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Serbian Orthodox Church,
presbytery
Important
351 Melville Avenue
J. Rawson Gardiner, architect
1912
Built a dozen years after the church, the
presbytery was designed to integrate with it in
terms of scale, roof shape and facade materials.
Blenheim Place
Important
1894-1896
These row houses were built by contractors Riel
and Brown. Each unit has a bay window and a
balcony with a pediment in the Turkish vein.
Victoria Hall
Important
4626 Sherbrooke St. West
Hutchison & Wood, architects
1924
The architects of Westmount City Hall drew upon
the same Tudor inspiration in rebuilding Victoria
Hall. Note the turrets, ogival-shaped doors and
the oriel of the centre tower.
10
351 Prince Albert Avenue
Important
1899
Typical of Montreal commercial architecture, this
corner building has retained its intricate wood
cornice and balconies, and the old-fashioned
decoration of the show windows.
9
323 Grosvenor Avenue
Important
C.J. Saxe and J.S. Archibald,
architects
1898-1899
This house is a combination of Queen Anne
style, as seen in the tower, pavilion roof,
gingerbread woodwork and articulated brick
facade, and neo-Renaissance style, as seen in the
entry arcade and the first-floor loggia.
11
4868 to 4896 Sherbrooke St. West
Important
Théo Daoust, architect
1899
In 1914, architects McVicar and Heriot
transformed these row houses into a commercial
complex that is a lesson in rhythmic and well
articulated architecture.