• Source: Chief Dominion Architect
  • Chief Dominion Architect was a position created in 1871 by the Government of Canada to help design public federal buildings across Canada. The role reported to the Minister of Public Works.
    From World War II onwards to 1973 (renamed Chief Architect) the role was diminished with work being contracted out to third parties and finally replaced with a bureaucrat (Assistant Deputy Minister for Design and Construction, Department of Public Works and now Assistant Deputy Minister for the Real Property Branch, Public Works and Government Services Canada) responsible for finding external architects instead.


    List of Architects


    Thomas Seaton Scott 1872–1881
    Thomas Fuller 1881–1896
    David Ewart 1896–1914
    Edgar Lewis Horwood 1915–1917
    Richard Cotsman Wright 1918–1927
    Thomas W. Fuller 1927–1936
    Charles D. Sutherland 1936–1947
    Joseph Charles Gustave Brault 1947–1952
    Edwin Alexander Gardner 1952–1963
    James Alfred Langford 1963–1975
    Frederick Preston Rubidge was a lead government architect for many projects prior to the formation of the title, first for the Province of Canada beginning in 1841, then with the federal Department of Public Works from 1867 to 1872.


    References

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