Most images of the building are from the side, or at least oblique. Very few images are of the front, and even when you look at this photo of the front, it has an unfamiliar look; the protruding columns no longer donimate the facade:
Not too many photos of the interior, though. The Wikipedia article has one photo of the ceiling, but that was taken last July. The Heritage Ottawa article has a photo of the interior. But that's all the internet would give, at least for Ottawa's Union station.This Mid-1950s photo of the Waiting Hall at Christmastime was sent to me by e-mail earlier this month, accompanied by a suggestion I visit it during Doors Open Ottawa (see posts with the "tours" label for various Doors Open Ottawa sites I've covered). By posting it here, I'm doubling the number of photos of its interior that are on the web (as always, click to enlarge):
But there's more. As you can see, the benches and lamp standards were quite ornate; it was definitely a very decadent space. So just a few days after that e-mail, at this year's Doors Open Ottawa tour of the National Museum of Science and Technology's general collection, I immediately recognized this bench high atop a storage shelf:
Ray Hnatyshyn died 6 1/2 years ago. I'm guessing you mean Roméo LeBlanc.
ReplyDeleteWhoops! Thanks, I've corrected it.
ReplyDeletei was fortunate enough to get inside the station just the other day. being an enthusiastic teenager with a keen interest for old architecture, i was able to talk one of the security guards into giving me a quick peak inside. i have some photos too. send me an email if you'd like to see them
ReplyDeletedenisebeaulieu22@yahoo.ca
Brian