Former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail)

Heritage Railway Station of Canada

Duncan, British Columbia
Corner view of the former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) in Duncan, showing the central two storey block with a pyramidal hip roof and six-over-one windows on the first storey, and tripled windows on the second storey. © Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs Canada
Corner view
© Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs Canada
Corner view of the former Canadian Pacific Railway Station(VIA Rail) in Duncan, showing the low, hip roof with deep overhanging eaves. © Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs CanadaCorner view of the former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) in Duncan, showing the central two storey block with a pyramidal hip roof and six-over-one windows on the first storey, and tripled windows on the second storey. © Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs CanadaCorner view of the former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) in Duncan, showing the rectangular plan with low, horizontal form and massing. © Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs Canada
Address : 120 Canada Avenue, Duncan, British Columbia

Recognition Statute: Heritage Railway Stations Protection Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. 52 (4th Supp.))
Designation Date: 1994-01-07
Dates:
  • 1912 to 1912 (Construction)

Event, Person, Organization:
  • Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway  (Organization)
  • Canadian Pacific Railway  (Organization)
  • R.A. Bainbridge, Divisional Engineer, CPR  (Architect)
Other Name(s):
  • VIA Rail - Former Canadian Pacific Railway Station  (Designation Name)
  • Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway Station  (Other Name)
  • Duncan Railway Station  (Other Name)
  • Canadian Pacific Railway Station  (Other Name)
  • Duncan VIA Rail Station  (Other Name)
Research Report Number: RS-149

Description of Historic Place

The former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) is a two-storey, wooden railway station with a station agent’s living quarters above, built in 1912. It is located in the city of Duncan, in British Columbia. The formal recognition is confined to the railway station building itself.

Heritage Value

The former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) at Duncan reflects the Canadian Pacific Railway’s (CPR) commitment to sustaining the pivotal role of its subsidiary, the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway (E&N), in the economy of Vancouver Island. This station ensured access to products in the timber, mining and agricultural markets of the Cowichan Valley, and facilitated the expansion of tourism in the area.

Designed by CPR Divisional Engineer R.A. Bainbridge, the generous size and distinctive appearance of this Station reflects the CPR’s optimistic view of Duncan’s prospects as a key stop on the E&N main line.

The former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) at Duncan serves as a focal point for the downtown area. It has been renovated twice by the community and houses the Cowichan Valley Museum. The station retains its relationship with the tracks and with the generous lawn formerly used as a station garden.

Sources: Heritage Character Statement, VIA Rail Station, Duncan, British Columbia, September 1993; and Analytica Associates, Railway Station Report 149, VIA Rail (former Canadian Pacific Railway) Station, Duncan, British Columbia.

Character-Defining Elements

Character-defining elements of the former Canadian Pacific Railway Station (VIA Rail) at Duncan include: its rectangular plan, exceptionally long and wide for a CPR station of this era; its low, horizontal form and massing, consisting of a central, two-storey block with flanking one-storey wings all covered by broad, hip roofs; the roof form, consisting of a low, hip roof with deep, overhanging eaves, intersected by a pyramidal, hip roof over the two-storey block, and enlivened by three brick chimneys and two skylights; the use of different materials to provide textural contrast, including shiplap siding with corner boards on the first storey; cedar shingles on the second storey walls; and cedar shingles on the roof; the exterior detailing, including unusually large and detailed, wooden canopy brackets, and a wide finish board at the building’s base; the irregular but balanced arrangement of windows and doors; its surviving original fenestration, including paired six-over-one windows on the first storey, and tripled windows on the second storey, both topped by multi-paned transoms, and two passenger entrances on the track side, framed by side windows and fixed transoms; the surviving original panelled baggage doors on both main elevations; the surviving original interior finishes on the main floor, including traditional wood floors, plaster-on-lath walls covered in burlap, moulded skirting, and crown moulding; the surviving original interior features on the second floor, including wall partitions, room dimensions, wood floors, door and window casings, baseboards and period light fixtures.