Westmount District National Historic Site of Canada

Montréal, Quebec
Pavilion in King George Park (1932, Robert Findlay). © Parks Canada / Parcs Canada
King George Park
© Parks Canada / Parcs Canada
Pavilion in King George Park (1932, Robert Findlay). © Parks Canada / Parcs CanadaStonehurst and Stonehenge (1928, J.J.Perrault and J. R. Gadbois); 4200 and 4250 Sherbrooke Street West. © Parks Canada / Parcs CanadaWestmount Park (1898-1899) and its pavilion (1929, MacDougall) © Parks Canada / Parcs Canada
Address : 4333 Sherbrooke Street West, Westmount, Montréal, Quebec

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 2011-07-19
Dates:
  • 1890 to 1930 (Significant)

Event, Person, Organization:
  • Jean Omer Marchand  (Architect)
  • Edward J. Maxwell  (Architect)
  • Percy E. Nobbs  (Architect)
  • W.S. Maxwell  (Architect)
  • George Alphonse Monette  (Architect)
  • Leslie Perry  (Architect)
  • Charles Saxe  (Architect)
  • Charles Saxe  (Architect)
  • L.A. and P.C. Amos  (Architect)
  • John James Browne  (Architect)
  • Cajetan Dufort  (Architect)
  • Robert and Frank Findlay  (Architect)
  • W.M. Footner  (Architect)
  • Alex Cowper Hutchison  (Architect)
Other Name(s):
  • Westmount District  (Designation Name)
Research Report Number: 2009-001

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque:  4333 Sherbrooke Street West, Montréal, Quebec

This historic district, made up of large portions of the town of Westmount, is a classic example of the Victorian suburbs that began springing up in Canada during the second half of the 19th century. Built between 1890 and 1930 on the southwest slopes of Mount Royal, Westmount offered its inhabitants a healthy and privileged living environment interlaced with extensive green spaces, far from the population density, noise, and pollution of the big city. This suburb sustained a vibrant community life with its elegant institutional, religious, and cultural buildings, including city hall, houses of worship, schools, a library, and a community meeting hall. Its rich built heritage influenced architects nationwide and remains as a testament to the building styles that swept Canada at the turn of the 20th century. The early adoption of restrictive zoning and the creation of an architectural commission in 1916 illustrate the municipality’s pioneering efforts and ongoing commitment to protect and conserve the harmonious setting of Westmount.

Description of Historic Place

Westmount District National Historic Site of Canada is situated on the southwest slope of Mount Royal, mostly northwest of Sherbrooke Street, and forms part of the City of Westmount. The site is representative of a prosperous Victorian and post-Victorian suburb in Canada, and is defined by its architectural and landscape heritage reminiscent of the period between 1890 and 1930. A local architectural and planning board regulated development beginning in 1914. Defined by its high-quality residential buildings, notable public buildings, schools, and places of worship, the district also features grid-like streets and its network of landscaped public and private green spaces. Official recognition refers to space within the City of Westmount which covers 2.5 square kilometres of varied topography.

Heritage Value

Westmount District was designated a national historic site of Canada because: it is an exemplary model of suburbs dating from the Victorian and post-Victorian era in Canada because of its diversity and the integrity of its components: residences (detached, semidetached and row houses), apartments, public buildings (city hall, library, and hall) and institutions (schools and places of worship), as well as landscape features such as parks, staircases and public spaces; its rich built heritage is representative of the main Canadian architectural style trends between 1890 and 1930. It served to influence architects elsewhere in Canada, and has since been supplemented by more recent infill that is both sensitive to and respectful of this heritage; and, it demonstrates an early and ongoing commitment from the municipality to protect and conserve through restrictive zoning and other planning mechanisms the built and landscape resources that contribute to the harmonious composition of the district.

The heritage value of Westmount District lies in its ties to the development of the social and intellectual life of Montreal’s middle-class English community in the early 20th century. Examples include the regulated construction of residential and public buildings designed and built in a wide variety of architectural styles by prominent Montreal architects and builders; and landscape features, such as parks and gardens, the Belvedere and the stairs going up the mountain. The district’s visual coherence was retained through the establishment of a local architectural and planning board which regulated development in the area beginning in 1914. Overall, Westmount displays a balanced setting for urban living with large green spaces and aesthetically pleasing public buildings conducive to the harmonious development of a sound community life.

Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, July 2009

Character-Defining Elements

Key elements contributing to the heritage value of this site include:
its location southwest of Mount Royal at the heart of Montreal Island, Quebec; its clearly defined boundaries (2.5 square kilometres) within a ring more or less circular in shape from the most south-easterly point at Dawson College; all major elements of the existing urban layout, including residential street patterns juxtaposed against two diagonal main roads, network of parks and gardens, and other green spaces; its characteristics of the City-Beautiful and Garden-City movements, including cohesive organization of plans and distinctions between residential streets and main arterials; the uniformity of general building design accented by distinctively-shaped buildings; the wide selection of buildings designed and built by noteworthy Montreal architects and builders; the wide variety of Victorian and post-Victorian architectural styles, including neo-gothic, picturesque, Italian, Second-Empire, neo-Queen Anne, neo-Roman, Beaux-Arts, Chateau, neo-Tudor, Arts and Crafts, neo-Quebec, and the French regime style; the high quality of exterior finish materials, including wood, stone, and bricks, with decorative wood elements on porches and balconies or rich sculpted stone details such as columns, newel posts, cornices, sculptures, and casings; its historical coherence and pleasing viewscapes.

Commemorative Intent

The Committee and the Board recommended Westmount District for designation as a national historic site because:
· it is an exemplary model of suburbs dating from the Victorian and post-Victorian era in Canada because of its diversity and the integrity of its components: residences (detached, semi-detached and row houses), apartments, public buildings (city hall, library, and hall) and institutions (schools and places of worship), as well as landscape features such as parks, staircases and public spaces;
· its rich built heritage is representative of the main Canadian architectural style trends between 1890 and 1930. It served to influence architects elsewhere in Canada, and has since been supplemented by more recent infill that is both sensitive to and respectful of this heritage; and,
· it demonstrates an early and ongoing commitment from the municipality to protect and conserve through restrictive zoning and other planning mechanisms the built and landscape resources that contribute to the harmonious composition of the district.