimmie Simpson Recreation Centre
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the Jimmie Simpson Recreation Centre in Toronto, Ontario.
Clark, Clive H.
Fait partie 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
Fait partie 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
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the exterior of the building also known as the "Flatiron" at 49 Wellington Street East in Toronto. The Romanesque Revival building was constructed in 1892 as an office building and has been designated a heritage property. The photographs in this file were probably taken to illustrate the construction of the CN Tower, contrasting with an older, well-known city landmark and showing the effects on the skyline before and after.
Fifth Church of Christ, Scientist
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior church decoration, featuring metal letters adhered to the wall with phrases such as "God is Love". Views of altar and worship space, located at 41 Chatsworth Drive near Lawrence and Yonge Streets in Toronto.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the office and reasearch building. One interior view of a lounge area.
Jowett, Roger
Fait partie 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.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Streetscapes, showing Ed's Warehouse on King Street West in Toronto, next to the Royal Alexandra Theatre and an advertisement for Old Ed's, one in the group of warehouse restaurants, from the Lakeshore Boulevard.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior views of a high-rise office tower and lower-level shopping concourse, designed in glass and concrete. One view of courtyard outside the building. Shopping area shows a Mappins retail store and a telephone booth.
Retired street sign, Surrey Place and Breadalbane Street, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a street sign situated in the middle of a grassy lawn, with office buildings in background. This image was taken as part of a commentary on colonnades for a special article in Canadian Architect magazine, titled "Citizen and the City". A part of the caption reads: "When the street is removed, both the colonnade and the building are removed from the public realm to the acropolis and we as citizens are left, not with a way through, but a way around." (p.32)
Hazelton House, 33 Hazelton avenue, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Originally built in 1890 as the Olivet Congregational Church, converted to a shopping complexe in 1973. Discussed in the November 1974 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Fait partie 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
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains 7 black and white acetate negatives.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains 10 black and white acetate copy negatives of sculptures and paintings by the artist Michael Snow. A selection of these photographs accompanied an interview of Snow by Sara Bowser and published in the April 1959 issue of The Canadian Architect.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains black and white acetate negatives of interior views of the offices of Hugh C. Maclean Publication Ltd.. A selection of these images appeared in the December 1958 issue of The Canadian Architect in the article "Factory-Into-Offices: Don Mills, Ontario", written by the architect James A. Murray.
James, Arthur
Westbury Hotel Modular Meeting
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains 3 black and white acetate negatives.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
This item contains two black and white acetate negatives of images published in the November 1958 issue of The Canadian Architect. The photographs are part of the article "Shelter Bay: Project for a New Mining Town on the St. Lawrence" concerned with the work of the archtectural firm Rother/Bland/Trudeau.
Lapointe Magne & associes
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
This file contains two black and white acetate negatives of an architectural model.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
This file contains 5 copy black and white acetate negatives.
Regent Park Apartments, South Complex
Fait partie 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
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Head office is jointly occupied by Catholic Education Center. Building cost was 33.5 million including land and construction. View of entrance, interior and exterior of the building. Images 2009.002.016.002 & 003 had yellow sticky notes attached indicating they were considered for the July 1982 cover of Canadian Architect magazine. The sticky notes were kept with the files. Images of the reception area show a ceramic mural by Angelo di Petta called Canadian Allegory. This mural is made of 84 tiles which will cover the entire third floor lobby wall.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of the Simpsons department store, and views of the shopping concourse between Eaton's, Simpson's and the Hudson's Bay Company (all major anchor stores in the mall). One exterior view of the mall, showing the Hudson's Bay Company store.
Panda/Croydon Associates
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the architect's model and illustrations for the SkyDome, a covered convertible dome over a baseball field and entertainment stadium. Artist's illustrations of proposed designs from The Webb Zerafa Menkes Housdon Partnership and The Robbie/Adjeleian/Norr Consortium. Later photographs show the construction of the dome, and an aerial view of hte site. The building was renamed the Rogers Centre in 2005.
