Saskatchewan Legislative Building
{{Short description|Government buildings in Saskatchewan, Canada}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{Infobox Historic building
|name = Saskatchewan Legislative Building
|image = Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly - Regina (44062386731).jpg
|caption = Saskatchewan Legislative Building and grounds
|map_type =
|coordinates = {{Coord|50.4324|-104.6151|region:CA_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}
|location_town = Regina, Saskatchewan
|location_country = Canada
|architect = Edward and William Sutherland Maxwell
|client = Government of Saskatchewan
|owner = Government of Saskatchewan
|engineer =
|construction_start_date = {{Start date and age|August 31, 1908}}
|completion_date = {{Start date and age|January 25, 1912}}
|date_demolished =
| highest_start = 1912
| highest_end = 1927
| highest_region = Regina, Saskatchewan
|cost = $1.75 million
(${{formatprice|{{Inflation|CA|1750000|1912}}}} in {{Inflation-year|CA}} dollars{{inflation-fn|CA}})
|structural_system =
|style = Beaux-Arts
|size =
|embedded = {{Designation list |embed=yes |designation1=NHSC |designation1_offname=Saskatchewan Legislative Building and Grounds National Historic Site of Canada |designation1_date=2005 |designation2=Saskatchewan |designation2_type=Provincial Heritage Property |designation2_date=1978 }}
}}
The Saskatchewan Legislative Building is located in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, and houses the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan.
History
File:Sask Legislative Bldg historic view.png
The Saskatchewan Legislative Building was built between 1908 and 1912 in the Beaux-Arts style to a design by Edward and William Sutherland Maxwell of Montreal. The Maxwells also supervised construction of the building by the Montreal company P. Lyall & Sons, who later built the Centre Block of the federal Parliament Building in Ottawa after the 1866 Parliament Building was destroyed by fire in 1916. Piles began to be drilled for the foundations during the autumn of 1908 and in 1909 the Governor General of Canada, the Earl Grey, laid the cornerstone. In 1912, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, by then the serving governor general, inaugurated the building.{{Citation| last=Jackson| first=Michael D.| contribution=Royal Visits| year=1990| title=The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan| editor-last=Cottrell| editor-first=Michael| place=Regina| publisher=Canadian Plains Research Centre| url=http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/royal_visits.html| access-date=30 June 2009| archive-date=8 October 2007| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071008112157/http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/royal_visits.html| url-status=dead}}{{cite web| url=http://scaa.sk.ca/gallery/aerial/landmark_key.html#45| title=Departments > City Clerk's Office > City Archives > Image Galleries > A View From Above > Downtown III: Spadina Crescent to the Bessborough > Note 45| publisher=City of Saskatoon| access-date=30 June 2009}}
Image:B-779 Day out at Wascana Park c. 1910.jpg
The design contemplates expansion of the building by the addition of wings extending south from the east and west ends and coming together to form a courtyard. The plans originally called for the exterior of the building to be red brick but after construction had begun and red bricks were already on the site, Premier Walter Scott decided that Manitoba Tyndall stone would give the building greater grandeur and the plans were adjusted with the substitution increasing the building cost by $50,000.{{cite news |url=https://thestarphoenix.com/opinion/columnists/history-matters-driving-force-behind-legislative-building-missed-opening |title=History Matters: Driving force behind Legislative Building missed opening |last=Waiser |first=Bill |work=The StarPhoenix |date=2016-07-19 |access-date=2016-07-19}} The total cost of construction came to $1.75 million by the time of its opening in October 1912, ten months after the assembly had begun meeting in the yet-uncompleted building.
In 1965, Clifford Wiens started a major project of renovation and restoration which took some fourteen years to complete.{{cite web |title=Clifford Wiens |url=https://www.uregina.ca/library/services/archives/collections/art-architecture/wiens.html |website=University of Regina Library |publisher=University of Regina |access-date=14 January 2020}} Leslie Jen, associate editor at Canadian Architect, called it a "masterful" renovation.{{cite journal |last1=Jen |first1=Leslie |title=Books |journal=Canadian Architect |date=November 1, 2013 |url=https://www.canadianarchitect.com/books-19/ |access-date=18 January 2020}}
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Characteristics
File:Saskatchewan-Legislature-Chamber.jpg
Diverging from parliamentary tradition, the carpet in the legislative chamber was red until 2012. Traditionally, red carpet is used for houses of unelected members, such as the Senate of Canada, and houses of elected members are given blue or green carpet. Walter Scott preferred red carpet, and for a century the Saskatchewan Legislative Building stood as one of only two in Canada to feature red carpet in its legislative chamber (British Columbia's being the other). The red carpet was replaced by green carpet in the summer of 2012.{{cite news
|url = https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/saskatchewan-assembly-goes-green-in-carpet-colour-1.1248423
|title = Saskatchewan assembly goes green, in carpet colour
|publisher = CBC News
|date = October 10, 2012
|access-date = 2012-11-28}}
Walter Scott anticipated that the building might "for a century yet be credible enough to form the main building on the Capital grounds",{{cite book |last=Barnhart |first=Gordon L. |author-link=Gordon Barnhart |title=Building for the Future: A Photo Journal of Saskatchewan's Legislative Building |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Centre |year=2002 |isbn=0-88977-145-6}} the general assumption of the time being that Saskatchewan's population would grow to several million. That century has long since elapsed; the provincial legislative building remains the main building on the "Capital grounds", but indeed, continues to be the most imposing structure in a city smaller than its founders envisioned.
