Sayward Building (Victoria) | office building, 1911_construction, 1910s construction

Canada / British Columbia / Victoria / Douglas Street (Trans-Canada Highway Victoria-St. Johns), 1207
 office building, 1911_construction, 1910s construction

The Sayward Building is a six-storey plus basement, Edwardian-era commercial building, situated at the corner of Douglas and View Streets at the eastern edge of Victoria’s historic Old Town. One of the city’s most massive buildings of its era, its tan-brick cladding, banks of regular fenestration, and projecting sheet-metal cornice reflect the influence of Chicago School architecture.

The Sayward Building, built in 1910-11, is symbolic of Victoria’s Edwardian-era prosperity and is linked to the continued commercial development of Victoria’s gateway economy. The local economy was booming in the era prior to the local economic collapse of 1913 and the advent of the First World War in 1914. Constructed with ground floor retail shops and upper floor offices, the massive and dense Sayward Building reflects the demand for commercial space to serve Victoria’s burgeoning downtown.

Sparsely ornamented and overtly functional, the Sayward Building is significant as one of the finest examples of the Chicago School influence on Victoria’s Edwardian-era commercial buildings. Chicago during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was a locus of technical and aesthetic innovation in skyscraper design. Some of the distinguishing features of the Chicago School are the use of steel-frame or concrete structures with masonry cladding, with large areas of plate-glass windows and limited amounts of exterior ornament. Many Chicago School skyscrapers contain the three parts of a classical column. The first floor functions as the base, the middle stories, usually with little ornamental detail, act as the shaft of the column, and the top floor represents the capital, capped with a cornice. This provided a refined and progressive appearance that met modern commercial needs with maximum efficiency.

Massive in its cubic density, the rigidly symmetrical exterior of the Sayward Building features a grid of large window banks separated by interwoven horizontal and vertical bands of masonry, crowned by an overhanging sheet-metal cornice. It was designed and built by English-born George Charles Mesher (1860-1938), who developed an outstanding reputation as a contractor in Victoria. In 1886, Mesher and his widowed father, George Mesher Sr., came to the city. Mesher Sr. had earned his living in England as a builder and contractor, and his son had worked with him learning the trade. The Meshers were fortunate to arrive in Victoria when the resource-based economic boom was underway. When they set up shop in Victoria in 1887, they continued as partners in their contracting work. Although not formally trained in architecture, G.C. Mesher designed a number of prominent buildings in Victoria, including the even more massive Pemberton Building in 1911.

The Sayward Building is additionally valued for its association with prominent Victoria businessman Joseph Austin Sayward (1862-1934), the son of pioneer William Parsons Sayward (1818-1905). W.P. Sayward arrived in Victoria in June 1858, and became the most important local lumberman in the 1860s. He invested his profits in downtown lots, and established a large mill on the Inner Harbour, which at its peak in 1891 was the largest on Vancouver Island. His son, Joseph, took over management of the mill in 1891, and assumed control of the Sayward business empire in 1896 upon William’s retirement. The construction of the Sayward Building as a flagship investment property reflected confidence in the booming real estate market and Victoria’s position as a centre of trade and commerce.
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Coordinates:   48°25'32"N   123°21'53"W
This article was last modified 7 years ago