Lenscape Incorporated
Metro Toronto Reference Library
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Built in 1977, this building was featured in the July 1984 issue of Canadian Architect magazine on atriums. Interior and exterior views. The name was changed to "Toronto Reference Library" in 1998 when it was incorporated into the Toronto Public Library system. It is the biggest public reference library in Canada.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of architectural plans and architect's model of the building.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view of school auditorium.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view, Buddhist incense urn on table.
Toronto Public Library, Taylor Memorial branch : Scarborough
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of the single storey brick building.
Mykusz, Peter
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of one on the inland waterways on the island, showing two children fishing.
Legg Brothers Ltd.
North York, Menkes corporate plaza
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model of the glass and steel office buildings.
Applied Photography Ltd.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of a the renovated fast-food restaurant space, with red marble and tan, red and green chairs, mirrored staircases and large windows. One exterior view of the restaurant sign.
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Spalding-Smith, Fiona
Fait partie 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.
Toronto Project, maquette for outdoor installation
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Sticker on verso describes the project: "Maquette for the Toronto Project, a site specific outdoor installation by Tadashi Kawamata, opening Sept. 7, 1989. photo courtesy of Mercer Union photo credit : Peter MacCallum."
MacCallum, Peter
Sunnybrook : York Mills Centre
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Bank of Nova Scotia : Don Mills
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Signposts : bulders + agents in Don Mills
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
File contains photographs of a sign post listing bthge names of businesses.
Bruce Etherington: Toronto-Dominion Bank
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of architects participating in the planning proces for a new branch of the Toronto-Dominion Bank in Mississauga. Persons pictured are: A. Bruce Etherington, Harry Waring, Robert McCague (office manager and spec. writer), Valentin Petschar and Edmond Ruud (draftsmen), Mrs. Rosa Teshima (secretary).
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Negatives cut into 3 strips of 2 frames each.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the CN tower and downtown Toronto.
Copy Negs from B.C. Langley Museum
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
This file contains a series of copy black and white acetate negatives of the interior and exterior of the Langley Museum in British Columbia. The article "Fort Langley, B.C.: Museum and Fort" written by J. Calder Peeps appeared in the 1958, November issue of The Canadian Architect.
J. Calder Peeps
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
File contains 27 black and white acetate negatives depicting exterior and interior views of the Carling Breweries building. A selection of these photographs were reproduced in the 1959 June issue of The Canadian Architect for an article titled, "Office Building, Toronto. The building was designed by the architects Weir, Cripps & Associates.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
This file contains 19 copy black and white acetate negatives by James H. Acland. A selection of these images accompanied the article "The Architecture of Water" by Charles W. Moore and published in the 1959 November issue of The Canadian Architect.
J. Acland
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains 2 copy black and white acetate negatives.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains three black and white acetate negatives produced in preparation of 1958 December issue of The Canadian Architect periodical.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The file contains 14 black and white acetate negatives of an unknown highrise building.
Toronto Pearson International Airport, Old Terminal 1
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior and exterior of the development of the Toronto International Airport, showing photographs of planes, baggage claim, parking garages. Design drawings were published in the May 1958 issue of Canadian Architect. The airport was originally known as the Malton Airport, opened in 1937, and was redeveloped as an International Airport in the 1960s, and renamed in 1984 for former Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.
Jowett, H.R.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Head office of TD Bank. photographs of various construction processes and completion. Exterior ground and aerial level views. Interior photographs of office spaces. View of Lancaster Gate. Was constructed in 1967-1969, height is 222.86 m, 56 floors. photograph of Bank of Toronto head office, demolished to allow for the construction of the Toronto-Dominion Centre.
