Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Bank of Canada Building

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Phone
  
+1 613-782-8111

Province
  
Ontario

Bank of Canada Building

Address
  
234 Wellington St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0H9, Canada

Hours
  
Closed now Wednesday9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PM

Similar
  
Currency Museum, Bank of Canada, Confederation Building, Logos Land, Splash Works

The Bank of Canada Building, located at 234 Wellington Street in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, is the head office of the Bank of Canada.

It was built from 1937-1938 by architect S.G. Davenport of Montréal, Québec, Canada and completed by the Torontonian firm Marani, Lawson and Morris.

The Bank of Canada Building replaced the Victoria Building to the east of this building on Wellington Street.

It is constructed of grey granite from Quebec; and is late neoclassical in style, which was a very popular style at the time for banks.

The Bank of Canada Building won a number of architectural awards, including the Gold Medal from the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada.

The large bronze front doors were designed by Ulysses Ricci of New York, and decorated with facsimiles of Greek coins from the British Museum. The sculptures decorating the front facade were designed by Jacobine Jones, and represent the Canada's seven principal industries at the time: fishing, electricity, mining, agriculture, forestry, manufacturing, and construction. The cornerstone was placed by Prime Minister Mackenzie King and the Bank's first governor, Graham Towers.

Plans for additions in the 1940s and 1950s were scrapped, and while more substantial plans were drafted during the 1960s, construction was delayed due to Ottawa's already-strained construction industry, and only commenced in 1972. The glass structure behind the original 1937 structure was completed in 1979 by the firm Marani Rounthwaite & Dick (successor to Marani, Lawson and Morris) and Arthur Erickson. The building contains an enclosed courtyard with a large tropical garden bordering a shallow pool which is very popular with wedding photographers, and a three-ton Yap Stone.

In 2000, it was named by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada as one of the top 500 buildings produced in Canada during the last millennium.

References

Bank of Canada Building Wikipedia