Firms
Waisman Ross
Biography
Waisman Ross was founded by Allan Waisman and Jack Ross, who were recent University of Manitoba graduates when they established the firm in May 1953. Their offices were located at Room 308-356 Main Street in the Great Western Building. Much of Waisman and Ross’s early practice consisted of small rural hospitals; one of these was a hospital in Teulon, Manitoba which won the firm a Massey Medal in Architecture honourable mention. Larger commissions in Winnipeg came in 1955 and 1956, and, notably, included the new Winnipeg Builders Exchange offices at 290 Burnell Street, a clean-lined, classically proportioned building in which the courtyard space contained a mosaic-mural by renowned Canadian artist Takao Tanabe. Another example of public art – again in mosaic-mural – is a Robert Bruce piece gracing the entrance arcade of the Astra Building, at 208 Edmonton Street, another Waisman Ross building of the same year..
During the early 1960s, Waisman Ross completed the New York Life Building (385 St. Mary Avenue, 1957), a two-storey glass and steel office of understated proportions and detailing. In 1961, the firm won a silver Massey Medal for its design of the multi-use Thompson Municipal Building and another silver medal for Waisman’s design of his own summer cottage in Husavik, on Lake Winnipeg, a wood and glass structure that blurs the separation between interior and exterior, nature and structure. This era also saw the practice enter into a business relationship with local developer R.C. Baxter, who employed Waisman Ross to build four office buildings along Broadway between 1961 and 1964. These projects, all of a modernist character, included the Imperial Oil Offices (379 Broadway, 1961), Premier Life (360 Broadway, 1962) and Britannia House, 338 Broadway, 1962). It was during this time that Waisman and Ross designed and built its own office at 10 Donald Street, a structure large enough to be shared with its partner – the engineering firm of Klein and Dashevsky.
Waisman Ross merged with and Blankstein Coop Gillmor Hanna in 1964. The amalgamated practice was located in the former Waisman Ross office building. Following a period operating as Waisman Ross Blankstein Coop Gillmore Hanna, this ungainly title was changed to Number TEN Architects, in honour of the building’s street address.
Projects
Daly Display Limited, 1688 St. Matthew’s Street, 1953
Hospitals in Melita, Deloraine, Crystal City, Glenboro, Grandview and St. Pierre, Manitoba, 1953-55
Hunter Memorial Hospital, Teulon, Manitoba, 1955
Municipal Hall, St. Pierre, Manitoba, 1955
Waisman Residence home, 474 South Drive, 1956
Winnipeg Builder’s Exchange, 290 Burnell Street, 1956
Blackwood Beverages, 1850 Ellice Avenue, 1957
Gibson Building, 320 Donald Street, 1957
Astra Building, 208 Edmonton Street, Winnipeg, 1957
New York Life Building, 385 St. Mary Avenue, Winnipeg, 1957
City Centre Hotel, 367 Ellice Avenue, 1957
St. Hedwig’s Church, Brandon, Manitoba, 1957
St. Augustine School and Parish Hall, Brandon, Manitoba, 1958
I L Peretz Folk School, 600 Jefferson Avenue,1958
St. Paul the Apostle Church 2400 Portage Avenue, 1959
IBM Offices, 373 Broadway, Winnipeg, 1960
Municipal Offices, Thompson, Manitoba, Municipal Offices, 1961
Waisman Cottage, Husavik, Manitoba, 1961
Imperial Oil Offices, 379 Broadway, Winnipeg, 1961
Britannia House, 338 Broadway, Winnipeg, 1962
Assiniboine Credit Union, 300 Assiniboine Avenue, 1962
Women’s Residence, University of Manitoba (Mary Speechly Hall), 1963
Food Services Building (Pembina Hall), University of Manitoba, 1963
Central Park Lodge, 440 Edmonton Street, 1963
Britannia House Office Building, 338 Broadway Avenue, 1963
Unicity Mall, Portage Avenue, 1963
Waisman and Ross Architects office, 10 Donald Street, 1964
Addition to Tec-Voc High School, 1964
St. Joseph’s Ukrainian Catholic Church, 250 Jefferson Avenue, 1964
Ross Residence, 630 Cloutier Drive, 1964
Crop Research Centre, University of Manitoba, 1964
Toronto Dominion Bank, 200 Regent Avenue, 1964
Hy’s Steakhouse (Addition), 216 Kennedy Street, 1964 (Demolished)