Toronto, Bank of Montreal, 30 Yonge Street
Fait partie 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
Meteorological Headquarters building
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The headquarters building is four storeys high, aproximetely 430 ft. long by 210 ft. wide and has a gross floor area of 340.000 sq.ft. Two courtyards occupying the center bays of the building provide natural light to interior offices and laboratories. The building programme included offices, warehousing facilities, classrooms, lecture theatre, research library and archives, cafeteria and specialized scientific facilities such as observetion domes, radar equipment and wind tunnels. Views of the courts, lobby, typical service core. Interior and exterior views.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
N&H Studio
Fait partie de Design Archive photographic collection
File contains a photograph depicting an exterior view of GJVN Housing. The concrete structure is four-storeys and features a unique angular overhang at the front entrance with a round skylight cut through it.
Burley, Robert
Fait partie de Design Archive photographic collection
File consists of photographs of the interior of Ennslen House on Howland Avenue.
Burley, Robert
Fait partie 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
Italian Trade Commission office
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of a lobby and office space, meeting rooms, featuring glass walls, banquette seating and wood-panneled ceiling.
Applied Photography Ltd.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of a flat-roof building clad in grey stone, with a central window feature.
Samson, Ian
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model of the building. Sticker on back of photograph reads: Model of the Homeworld mega centre in Metropolitan Toronto, looking north towards Highway 401. The semi-translucent fibreglass dome will measure 240X240 feet and soar 120 feet from ground level. Photo credit: Zeidler Roberts Partnership/ Architects. Information: 416 968 2100."
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Renovation and addition to a heritage property located at 2 Gloucester Street in Toronto. The original Masonic building was constructed in 1888. The addition to this building won a Canadian Architect Award of Excellence in 1972.
Clark, Clive
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The gas works building located at 251 Front St., built in 1887-1888, belonged to the Consumers Gas Company and produced gas for light fixtures. It was known as Purifying House No. 2. The file contains an image of the interior of the building being gutted. The basilica-style interior space is evident in the empty room. In 1985, The Canadian Opera Company purchased the buildings north of the lane and commenced an comprehensive $10 million restoration program with Bregman, Hamann and Arcop Associates. It would later house the Imperial Oil Opera Theatre and the Joey and Toby Tanenbaum Opera Centre.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of the main buildings on site, with cedar shingles and enclosed walkways between buildings.
Jowett, Henry Roger
Dynamic Funds of Canada, corporate offices
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of the hallway and decorative glass cube wall feature.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior views of the architects' offices, showing staff at work.
North York Central Library / Crown Life Building
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Architect's model of the stepped library building, with arched main entrance, an atrium connecting six floors, curved staircases, and semi-circular balconies. Design by Moriyama and Teshima. Adhered to the same paper backing is a photo of an artist's illustration of the Crown Life building by Bregman + Hamann.
Branch bank, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view of renovation to an existing bank. Vaulted plaster ceiling in main reception area.
Fait partie 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.
Don Mills, Brookbanks Community Library
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
4 black and white prints on an 8x10 sheet showing the exterior of the library. One photograph has a blue check-mark in the sky area.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Aerial view of a high-rise office building. Photographer's stamp visible through tissue on verso: Art James. One interior view showing a board room through a closed door.
James, Arthur
Hotel Admiral, 249 Queen's Quay west, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
One small colour photograph in which the sign "Hotel Admiral" is visible on the roof of the building. The two black and white prints show the hotel under construction. The building was purchased by Radisson and became the Radisson Admiral Hotel.
James, Arthur
Fait partie 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
La Cantinetta restaurant, 322 King street west, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of the interior of a restaurant located on the ground floor of an office building in downtown Toronto. A stamp on the back of the photograph gives the architects as Baron Myers Associates.
Samson, Ian
Fait partie 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.
Market Galleria Lofts, 71 Front St East, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a design concept drawing for the interior lobby of the Market Galleria lofts.
45, 47 and 49 Front street East, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
2 contact sheets with 8 black and white images of the exterior and interior of 45 and 47 Front street, which comprise part of a larger commerical building originally constructed in 1872-3 by Walter Strickland. The cast iron front elevation is original; the interiors were refitted by Stone & Kohn in the early 1980s. Alternate titles include: Beardmore Building, Griffiths Building
45 Charles street East, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Black and white photographs of an office tower. 3 of the 4 photographs were printed by Panda Associates Photography and have the company's stamp on the verso.
