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Page 19

  • Image of Blackstone Apartments at 100 Roslyn Road

    Blackstone Apartments

    100 Roslyn Road

  • Photo not available

    Evergreen Towers (1984)

    11 Evergreen Place

  • Image of Gas Station Theatre mural by Sarah Collard at 455 River Avenue

    Gas Station Theatre

    445 River Avenue

  • Image of Ghost Sign at former Royal Bank of Canada Building at 504 Main Street.

    Royal Bank of Canada

    504 Main Street

  • Ghost Sign at 121 Princess Street.

    Miller and Richard

    121 Princess Avenue

  • Photo of J.H.Ashdown Building at 211 Bannatyne.

    J H Ashdown Hardware Company (Ghost sign)

    211 Bannatyne Avenue

  • Photo of White and Manahan Building at 500 Main Street.

    White & Mannahan (Ghost sign)

    500 Main Street

  • Image of Ghost Signs at 281 McDermot Street

    Stobart, Sons & Company (Ghost sign)

    281 McDermot Avenue

  • Photo of Robinson and Webber Ghost Signs on the watertower of the building at 185 Bannatyne.

    Robinson & Webber/Essex Packers (Ghost Sign)

    185 Bannatyne Avenue

  • Ghost Signs at 168 Bannatyne Avenue

    Franklin Press / Empire Wholesale / Canadian Office Supply / The Orient (Ghost Sign)

    168 Bannatyne Avenue

  • Image of Ghost Signs at former J.H. Ashdown Warehouse at 167 Bannatyne Avenue

    Ashdown Warehouse (Ghost Sign)

    167 Bannatyne Avenue

  • Image of illustrated postcard of Trinity Baptist Church at 549 Gertrude Avenue

    Trinity Baptist Church

    549 Gertrude Avenue

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The Winnipeg Architecture Foundation acknowledges that Manitoba is located on the ancestral lands of the Anishinaabeg, Anishininewuk, Dakota Oyate, Denesuline and Nehethowuk Nations. We acknowledge that Manitoba is located on the Homeland of the Red River Métis, and includes lands that were and are the ancestral lands of the Inuit.

The Winnipeg Architecture Foundation gathers and works on Treaty One land, near the confluence of the Assiniboine and Red Rivers, part of one of the many land and water routes travelled by Indigenous peoples for thousands of years. The water that sustains us comes from Treaty 3 lands, the shores of Shoal Lake Nations 39 and 40. Much of the electric power we rely on comes from rivers that run through Treaty 1, 3 & 5 lands.

© 2013–2026 Winnipeg Architecture Foundation, Inc. Design by Burdocks.