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Essential
Architecture- Canada
Parliament Hill |
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architect
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location
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a scenic location on the southern banks of
the Ottawa River in downtown Ottawa, Ontario |
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date
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1865 |
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style
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a combination of the High Victorian
Gothic, English garden, formal garden styles popular at the end of the 19th
century. The Palace of Westminster and precinct had recently been rebuilt in
a similar style, and the choice of a gothic rather than an American inspired
neoclassical design, was a symbol of Canada's continued links to Britain. |
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construction
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stone |
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type
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Government |
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Parliament Hill, viewed from the Gatineau
shore of the Ottawa River.
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The main entrance of Parliament Hill, the
Queen's Gates, erected in 1876. |
Parliament Hill (French Colline du Parlement, colloquially The Hill) is a
scenic location on the southern banks of the Ottawa River in downtown
Ottawa, Ontario. Its Gothic revival suite of buildings – the Parliament
Buildings – serves as the home of the Parliament of Canada; the best
known of these buildings is the Centre Block, with its prominent Peace
Tower, a national symbol. Parliament Hill attracts approximately 3
million visitors each year.[1]
History
Parliament Hill is a limestone outcrop with a gently
sloping top. For thousands of years it served as a landmark on the
Ottawa River for First Nations, and later European traders, adventurers
and industrialists, to mark their journey to the interior of the
continent. After Ottawa, then called Bytown, was founded, the builders
of the Rideau Canal used the hill as a location for a military base,
naming it Barrack Hill. A large fortress was planned for the site, but
was never built, and by 1858 it had lost its strategic importance.
In that same year, Queen Victoria selected Bytown as the capital
of the Province of Canada. Barrack Hill was chosen as the site for the
new parliament buildings, given its prominence over both the town and
the river, as well as the fact that it was already owned by the Crown.
Within less than two years, on December 20, 1859, ground was broken on
the site; by summer of the following year, Prince Edward, Prince of
Wales, laid the cornerstone of the new parliament. It became the largest
project undertaken in North America to that date. The complex was not
completed, however, when three colonies of British North America
confederated, with the potential for others to join as provinces, with
Ottawa remaining the capital. Thus, the bureaucracy of parliament spread
to buildings beyond Parliament Hill even at that early date.[2]
By 1876 the structures of Parliament Hill were completed, along
with the wrought iron fence and Queen's Gates, forged by Ives & Co. of
Montreal. However, the grounds had yet to be properly designed; Governor
General Lord Dufferin sent chief architect Thomas Scott to New York City
to meet with Calvert Vaux and view Central Park. Vaux completed a layout
for the landscape, including the present day driveways, terraces, and
main lawn; Scott created more informal grounds to the sides of and
behind the parliament.[2]
The Centre Block was destroyed by fire on February 3, 1916.
Despite the ongoing war, the original cornerstone was re-laid by
Governor General Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, on September 1, 1916;
exactly fifty-six years after his brother, by now the late King Edward
VII, had first set it. Eleven years later the new tower was completed;
dedicated as the Peace Tower in commemoration of the Canadians who had
lost their lives during the First World War.
Parliament buildings

A supporter from the Arms of Her Majesty in Right of Canada
rendered in three dimensions, bearing the shield of the Royal Arms.
The entire parliamentary precinct measures 112,360 m², bounded on the
north by the Ottawa River, on the east by the Rideau Canal, on the south
by Wellington Street, and on the west by a service road near the Supreme
Court.
The main buildings are: the Centre Block, built between 1865 and
1927, containing the House of Commons and Senate chambers, and featuring
the Peace Tower and Library of Parliament; the East Block, built in two
stages in 1867 and 1910, containing senators' offices and preserved
Confederation-era rooms; and the West Block, built in 1865, containing
ministers' and MPs' offices and meeting rooms. The three blocks are
disposed around a large grassy quadrangle, while the Centre Block is
surrounded by lawns and a walk overlooking the Ottawa River. The Library
of Parliament was opened in 1876. The Legislature of the Province of
Canada met for the first time in the new building on June 8, 1866, and
the new Parliament of the Dominion of Canada began its first session
there on November 6, 1867.
The overall site is in a combination of the High Victorian
Gothic, English garden, formal garden styles popular at the end of the
19th century. The Palace of Westminster and precinct had recently been
rebuilt in a similar style, and the choice of a gothic rather than an
American inspired neoclassical design, was a symbol of Canada's
continued links to Britain.
The only structure on Parliament Hill to have been purposefully
demolished was the building, which had been behind the West Block, that
housed the Supreme Court between 1889 and 1945. Throughout the 1950s and
1960s there were discussions to tear down other parliamentary precinct
buildings, including the Library of Parliament and West Block for new
structures, and the East Block for parking. None of these plans were
carried out.[3]
Future plans
Since 2002 a thorough renovation project has been going
on across the parliamentary precinct, specifically focusing on West
Block renovations, security of perimeters, pedestrian and vehicle
screening, circulation of traffic/delivery and parking.[4] Increased
costs due to greater deterioration of the heritage buildings.
Significant increase in building commodities (steel) and labour costs
(highly specialized and skilled trades) Increased allowances for risks
based on experience with other heritage rehabilitation projects such as
the Library of Parliament In 2012, the Centre Block is scheduled to be
closed for five years for an extensive interior renovation. In
preparation, the other buildings are being renovated and expanded first;
the inner courtyards of the West and East Blocks will be enclosed, and
temporary chambers for the Commons and Senate installed.
Major events

