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Guelph City Hall National Historic Site of Canada

Corner view of Guelph City Hall, showing the façade with the main entrance and a second façade, 1990. : Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs Canada, 1990.

    Heritage Value

    Guelph City Hall was designated a national historic site in 1984 because it is an example of a multi-functional city hall; it symbolized the city's confidence in its future; and the smoothly dressed stonework and delicate carving of the exterior design provide an elegant and refined example of civic architecture in a classical style.



    Guelph City Hall was erected, along with other prominent local buildings, during the mid-19th-century period of pride and prosperity that followed the arrival of the Grand Trunk Railway service to the community. It is an excellent example of a mid-19th-century, multi-functional civic building, combining the functions of a market, fire hall, police office and jail, library, a reading room for the Mechanics Institute, a large public hall along with town offices and a council chamber in a single building. Designed by prominent Toronto architect William Thomas and built by Morrison and Emslie with an 1875 addition by George Netting, Guelph City Hall is one of Ontario's finer examples of the mid-19th-century Renaissance Revival style, a classical style based on 16th-century Italian precedents. The carved detailing of the façade were supervised by well-known artisan Matthew Bell.



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    59 Carden Street
    Guelph, Ontario

    Also called: Guelph City Hall, Hôtel de ville de Guelph

    Construction Date 1856 to 1857

     

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    Last updated: 08/02/2010 Page Top Important Notices