The Prairie legislative buildings of Canada (original) (raw)

Abstract

This thesis is a study of the three legislative buildings in the Canadian Prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. It documents the history of each building, describes the architectural features, and establishes the stylistic prototypes and influences. It further examines the place of these buildings as a group in the North American and European architectural environment of the period 1880 - 1920. The thesis will show how the formation of the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan in 19051 and the expansion of the province of Manitoba in 1912, necessitated the construction of legislative buildings to accommodate governmental functions. The significance of such practical, as well as other symbolical, needs on the design and style of each building is examined. Individual factors surrounding each building such as the use of local materials, the nationality and training of the architects, and economic limitations are considered. The thesis will conclude that while the three buildings show a similar architectural style - the Beaux-Arts Style - local influences have combined to produce a more specifically Canadian version, one which is less ornate, less complex, and smaller in scale.

Item Metadata

Title The Prairie legislative buildings of Canada
Creator Bodnar, Diana Lynn
Publisher University of British Columbia
Date Issued 1979
Description This thesis is a study of the three legislative buildings in the Canadian Prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. It documents the history of each building, describes the architectural features, and establishes the stylistic prototypes and influences. It further examines the place of these buildings as a group in the North American and European architectural environment of the period 1880 - 1920. The thesis will show how the formation of the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan in 19051 and the expansion of the province of Manitoba in 1912, necessitated the construction of legislative buildings to accommodate governmental functions. The significance of such practical, as well as other symbolical, needs on the design and style of each building is examined. Individual factors surrounding each building such as the use of local materials, the nationality and training of the architects, and economic limitations are considered. The thesis will conclude that while the three buildings show a similar architectural style - the Beaux-Arts Style - local influences have combined to produce a more specifically Canadian version, one which is less ornate, less complex, and smaller in scale.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Type Text
Language eng
Date Available 2010-03-06
Provider Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
Rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
DOI 10.14288/1.0094676
URI http://hdl.handle.net/2429/21600
Degree Master of Arts - MA
Program Fine Arts
Affiliation Arts, Faculty of; Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of
Degree Grantor University of British Columbia
Campus UBCV
Scholarly Level Graduate
Aggregated Source Repository DSpace