Panda Associates Photography and Art Services
20 Adelaide street East, Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Design concept drawing of a high rise office building. 2 x 3 inch colour photograph adhered to clear plastic backing.
1 Richmond street West : Toronto
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
1 photograph of the building model and 1 of the completed building. One image is stamped in red ink with the logo for Lenscape Inc. photography.
Lenscape Incorporated
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of a 3-storey glass and concrete office building, square in shape and symmetrical in design. Photographed in winter, with snow on the ground.
Jowett, Henry Roger
Northeast Court restaurant development
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of restaurant with glass atrium and steel(?) roof. Signs for "Pappr's good eats" and "St. Hubert Bar-B-Q" in the foreground. Designed for Northeast Land Incorporated by E.D.A. Collaborative Inc., Landscape Architects and Alfred Szeto Architect. Building was located at Finch Avenue, East of Kennedy Road in Toronto.
Norman Bethune - Tim Buck Educational Centre
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Re-design of a heritage Victorian townhouse at 24 Cecil St., Toronto; original façade pictured.
Fait partie 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.)
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of the exterior of the hotel, and interior dining area.
Rothmans of Pall Mall Canada Ltd. offices
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of main entrance to concrete and glass office building, located at 75 Dufflaw Road in Toronto.
Newton, Neil
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of high rise hotel constructed ca. 1957, located at 150 King Street West. It was replaced by the Toronto Stock Exchange Tower in 1983.
Western section, Gardiner Expressway, concept drawings
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Illustrations showing an idealized reconstruction of the section of the Gardiner Expressway between Bathurst Street and Sunnyside Pavilion (near the base of Parkside Drive), extending to the waterfront. Drawings include the addition of a new waterfront park, viewing platforms hung under the raised expressway, Front Street is extended to the west, and an amusement pier at Sunnyside. The designs were commissioned as part of an OAA Charrette, and the images were published in the July 1987 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.
Educational buildings, SEF program (Study of Educational Facilities)
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photographs of buildings constructed under the SEF (Study of Educational Facilities) program by the Metropolitan School Board. These buildings were featured In the article "SEF - A Critical Evaluation" published in Canadian Architect, February 1972, pp.26-33. The buildings are used as a critique of the SEF program by prominent Toronto Architects, including:Howard V. Walker, Ronald M. Glaiser, W. T. Pentland, George A. Robb, John N. Shaw, and Alan Wilcox. The buildings themselves are not named in the article, but Denlow Public School, Brooks Road Junior Public School, and Don Valley Junior High School have been identified. Articles on SEF also appeared in Canadian Architect, December 1969 and April 1971.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior view of brick synagogue located at 3600 Bathurst Street, view from Bathurst street.
Toronto, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Photograph of a design concept drawing for a hospital and medical research facility.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Interior view of office space on main level. The building ceased to function as a municipal city hall after North York was amalgamated into the Toronto Metropolitan Area in the late 1990s. It now serves as the North York Civic Centre, located on Yonge Street north of Sheppard Avenue.
Applied Photography Ltd.
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
Exterior views of the pods and waterways of the amusement park.
Nakashima, Hiro
North York, Joseph Shepard Federal office building
Fait partie de Canadian Architect magazine fonds
The Joseph Shepard Building is located in the urban core of the North York region of Toronto. The fourteen-storey, modern office complex is pyramidal in form with stepped massing and an asymmetrical plan. The building's walls are clad in rust-red and brown clay brick and have continuous bands of windows and brick spandrels that create a strong horizontal emphasis. Prominent features of its design are its five-storey atrium, many open-air terraces, public courtyard and accessible mall. A strong architectural vocabulary unifies the interior and exterior. The designation is confined to the footprint of the building.
Applied Photography Ltd.