Prince Rupert City Hall

Prince Rupert City Hall

Prince Rupert City Hall
General information
Architectural style Art Deco
Location 424 3rd Avenue West
Prince Rupert, British Columbia
V8J 1L7
Coordinates 54°18′46″N 130°19′31″W / 54.31268°N 130.32541°W / 54.31268; -130.32541Coordinates: 54°18′46″N 130°19′31″W / 54.31268°N 130.32541°W / 54.31268; -130.32541
Client Department of Public Works
Technical details
Floor count 2
Design and construction
Architect Max B. Downing

The art deco Prince Rupert City Hall, in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, was originally constructed as the Federal Building in 1938.[1]

The architect was Max B. Downing who persuaded the Department of Public Works to use "monolithic concrete" on the edifice instead of brick.[2] The result: the rather striking Prince Rupert Federal Building appeared in the northern B.C. community.

It was built in the fashionable art deco streamlined style; many years later decorative native motifs were incorporated into the front wall. It is one of only 2 existing Art Deco city halls in Canada; the other being Vancouver City Hall.

References

  1. Tourism Prince Rupert City Hall Prince Rupert City Hall
  2. Building The West, page 440 Building The West: Early Architects of British Columbia (page 440)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.