Such planning is evident in the legislative chamber itself, designed to accommodate 125 members. The assembly has never expanded beyond 66 MLAs (and currently has 61). As a result, even after those elections which yielded massive majorities (such as those held in 1982, 1991, and 2011) there has been plenty of space to seat all government members to the speaker's right. The one exception was in 2020 and 2021 to satisfy physical distancing requirements during the COVID-19 pandemic. Desks were spaced in such a manner that a relatively equal number needed to be placed on each side of the Speaker, meaning some government backbenchers sat on the Speaker's left.
The Institute for stained glass in Canada has documented the stained glass at Saskatchewan Legislature.Stained glass at Saskatchewan Legislature http://stainedglasscanada.ca/site.php?site=174
The Saskatchewan Legislative Building is located at 2405 Legislative Drive, Regina, overlooking Wascana Lake. Free tours of the facility are offered throughout the week.
Significance
The legislative building and its grounds were designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 2005.{{CRHP|13054|Saskatchewan Legislative Building and Grounds National Historic Site of Canada|19 August 2012}} It is also a Provincial Heritage Property under the Heritage Property Act.{{CRHP|3764|Saskatchewan Legislative Building and Grounds|19 August 2012}}
Of historical significance, the table that was used during the meeting of the Fathers of Confederation in Quebec City in 1864 resides in the building's library, albeit with six feet of it removed. Lieutenant-Governor Edgar Dewdney of the North-West Territories brought the table to Regina, which was the capital of the territory at the time. It was used in the offices of the Indian commissioner for Manitoba and the North-West Territories until 1896. Six feet of the table length was removed from the middle so that it could fit within the limited confines of the Prince Edward Building, the temporary home of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan while the Saskatchewan Legislative Building was under construction.
=Statues at Legislature=
==Current statues==
An equestrian statue of Queen Elizabeth II unveiled in 2005 at the renamed Queen Elizabeth II Gardens stands in front of the legislative building.{{cite news|title=Royals reign in rainy Regina|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/royals-reign-in-rainy-regina-1.536312|access-date=24 June 2016|work=CBC News|date=May 18, 2005}} It was designed by Susan Velder.{{cite web |title=QUEEN'S STATUE MAQUETTES PRESENTED TO DONORS {{!}} News and Media |url=https://www.saskatchewan.ca/government/news-and-media/2004/february/04/queens-statue-maquettes-presented-to-donors |website=Government of Saskatchewan |language=en}} The statue depicts the Queen atop Burmese, her favourite horse, a gift from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in 1969. The horse was originally bred in Saskatchewan.
On the eastern side of the building there is a fountain, one of two brought from London's Trafalgar Square, the other having been taken to Ottawa (and now located at Confederation Park). The Peterhead granite fountain was designed by McDonald and Leslie and were relocated before the mid-1930s when Trafalgar Square obtained new fountains designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens.
==Removed statue==
The commissioned statue of Louis Riel by John Cullen Nugent unveiled in 1968 stood on the grounds of the legislature until 1991, when it was removed at the insistence of the Saskatchewan Métis Society and others. Some found the work demoralizing for depicting Louis Riel in a "disrespectful" manner: "gaunt" and semi-nude, in the moment of ultimate Métis humiliation.{{cite journal |last1=Beatty |first1=Greg |title=Kim Morgan: Antsee |journal=Espace Sculpture |date=Winter 2003–2004 |issue=66 |page=42 |url=https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/espace/2003-n66-espace1049207/9041ac.pdf |access-date=10 January 2020 |issn=0821-9222}} Others argued that the sculpture was Euro-Canadian appropriation.{{cite journal |last1=Pitsula |first1=James M. |title=The Thatcher Government in Saskatchewan and the revival of Métis nationalism, 1964-71 |journal=Great Plains Quarterly |date=Summer–Fall 1997 |issue=17 |pages=213–235 |url=https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2952&context=greatplainsquarterly |access-date=10 January 2020}}{{cite book |editor1-last=Thraves |editor1-first=Bernard D. |display-editors=etal |title=Saskatchewan: Geographic Perspectives |date=2007 |publisher=University of Regina Canadian Plains Research Center |location=[Regina, Saskatchewan] |isbn=9780889771895 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J18N8Py8nqgC&q=john+nugent+louis+riel+statue+high&pg=PA166 |access-date=10 January 2020}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |last1=Barnhart |first1=Gordon |title=Building for the Future: A Photo Journal of Saskatchewan's Legislative Building |date=2002 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |isbn=0-88977-145-6}}
- {{cite thesis |last1=Bodnar |first1=Diana Lynn |title=The Prairie Legislative Buildings of Canada |date=1979 |publisher=University of British Columbia |oclc=15888170 |type=MA}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Goodspeed |first1=Rhona |title=Saskatchewan Legislature Building and Grounds |journal=Journal of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada |date=2007 |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=61–88 |url=https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/70741/vol32_1_61_88.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |issn=1486-0872}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- [https://www.legassembly.sk.ca/about/saskatchewans-legislative-building Legislative Building of Saskatchewan]
- [http://scaa.usask.ca/gallery/regina/south/legislative.html Drawings of unsuccessful designs in the 1907 competition for the commission to plan the Legislative Building]
- [http://www.historicplaces.ca/rep-reg/affichage-display_e.aspx?Id=3764 Canadian Registry of Historic Places]
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{{succession box
| before=
| title=Tallest Building in Regina
| years=1912-1927
53 m
| after=Hotel Saskatchewan
}}
{{s-end}}
{{Saskatchewan parks}}
{{NHSC}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Government buildings completed in 1912
Category:Legislative buildings in Canada
Category:Buildings and structures in Regina, Saskatchewan
Category:Beaux-Arts architecture in Canada
Category:Government buildings with domes
Category:National Historic Sites in Saskatchewan
Category:Saskatchewan Legislature
Category:Tourist attractions in Regina, Saskatchewan