- Girl's Entrance
- Boy's Entrance
Queen Mary School - 1914
230 Keith Road West, North Vancouver, BC.
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE:
Queen Mary School is a prominent two-storey with full basement masonry institutional building with a pedimented central bay and bell tower. The school stands on a rise of land, surrounded by playing fields, on Keith Road West in North Vancouver.
HERITAGE VALUE:
Queen Mary School is important as an indication of the social and economic conditions in North Vancouver, which resulted in rapid population growth. The establishment of the North Vancouver Ferry and Power Company in 1903, a building boom in North Vancouver, and the opening of the Wallace Shipyards, all brought substantial migration to the North Shore of Burrard Inlet. By 1906, the North Vancouver Land and Improvement Company was clearing land for substantial new residential developments. The population increase was substantial enough that construction of this school proceeded despite the outbreak of the First World War, indicating the value of education to the local community.
Symbolic of the importance of the school to the community, the architecture is imposing, conveying a sense of permanence and order. There is an eclectic mix of classical references, reflective of the Edwardian Baroque movement popular in England at the time, including Greek pediments, Baroque broken pediments, quoining and a variety of decorative windows. The ribbons of sash windows are characteristic of the requirements of the provincial authorities, allowing abundant natural light into the classrooms.
Queen Mary School is valued as a significant example of the work of English-born and trained architect William Charles Frederick Gillam (1867-1962), an expert in school planning and also the architect of Ridgeway School in North Vancouver and the Provincial Normal School in Victoria.
Source: Heritage Planning Files, City of North Vancouver
CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS:
Key elements that define the heritage character of the Queen Mary
School include its:
- landmark location on a rise at the convergence of Keith Road and
13th Street
- articulated form, monumental scale and symmetrical massing
- brick cladding on the first and second floors
- reinforced concrete construction
- random ashlar stone foundations
- design elements of the Edwardian Baroque style, with a free
interpretation of Classical elements such as quoining and a variety of
pediments
- double front entries, each with its own flights of steps
- cut-stone ornament such as the window surrounds and quoins
- tall belltower
- regular and decorative fenestration, such as: multi-paned
double-hung wooden-sash windows with transoms, many in multiple
assembly; a central Palladian window at the entry; and round-headed
windows on the end facades
- surrounding landscape, including grassed school yard and rubble
stone retaining wall.
Comments and faves
alexalexander55 and North Vancouver Museum and Archives added this photo to their favorites.
icebergmedic (5 months ago | reply)
I grew up at 315 West Keith Road in the shadow of Queen Mary Elemantary. I was there from grades 1-7 and my fondest memories are of Mr. Cowell and Lunch playing ball tag with my friends! My Dad and Aunts/Uncles went to this school.
Great to see she's still standing... what happened to the Library wing?
Wally Berg
Mission, BC