Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1915

Page 17 of 146

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 17 of 146
Page 17 of 146



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

LOYOLA COLLEGE REVIEW 7 The class-rooms measure about 27 feet by 22 feet, and are 12 feet high. They are well lighted and ventilated, and are so arranged that each room gets a good proportion of sunlight. In fact, this may be said of every room in the building without exception. The windows are large, and each class-room has its own ventilation so designed that in winter heated fresh air is blown in and extracted by fans, without having recourse to open windows. The study is treated in the same manner as the class-rooms, with windows facing South-East and West. Тһе parlor is 27 feet by 22 feet, and has a large bay-window facing the Campus, and an open fire-place. On the Second Floor are the Sodality Chapel, two Dormitories, Bath-rooms and Lavatories. The Sodality Chapel for the exlusive use of the Sodalists, has an open timbered ceiling, and will seat about sixty. The Dormitories have been modelled upon the type in vogue at the Naval Academy, Osborne, England. The beds are placed in the centre of the room, and around the walls are cubicles. Each of these cubicles contains a wardrobe 6 feet wide by 6 feet high, and a wash-basin. Both Dormitories are well ventilated with windows placed 6 feet above the floor, and extractor- fans, etc. Тһе Bath-rooms contain the most sanitary type of showers, bath- tubs and wash-basins, and special attention has been given to prevent scalding by the use of an automatic control valve which keeps the temperature of the water from going above a fixed point. The walls, floors, etc., of bath and toilet rooms are of tile, the only wood in these apartments being the doors. THE REFECTORY BUILDING: 一 The Refectory, Building, about 60 feet to the West of the Juniors' Block and connected to it by means of a cloister, is three storeys high. On the Ground Floor are the boiler and pump rooms, coal space, workmans' dining-room and dormitory, store rooms and cold- storage plant. On the First Floor are the Refectories, one each for the Com- munity, Lay Masters, Seniors and Juniors; the kitchen, scullery, bakery, cook's store and service room. Тһе Refectories are 18 feet high, and have large leaded glass windows, red English quarry tiled floors, and ornamented plaster beams, and the rooms are ventilated by means of extractor-fans. Much thought has been given to insure the success of the kitchen and its adjuncts. The second Floor, almost entirely devoted to the Infirmary, is isolated by means of lobbies and cross ventilation. АП the materials are impervious, and all dust-collected mouldings, etc., are eliminated. There is also a large dormitory and observation-room for isolation in case of ап epidemic, with room for twenty-five patients. THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING:—The Administration and Faculty Building, which is only partially built, will, when completed, be four- and-a-half storeys high, with a large centre tower seven storeys high. On the Ground and First Floors the Eastern section will be entirely devoted to Chemical Physical and Biological Laboratories, Preparation Room, and Dark Room for photographic and other purposes. These rooms аге all inter-communicating. The remainder of these two floors is taken up with two double reception parlours, Community Library, Bursar's office, etc. The Second and Third Floors will be entirely devoted to the Community. In the centre over the Main Entrance will be the Community Chapel 30 feet by 30 feet.

Page 16 text:

NEW LOYOLA Я 7 ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY BUILDING



Page 18 text:

8 LOYOLA COLLEGE REVIEW CHAPEL:—Centrally located between the Administration and the Refectory Buildings and to the West side of the Cloister line, is the Chapel Building, with seating accommodation for about 500 persons. This building has been treated more or less in 14th Century English Gothic, both externally and inte rnally. The floors will be of English oak parquetry or tiles, and the walls will be treated in rough plaster with stone trimmings and panelled wood dado 9 feet high. Special attention has been given to the large open raftered roof which will be built in B. C. Fir and will be a replica of the well-known and much discussed l4th Century roof of Westminster Hall. EXTERNAL TREATMENT :—The accompanying Bird's Eye View of the completed scheme, the view of the Administration and Faculty Building, and the photographs of the buildings now erected, indicate the general design, which is more or less a free treatment of the Tudor and Early Renaissance type of English Collegiate and Domestic Work, adapted to suit modern requirements. The walls are of brick faced with Matt surface Greendale Bricks, with Indiana Limestone or Terra-Cotta trimmings, and set upon a base of Montreal limsetone. Тће Administration Block with Main Entrance in the centre of the Tower is fronted by an open arcaded terrace with a stone balustrade at top, and is approached by a flight of 22 steps 30 feet wide. The Tower, 40 feet by 30 feet, has four octagonals with a large oriel window in the centre having moulded mullions, cusped and traceried heads with cresting heraldic shields, etc. It is carried up to the roof, and forms with projecting corbelled and embrasured parapet a promenade all around the tower, from which every part of the City can be seen. The Main Entrance doorway, practically a copy of St. Mary's, Oxford, will have in the centre of the bay over the door a carved and traceried niche with a statue of St. Ignatius. The spaces between the Tower and the side projecting wings on both the North and the South Elevations will be divided into panels with buttresses, with intakes terminating under the moulded cornice. The windows will have moulded mullions with cusped and traceried heads, the panels between the windows being carved and en- riched with traceried heraldic devices, etc. The small gablets over these windows will be shaped and moulded with ornamented finials. The turrets in the corners forming the two side entrances to the staircases will be slightly more Renaissance in treatment, and will have Entrance Doorways with fluted columns, enriched arch mould, entablature, etc., and the upper storeys will be treated in a similar manner, with intervening panels filled in with carving and terminated at the roof level with a large cartouche of typical Jacobean interlacing strapwork. The projecting wings have large oreil windows supported on corbels and terminated at the top with gargoyles at angles and traceried and embrasured parapet. These windows will have lead glazing, and the panels between them will be carved. The East and West Elevations are similar to the South Elevation already described, excepting that they will be treated less decoratively and that the gablets will be peaked with moulded finials. The Chapel Block, as has already been noted, will be of 14th Century Gothic Design. The entrance will be from the Cloisters through an arched doorway enriched with typical mouldings, pillars, and ornament, and above

Suggestions in the Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) collection:

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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