Bank of Commerce
501 Main Street, Vancouver, Colombie-Britannique, V6A, Canada
Reconnu formellement en:
2003/01/14
Autre nom(s)
Bank of Commerce
Canadian Bank of Commerce, Main Street Branch
Liens et documents
s/o
Date(s) de construction
1914/01/01 à 1915/01/01
Inscrit au répertoire canadien:
2005/03/29
Énoncé d'importance
Description du lieu patrimonial
The Bank of Commerce building consists of a three-storey stone bank and office building at 501 Main Street, located on the southwest corner of Main and East Pender Streets, within Vancouver's historic Chinatown.
Valeur patrimoniale
The Bank of Commerce building has heritage value as a grandiose expression of the 'temple bank', for its imposing presence on Main Street, and for accommodating a succession of commercial and institutional tenants that reflect the social and economic diversity of Chinatown.
The building's architectural value is found in its being one of Vancouver's most extravagantly-scaled examples of the temple bank. Built in 1914-15, it reflects the monumental Edwardian Baroque Style. The design magnifies the more modestly-scaled banks in this mode that began to be built at the beginning of the twentieth century, and which used the classical metaphor to express the stability of financial institutions. It was the work of Victor Daniel Horsburgh, the Toronto-based architect for the Canadian Bank of Commerce. W.F. Gardiner was the local supervising architect, and prominent contractors Baynes and Horie were the builders. The design also reflects the Bank of Commerce's aggressive expansion into Western Canada during the first two decades of the century.
This is the dominant structure on this portion of Main Street, challenging the authority of the domed Carnegie Centre (401 Main Street), built a decade earlier, and reflecting the competition between commercial and public institutional interests.
The building also has heritage value for the diversity of its occupants. The Canadian Bank of Commerce (since 1961 the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce) continues to use the ground-floor banking hall after nearly a century. The two upper floors have accommodated a variety of non-Chinese and Chinese businesses and institutions, reflecting the location where Chinatown's Pender Street is intersected by the more broadly representative Main Street. Institutional occupants have included the Italian Consulate and the Victorian Order of Nurses (in the 1920s), and the Hoi Ming Gwok Society of Canada (in the 1960s).
Source: City of Vancouver Heritage Conservation Program
Éléments caractéristiques
The character-defining elements of the Bank of Commerce building include:
- The exterior stonework, with its rusticated treatment
- The cornice, with its triglyphs and other Greco-Roman ornament
- The pediment, with its central ornamental panel
- The parapet
- The inscriptions "The Canadian Bank of Commerce" in the frieze on both elevations
- The pairs of large columns at either corner of the façade
- The classical detailing around the Main Street entrance, including the columns
- The pilaster treatment along the Pender Street elevation
- The detailing around the Pender Street entrance
- The stone surrounds of the windows
- The clock and its curved hood moulding on the Pender Street elevation
Reconnaissance
Juridiction
Colombie-Britannique
Autorité de reconnaissance
Ville de Vancouver
Loi habilitante
Vancouver Charter, art.593
Type de reconnaissance
Désignation patrimoniale
Date de reconnaissance
2003/01/14
Données sur l'histoire
Date(s) importantes
s/o
Thème - catégorie et type
- Économies en développement
- Commerce et affaires
Catégorie de fonction / Type de fonction
Actuelle
Historique
- Communauté
- Local pour association fraternelle, organisation sociale ou de bienfaisance
- Commerce / Services commerciaux
- Banque ou bourse
- Gouvernement
- Bâtiment diplomatique
Architecte / Concepteur
W.F. Gardiner
Constructeur
Baynes and Horie
Informations supplémentaires
Emplacement de la documentation
City of Vancouver Heritage Conservation Program
Réfère à une collection
Identificateur féd./prov./terr.
DhRs-168
Statut
Édité
Inscriptions associées
s/o