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The
Royal York Hotel
and The Bank of Commerce These two buildings dominated the Toronto skyline from when they were built around 1930 until several taller buildings were erected in the 1960s and 70s. Each had the distinction at one time of being the tallest building in the British Empire; the Royal York Hotel for a short while, from when it was erected in 1929 till The Bank of Commerce took the title in December 1930. The latter was the tallest in the British Empire and when the Empire had become the British Commonwealth of Nations, the tallest in the Commonwealth until 1962.
The Royal York is now dwarfed by the towering back drop of todays skyscrapers and the Bank of Commerce (now Commerce Court North) is almost completely hidden.
The Bank of Commerce
In 1927, having outgrown its earlier seven-storey head office, The Bank of Commerce started planning for a new headquarters, one that would surpass all other buildings in Canada in height. This 34-story tower was the first of a new generation of skyscrapers and would continue the tallest building in the British Commonwealth until 1962. Darling & Pearson, designers of many of the bank's important buildings across Canada, were the architects, assisted by the New York firm, York & Sawyer, noted for designing office towers in the United States which combined traditional historical style with modern techniques. It was completed in December 1930 and was officially opened when the Board of Directors held their first meeting in the building on January 13, 1931. Today it is one of the best-loved heritage buildings in the city. The immense banking hall projects an almost ecclesiastical sense of awe. Royal York Hotel
While
the Powells lived here and in following years a number of buildings were
built and It was a magnificent hotel, a city within a city, with 1,048 rooms, each with radios, private showers and bathtubs. 1.5 acres of public rooms included a 12-bed hospital, a library and ten elevators. The Concert Hall featured a full stage and a large pipe organ. There was a glass-enclosed roof garden, the largest hotel kitchen in Canada. The telephone switchboard was 66-ft.long and manned by 35 operators. ,It was renovated from 1988 to 1993, to restored the original elegance with refurbished guest rooms, public spaces, a health club, and a skylit pool. It is reputed to have had more than 40 million guests. Information on The Royal York Hotel from Fairmont website.
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