Images of the model for the former Ontario Association of Architects headquarters at 50 Park Road Toronto, Ontario. The modernist building was designed by John C. Parkin, and served as the home of the OAA from the building's completion in 1954 until 1992. The building is now occupied by DTAH, a landscape design company.
Photographs of an A-frame precase concrete cooling tower. Submitted for an award from the Prestressed Concrete Institute. The first photograph has a caption adhered to the back with information about the award of excellence from the Prestressed Concrete Institute.
Photograph of a model of the 1988 Calgary Olympic arches, the winning entry to the Olypic Arts Festival by A. J. Diamond & Partners (from sticker on verso).
4 photographs of design work by Jacques Rousseau (Canadian, born Saint-Hyacinthe, QC, 1948), and 1 unidentified photograph of a barn, partially destroyed.
Photograph of two black and purple upholstered armchairs, front and back. These chairs were a part of the exhibitions at SIDIM: Salon International du Design Intérieur de Montréal (Montreal International Interior Design Show).
The Éperon building was constructed to complement the existing historic architecture of the area, and was built to match the proportions of the Royal Insurance Company building that was previously on the site. The building matches the roof lines of the other structures on the Rue de la Commune, and the tower building (pictured) is an easily identifiable element in the museum complex.
Exterior view of church entrance, with huge ceramic mural executed by Claude Vermette, and interior view of a decorative panel "Blessed Virgin Mary" designed by J. C. Charuet. Additional interior view of round altar in the centre of the church.
Photographs of the construction phase of the building, with a press release from Wyndham Associates adhered to back of each image describing the project.
Interior and exterior views of the building. This office building has a 'green roof', which reduces the amount of energy required to heat and cool the building. It also has an extensive shopping mall at the ground floor and an arboretum with a waterfall at the Queen Street entrance. The double-decker elevator cabs are found inside the atrium, which stretches the entire height of the building.
Reproduction from the National Photography Collection of the Public Archives Canada. View of Sparks Street showing streetcards, horse and carriages ca. 1900.
File contains three contact sheets featuring images of a man in a lab coat standing at the of a Kodak's Signature Color Proofing System machine, explaining the information on its monitor to a woman. Located at Batten Graphics. For transparencies see 2005.001.06.08.005.
File contains 11 photographs of the Kodak exhibit at the Society of Motion Picture & Television Engineers 1965 Annual Conference & Exhibition held in Montreal, Quebec, and 13 photographs of the Kodak exhibit at the 1965 Canadian Graphic Arts Show.
File contains prints featuring images of buildings, factories, dining halls, people and plaques related to the Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. during the war.
Item is a transparency featuring an image of a woman packing boxes of Ektacolor film into cardboard boxes labelled "Kodak / Toronto" to be shipped to retailers.
File features three identical prints of women seated at machines labeled 'CINE PROCESS", working to process 35 mm film at the Toronto Film Processing Department.
File contains a panorama of lawn bowlers posed outside of a Canadian Kodak Co. building, a panorama of anonymous Kodak employees, an image of men lawn bowling with the inscription "Testing Dept Lawn Bowling Party" inscribed on the verso, an image of Ed Herbert and Fred Rowe lawn bowling, and other aerial views of men lawn bowling.
File contains exterior and interior views of the Kodak Canada building 35 and building 36 in Brampton, Ontario. There are also contact sheets featuring images of employees at desks and around office spaces.
File contains images of people at work at the North Vanouver Processing Laboratory. Each image is labelled with employees' names. Featured are employees making repairs and working with customers.
The file is comprised of 42 black and white acetate negatives. A selection accompanied "Banff 1958," a transcription of three addresses by Paul Rudolph at the annual Session at Banff and published in The Canadian Architect in March of 1959.
This file contains a series of black and white acetate negatives depicting a steel fountain by Gordon Raynor, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Meltzer of Toronto and published in the August 1958 issue of The Canadian Architect.
The file contains 3 black and white acetate copy negatives of paintings by Lewis Crutcher. Images of the paintings accompanied the article "Banff 1958 Cityscape" by Lewis Crutcher and were published in the March 1959 issue of The Canadian Architect.
This item contains a series of black and white acetate negatives commissioned by The Canadian Architect periodical to accompany a special issue on Shopping Centres and published October 1958. James H. Acland and James F. Harris are identified as authors of the sections of the magazine relating to shopping centres.
This file contains 12 medium format black and white negatives of the St. Lukes Lutheran Church located at the intersection of Finch and Bayview avenues in Toronto, Ontario.
This file contains a series of black and white acetate copy negatives produced by James H. Acland. A selection of these images appeared in the article titled Shopping Centres, a special issue, October 1958.
The file contains 28 black and white acetate negatives of exterior and interior views of a house designed by the architect Jack Klein and constructed in North York, Ontario.
Home of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. Starting date of the construction is 1978, opened in 1982. photographs of the model,different construction stages, completed building, interior and prespective view of Roy Thompson hall.