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John M. Lyle
Canadian architect

John M. Lyle

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John M. Lyle
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Biography

John MacIntosh Lyle (1872–1945) was an Irish born Canadian architect, designer, urban planner, and teacher active in the late 19th century and into the first half of the 20th century. He was a leading Canadian architect in the Beaux Arts style and was involved in the City Beautiful movement in several Canadian cities. In the 1920s, he worked to develop his vision of a uniquely Canadian style of architecture.

Biography

Lyle was born in Connor, County Antrim, Ireland on 13 November 1872. He came to Canada as a young child in 1878 and grew up in Hamilton, Ontario, where his father, Rev. Dr. Samuel Lyle, was minister of Central Presbyterian Church. Lyle attended the Hamilton School of Art. He trained as an architect at Yale University, enrolling in the École des Beaux-Arts, in Paris, France, in 1894. Following his graduation, he found work in 1896 with the New York architectural partnership of Howard & Cauldwell. Lyle subsequently became an associate with the New York firm of Carrère and Hastings—with which he was involved in the design of the New York Public Library (Fifth Avenue at 42nd St., 1897)—and became a member of the Society of Beaux-arts Architects.

In 1904, John Lyle designed and supervised the construction of the main building (now named Rogers House) at Pickering College, 16945 Bayview Avenue, Newmarket, ON L3Y 4X2. Was this his first major commission? Numerous sources exist including Professor Arthur Dorland' brief history of Pickering College in the 1942 Proceedings of the Royal Society of Canada.

Lyle returned to Canada in 1905 to begin work on the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto. In 1906, he established his own company, Atelier Lyle, in Toronto.

During the 1920s, Lyle strove to develop a uniquely Canadian architectural style, incorporating traditional designs from the English and French colonial periods and stone, metal, plaster, fresco, glass and mosaic floral and faunal motifs inspired by the Canadian post-impressionist painters known as the Group of Seven.

In 1926, the Ontario Association of Architects awarded Lyle its Gold Medal of Honour for his design of the Thornton-Smith Building (1922) on Yonge Street in Toronto. Two years later, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects. From 1941 to 1944, he served as president of the Art Gallery of Ontario.

Most of Lyle's projects were in Toronto and other parts of Ontario (and mostly for banks, especially Dominion Bank), but completed projects in New Brunswick, Alberta, Nova Scotia. He submitted proposals for competition for two buildings in United States (1 in Providence, RI and another Chicago), but he did not win either one.

John M. Lyle died in Toronto on 20 December 1945.

Lyle's best-known contribution is Royal Alexandra Theatre, completed in 1907 in the Beaux-Arts style. It was renovated in 1963 and remains one of the city's valued arts venues.

Lyle designed the granite and Indiana limestone Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada, whose two large bronze tablets bear the names of the ex-cadets who gave their lives for their country in World War I. The stone was laid by Governor-General of Canada, His Excellency Viscount Byng, of Vimy, CGB KCMG MVO 25 June 1923; Nominal rolls of Cadets and Staff, pamphlets concerning the Arch, the RMCC Review of May 1923, Canadian coins and stamps and the Roll of Honour of the College are in a sealed copper box.

Works

ProjectLocationDatesNotesSourceImage
Royal Alexandra Theatre284 King Street West, Toronto1907Beaux ArtsWRoyal Alex Theatre, Toronto.jpg
Central Presbyterian ChurchHamilton, Ontario1908Beaux-ArtsCharltonAvenueHamiltonA.JPG
Cobalt railway stationCobalt, Ontario1910
John B. Maclean House - 7 Austin TerraceToronto1911Georgian Revival. Built for John Bayne Maclean. Facade retained (remaining structure demolished was altered after 1950) during conversion as townhouses in 2011.
Maclean Publishing BuildingToronto1913. Demolished
John Lyle StudioToronto1920Beaux-Arts. All but facade demolished to make way for One Bedford condos 2006
The Thornton-Smith Building340 Yonge Street, Toronto1922Beaux-Arts. Lyle won the Ontario Association of Architects' Gold Medal of Honour for this building in 1926.
Commemorative ArchRoyal Military College of Canada, Kingston, Ontario1923Beaux-ArtsCMR - Arche commémorative.JPG
Bank of Nova Scotia123 Sparks Street, Ottawa1923Beaux-Arts[1]
Union StationFront Street West, Toronto1915–1927In the Beaux-Arts style, Canada's most monumental railway station. G.A. Ross and R.H. Macdonald, Hugh Jones (CPR), and John M. Lyle.WUnion Station on Front Street.jpg
Gage Park Memorial FountainGage Park, Hamilton, Ontario1927Beaux-ArtsGageParkHamiltonA.JPG
Bank of Nova Scotia125 8 Avenue SW, Calgary1929Beaux-Arts[2]
Bank of Nova Scotia head office and Halifax main branch1709 Hollis Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia1929–1931Beaux-Arts (A rare example of Renaissance inspired structure)[3] [4]Bank of Nova Scotia Halifax.JPG
Runnymede LibraryToronto1930A branch of the Toronto Public Library. Incorporates elements of English and French colonial architecture in Canada and uses Canadian imagery for ornamentation.Runnymede Public Library, Bloor and Glendonwynne streets.jpg
Cowan House174 Teddington Park Avenue, Lawrence Park, Toronto1931
Whitney HallUniversity College, Toronto1930-31Georgian Revival university residence.Whitney Hall.JPG
Thomas B. McQuesten High Level BridgeHamilton, Ontario1932Beaux-Arts monumental entrance bridge to the city of Hamilton characteristic of the City Beautiful movement.HighLevelBridgeHamilton.JPG
Bank of Nova Scotia head officeToronto1951Designed in 1928 and built after Lyle's death to a modified design.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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