Canada's 9/11 Memorial Service.
Parliament Hill is the site of annual Canada Day celebrations, presided
over by the Governor General and his or her Prime Minister. Canada's
monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, has also been present at these festivities
in 1990, 1992, and 1997, and earlier presided over the Canadian
Centennial celebrations on July 1, 1967, on The Hill.
Another annual event, during the summer months, is the Changing
of the Guard on the centre lawn.
Among the major events Parliament Hill has hosted:
Celebration of Queen Victoria's birthday in 1865
Memorial for the death of Queen Victoria
The first visit of Canada's reigning monarch, King George VI,
with his consort Queen Elizabeth, on May 19, 1939
The raising of Canada's new national flag for the first time on
February 15, 1965
The lighting of the Centennial Flame on December 31, 1966
The celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee on October
18, 1977
The proclamation of the Constitution Act by Queen Elizabeth II on
April 17, 1982
Celebrations for the Millennium
The memorial service for the victims of the September 11, 2001
attacks in 2001, attended by 100,000 people,[5] and called "the largest
single vigil" ever seen in the nation's capital[6][7]
The celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee on October
13, 2002
Canadians lying in state. Among them:
former Governors General:
John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir
Georges Vanier
Ray Hnatyshyn
former Prime Ministers:
Sir John A. Macdonald
William Lyon Mackenzie King
Lester B. Pearson
John George Diefenbaker
Pierre Trudeau[8]
The Unknown Soldier
Statues and monuments

Statue of Queen Victoria on Parliament Hill.
The monument on Parliament Hill to fallen Canadian police
officers.Numerous statues and monuments are arranged across Parliament
Hill, mostly on the grounds behind the three blocks. The following is a
list of the statues and monuments, in order of their date completed, or,
if the date is unknown, in alphabetical order:
Queen Victoria - located north of the West Block; sculpted by
Louis-Philippe Hébert (1900)
Alexander Mackenzie - located west of the Centre Block; sculpted
by Louis-Philippe Hébert (1901)
Henry Albert Harper / Galahad - located outside the Queen's
Gates, facing Centre Block; sculpted by Ernest Wise Keyser (1905)
George Brown - located west of the Centre Block; sculpted by
George William Hill (1913)
Robert Baldwin and Sir Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine - located east
of the Centre Block; sculpted by Walter Seymour Allward (1914)
Sir Wilfrid Laurier - located south of the East Block; sculpted
by Joseph-Émile Brunet (1922)
Sir Robert Laird Borden - located west of the West Block;
sculpted by Frances Loring (1957)
Queen Elizabeth II - located east of the Centre Block; sculpted
by Jack Harman (1977)
John George Diefenbaker - located north of the West Block;
sculpted by Leo Mol (1985)
Lester Bowles Pearson - located north of the West Block; sculpted
by Danek Mozdzenski (1989)
Sir George-Étienne Cartier - located west of the Centre Block;
sculpted by Louis-Philippe Hébert
The Famous Five - depicts the women's suffrage movement (Nellie
McClung, Irene Parlby, Emily Murphy, Louise McKinney and Henrietta Muir
Edwards); sculpted by Barbara Paterson; the monument is featured on the
reverse of the current $50 banknote
Sir John A. Macdonald - located east of the Centre Block;
sculpted by Louis-Philippe Hébert
William Lyon Mackenzie King - located north of the East Block;
sculpted by Raoul Hunter
Thomas D'Arcy McGee - located north of the Centre Block; sculpted
by George William Hill
Other memorials on Parliament Hill include:
Centennial Flame - located in front of the Centre Block;
commemorates the Centennial of Canada (1967)
Canadian Police Memorium - located north of the Centre Block
(1995)
Victoria Tower Bell (1875-1877) - located north of the Centre
Block; original bell of the first Centre Block tower (2000)
Library of Parliament
Centre Block
Commons | Senate
Peace Tower
West Block Parliament of Canada
Parliament Hill East Block
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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