Victoria City Hall

Victoria City Hall

Exterior view of red-brick Victoria City Hall with clock tower

Exterior view of Victoria City Hall
General information
Type Seat of local government
Architectural style Second Empire
Location 1 Centennial Square
Victoria, British Columbia
V8W 1P6
Groundbreaking 1878
Completed 1890
Owner City of Victoria
Design and construction
Architect John Teague
Website
www.victoria.ca/EN/main/city-hall.html
Official name Victoria City Hall National Historic Site of Canada
Designated 1977

Victoria City Hall is the city hall for Victoria, British Columbia, Canada at Douglas Street and Pandora Avenue. It was completed in 1890. It was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1977 and was also designated as a heritage site by the municipality in 1979.[1][2]

Construction

Architect John Teague designed Victoria's City Hall, considered "one of the best surviving examples of Second Empire-style public architecture in Western Canada." The earliest surviving municipal hall has a foot 105 tall Gillet and Johnson clock tower, three types of facades, tall windows, pedimented dormer windows and a metal mansard roof. The exterior is constructed of concrete, brick and stone. The Second Empire style reflects a change in the design and construction of governmental buildings, intended to symbolize the government's growth and power. It was constructed from 1878 to 1891 at Pandora Avenue and Douglas Street.[2]

Centennial Square

City Hall is a landmark in Victoria's Old Town District that in 1963 was nearly razed to make way for the Centennial Square, but is now an important historical building there.[2]

See also

References

Coordinates: 48°25′42″N 123°21′53.46″W / 48.42833°N 123.3648500°W / 48.42833; -123.3648500


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