| Architect: Brown and Vallance of Montreal
(also designed the Greyhound and the Canada Life
Assurance buildings).
Contractor:
Fysche, Martin Company
Ltd. of Calgary.
Original
cost: $750,000
Construction materials:
Reinforced concrete and
steel frame faced with brown kitanning brick and
ornamental terracotta. Four entrances built of granite.
Architectural style:
Architects claimed it
was the " one of the finest examples of Gothic
architecture adapted for a business building in North
America." Ground floor - seven tall, rounded arches
along the main facades. Each facade divided into
perpendicular bays rising from the third storey,
terminating in round headed windows at the eighth floor
and topped with decorative shields moulded in white terra
cotta.
Original interior
details:
Corridors with terrazzo
floors and marble base. Main vestibule done in marble.
Two pairs of ornate wrought iron and brass elevators.
This "thoroughly fireproof" building was
advertised to doctors and dentists (1913) as having
"safety deposit boxes, mail chute service and vacuum
cleaning systems on each floor." "Offices
outfitted with running water, piped for gas and supplied
with compressed air."
Historical highlights:
- First Baptist
church demolished to clear lot for Herald
Building.
- excavation began in
the summer of 1912.
- first Calgary
building to exceed six storeys and certainly one
of the most visually unique.
- 10 storey Herald
building financed by the Southams. As home to the
Calgary Herald 1913 to 1932 it was originally
known as the Herald Building. Subsequently called
the Southam Building and finally the Greyhound
Building.
- the Southams
commissioned the Royal Doulton Company (famous
English ceramics and pottery company) to design
and make 44 figures and masks to decorate the
exterior of the building. The decorative
terracotta figures included reptiles, birds,
fish, monkeys, heraldic shields, vegetation and a
series of caricatures based on personalities from
the newspaper world ; the editor, the
stenographer, the typesetter and others. The
gargoyles were the work of well - known sculptor
Mark Villars Marshall (1879 - 1912), who died
shortly after the gargoyles were installed in
1912. Marshall had been a stone carver working on
Victorian Gothic Revival churches before his
employment with Royal Doulton's Lambeth Studios
in the late 1870s. His work was often depicted
the fanciful, grotesque and impish.
- the Herald moved
into the new premises December 13, 1913 (its
seventh location since August 1883) occupied
about 15,000 square feet of the new structure.
- the first paper was
printed December 15, 1913 in the basement
pressroom on the new 250 ton Hoe presses.
- Herald business and
executive offices on the main floor, editorial
offices - second floor, composing and steno
departments - third floor.
- D.E. Black
jewellers (later Birks) had a new jewellery store
on the ground floor.
- built at the end of
Calgary's real estate boom. World War One and the
resulting depression meant that the building was
not as profitable as predicted. In November 1914
the 10 storey Herald building had a revenue of
$60,000 from $105,000 of rentable space.
- in 1915 there were
10 dentists and 10 physicians listed as tenants.
There still seven vacant offices. Over the years
it provided accommodation for a variety of
realtors, lawyers, financial organizations and
oil companies and geologists.
- by 1930 the "
Herald owned and operated Herald Broadcasting
Studio with the "Tapestry Studio" and
the call letters CFAC was located on the 8th
floor."
- June 18, 1932 the
Herald needed larger facilities and moved across
the street from the 1913 structure into the
"Southam Building" which had been built
in 1912 and was also decorated with gargoyles.
(these gargoyles were removed during remodelling
in 1966 - 1967) ! by 1933 the 1913 Herald
Building (now called the Southam building) housed
17 physicians and 31 surgeons.
- Southam's sold the
building to Greyhound who gutted the main floor
to build a drive -through bus station with an
attached coffee shop and ticket office.
- May 1972 gargoyles
carefully removed from exterior. Some of the
figures are currently on public view at the
Alberta Hotel Building, Colonel Walker Park, and
the University of Calgary.
- "Greyhound
Building" purchased by AGT and in the fall
of 1972 demolished to make way for the Len Werry
building.
- in 1973 the City of
Calgary acquired 200-300 decorative terracotta
pieces from AGT. The City maintained a
representative collection of the gargoyles and in
1994 the remaining figures were put up for public
auction with the proceeds going to the Calgary
Historic Preservation Fund.
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