- Source: City Hall of Quebec City
The city" target="_blank">City Hall of Quebec city" target="_blank">City (French: Hôtel de ville de Québec) is the seat of local government in Quebec city" target="_blank">City, Quebec, Canada. It was inaugurated on September 15, 1896 in the Old Quebec neighbourhood. The building slopes downward as it was built on a hill and was once home to the Jesuit College (Jesuit Barracks) from the 1730s to 1878.
The city" target="_blank">city hall was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1984. The building is also located within the "Arrondissement historique du Vieux-Québec" (Historic District of Old Quebec), a district that was designated under provincial heritage legislation in 1963 and listed as a World Heritage Site in 1985.
Located on rue des Jardins and designed by architect Georges-Émile Tanguay (1858-1923), it is the second permanent city" target="_blank">city hall for the old city" target="_blank">city. From 1842 to 1896 city" target="_blank">City Hall sat at home of British Army Major General William Dunn (British officer), son of former administrator Thomas Dunn (lieutenant-governor) (at rue Saint-Louis and rue Sainte-Ursule). Prior to 1842 the city" target="_blank">city government sat a various sites. The formal Quebec city" target="_blank">City Council was established in 1833.
The building used a mixture of Classical, Medieval and Châteauesque elements.
See also
List of Jesuit sites
Montreal city" target="_blank">City Hall
References
External links
Media related to city" target="_blank">City Hall of Quebec city" target="_blank">City at Wikimedia Commons
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