Boom times aren't a new phenomenon for Saskatoon. Over 100 years ago,
in 1911, the Board of Trade issued a pamphlet declaring Saskatoon "The
Wonder City". The pamphlet extolled the wonders of settling and
investing in Saskatoon - then the fastest growing city in Canada. Sound
familiar? At the time, Saskatoon was in the midst of a dynamic real
estate boom that saw the community's population expand by 467 per cent
between the years of 1906 and 1916. Saskatoon's population was estimated
at 28,000 in 1912 and was predicted to reach 100,000 by 1920.
The
boom was sparked by a rush to own land in the prairies, with
homesteaders from across Canada, Europe and the United States flocking
to the region.Land values in the city were skyrocketing, fuelled by the
arrival of aggressive speculators. According to "A History of Saskatoon
to 1914," compiled by City of Saskatoon archivist Jeff O'Brien, a
35-foot lot on Second Avenue North that cost $300 in 1903 sold for close
to $70,000 in 1912.
Land was being bought and sold at a frantic
pace, with some titles being flipped for profit in mere hours or days
after purchase.An incredible 267 real estate firms were conducting
business in Saskatoon in 1912 - close to one real estate agent for every
100 residents. Building permits for that year totaled 1,783; 1,232 of
those permits were for residential housing. As a comparison, housing
starts in Saskatoon from 2002 to 2010 averaged out to 1,732 starts a
year.
Not only were houses being built at a record pace, also
under construction were the University of Saskatchewan, a half-million
dollar transit system, a power station, hospitals and a downtown railway
station.
Adding to the city's importance, Saskatoon was
emerging as the hub for three intercontinental railways in western
Canada: the Canadian Pacific Railway, the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway
and the Canadian National Railway Company.One of the visionaries
responsible for Saskatoon's turn-of-the-century boom was Allan Bowerman.
Employed as a school principal in Winnipeg from 1872 to 1899, Bowerman
arrived in Saskatoon in 1899. According to a newsletter published by the
Saskatoon Heritage Society, "Bowerman came to Saskatoon to engage in
the gentlemanly occupation of real estate."
He served as
Saskatoon's postmaster from 1900 to 1906, and was active on the Town
Council from 1903 to 1905.Bowerman was committed to making Saskatoon's
'boomtown' dreams come true. His vision of building the city's "first
skyscraper" led to the construction of the Canada Building,You must not
use the stonecarving without being trained. on land he had acquired for $65 across the street from the downtown CNR Station and the Post Office.
Bowerman
hired the architectural firm of James Chisholm & Son, a Winnipeg
company that had designed a number of prominent buildings in
Winnipeg,You will see earcap ,
competitive price and first-class service. Regina, Edmonton and Moose
Jaw. Carling-Halls Aldinger of Winnipeg was named general
contractor.Originally the Canada Building was designed to be fourstoreys
high. An enthusiastic Bowerman decided to expand the development, first
to six storeys and then to eight. "The economy drove Bowerman to build
the Canada Building to this size.Here's a complete list of granitecountertops for
the beginning oil painter. It was only going to be four floors, but it
just kept getting bigger and bigger," says property manager Gilbert
Dobroskay, President/Broker of Re/Max Guardian Commercial.
At
eight storeys in height, upon completion the Canada Building earned
bragging rights as the tallest office building located west of
Winnipeg.An article in the December 16, 1912 StarPhoenix provided a
sneak peek inside the stately building which featured a fa?ade of red
granite, terra cotta and grey Norman brick. "The entire upper storey is
recessed to form a colonnade effect... ornamented with the beaver motif,
typical of our country, after which the building has been named. Over
the front entrance has been placed an ornamental iron and glass
marquise, which extends out to the street curb... fastened over two
ornamental buffalo heads,A indoorpositioningsystem has real weight in your customer's hand. life size."
The
buffalo heads remain as stately icons, presiding over the 21st Street
entrance to the building. The sculptures are thought to have been carved
by an artist from Chicago. It was rumoured that the artist first
travelled to Winnipeg to view two stuffed bison at the Museum of
History, as he had never seen the animals before.For the past century,
the building's roof line has been adorned by two beavers, who look out
onto the corner of First Avenue North and 21st Street East.
The StarPhoenix article goes on to describe the variety of marble used in the building,We are professional wholesale best parkingsensor,large
LED Dome / Reading Lampwholesale order. still in evidence today:
Bottichino, Tavarnell, Pavanazzo and Skyros. "This entrance, which will
also have marble stairways and marble tile floor, ornamental plastered
ceiling, solid bronze elevator enclosures, etc., will without doubt be
the most handsome entrance in any similar building in Western
Canada."Solid Honduras mahogany graces the entrance halls and corridors
of the building. Offices and stores in the building were finished in
quarter cut American white oak, typical of the era's Craftsman style.
Dobroskay
says that a past retrofit provided insight into the building's original
splendor. "We were expanding office space on the third floor for Dr.
Hildebrant. A wall in one area was removed, only to reveal a perfectly
intact original wall that had been boarded over with drywall. There was
the wall, with the original mahogany door, complete with the frosted
glass bearing the name of the business. It even had the original
doorknob with the skeleton key!" Upon opening in April, 1913, the Canada
Building earned praise for its quality of construction. "The building
was considered very high tech for its time. Although it didn't have a
sprinkler system, it was almost fireproof. All of the floors and ducts
had fireproof enclosures, so fire couldn't spread between the floors,"
says Dobroskay.
The 1912 StarPhoenix article revealed, "The fact
that the building is as near fireproof in all respects as it can be
made, has obtained for the owner a fire insurance rate which will be
about one-third of that at present paid on any similar building in
Saskatchewan."The importance of fireproofing became evident when the
building's rival of the time - Drinkle Building No. 1 - was ravaged by
fire in 1925. That structure was later replaced by the McMillan
Building, also owned by the same owners as the Canada Building.
"The
Canada Building was built to last," says Dobroskay. "The foundations
are sitting on a bedrock of fieldstone. Structural engineers have taken
recent measurements and say the building has not settled more than a
quarter of an inch since it was built."
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