Home For The Hockey Famous
This wonderful Rococo style building located at Yonge and Front Streets has been home to the Hockey Hall Of Fame since 1993. Designed by architects Darling & Curry and built in 1885 for the Bank Of Montreal it remained in use as a bank until 1982 before undergoing a $27 million renovation which also restored some of the beautiful original features of the building including the huge stained glass dome above the central banking hall. Today it is a shrine to hockey in a town that loves hockey and its Maple Leafs despite their horrible record for the last 47 years.
If I'm ever in Toronto again,(been there twice), this is a place I'll visit for sure. Walked by this impressive building on my last visit.
ReplyDeleteLove absolutely everything here, the old and new, the sunshine, the beautiful building!
ReplyDeleteHappy Sunday!
Love this building but have never been inside. Hubby has.
ReplyDeleteThat rococo buildings from the 19th Century is great looking. Wonderful that it has found a good purpose. I remember that the Maple Leafs were frequent winners of the Stanley Cup in the 1950s, and always beating our Chicago Black Hawks. Excellent photo.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your visit and comment on my blog. You are very kind.
Wonderful architecture Pat, what do you mean a shrine to hockey.. a hockey museum ?
ReplyDeletewow! how grand a place for hockey memorabilia!
ReplyDeleteWhen I first opened your site my first thought was that it had to be a bank. What a grand old building. I'm glad it has a new life and is visited often.
ReplyDeleteMeant to visit this on my last visit to Toronto. Will definitely get there next time!
ReplyDeleteI'm very surprised. This is such an incredible building in its essence and facade...it's magnificent!
ReplyDeleteWhat is mind-boggling is that it houses the Hockey Hall of Fame. Hockey is a sport, which may be great fun to watch, but that's all it is, a sport. This building deserves more.
Sorry about that all you hockey fans!
Totally ignorant about hockey, but this is a lovely building.
ReplyDeleteThe Temple of Hockey. What a waste! ;-) Would make a great bank, though.
ReplyDeleteFantastic looking building, ideal for its purpose!
ReplyDeleteOne museum of sorts I've never been into in Toronto. It is beautiful, and I hear it's haunted.
ReplyDeleteAs to the Leafs, well, they're crashing fast at just the right time of year to do so. Just as they do every year.
Brilliant! Simply brilliant. (No comments about the Leafs . . . )
ReplyDeleteHockey is an exciting game to see in person. It is too bad that it doesn't lend itself as well to television. That limits its appeal.
That is classic architecture.
ReplyDeleteYou could have given me ten guesses and I never once would have thought this is the home of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Not a hockey stick in sight.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Jack that hockey is far more exciting in person than on TV. It's a handsome building.
ReplyDeleteLovely building. Old and new together ;-)
ReplyDeleteGorgeous building!
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