Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

McLeod Building

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Status
  
Complete

Roof
  
35 m (115 ft)

Height
  
35 m

Floors
  
9

Cost
  
600,000 CAD

Completed
  
1915

Floor count
  
9

Opened
  
1915

Province
  
Alberta

McLeod Building

Type
  
Residential, Commercial

Location
  
10134-100th Street Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Address
  
10134 100 St NW, Edmonton, AB T5J 0N8, Canada

Similar
  
CN Tower, Forest Heights Park, Manulife Place, Ritchie Mill, Argyll Velodrome

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The McLeod Building is a historic office building located in Downtown Edmonton. It was designated a Provincial Historic Resource on January 3, 1995 and a Municipal Historic Resource on May 22, 2001.

Contents

History

Kenneth McLeod was a former Edmonton alderman, contractor and real estate speculator, who in 1912 announced the construction of the McLeod Building, which he claimed would be the tallest in the city, 25 ft (7.6 m) taller than the Tegler Building. Architect John K. Dow was instructed to copy the Paulsen Building in Spokane, Washington. The construction began in 1913 and was completed in 1915. Despite McLeod's claim about the building projected to be the tallest in Edmonton, the Alberta Legislature Building in the same city had already surpassed the height claimed by McLeod in 1913. The McLeod Building is considered Alberta’s best remaining example of an architectural style for commercial buildings known as the Chicago School.

References

McLeod Building Wikipedia