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Birkbeck Building

1910 establishments in OntarioBuildings and structures in TorontoEdwardian architectureNational Historic Sites in OntarioOffice buildings completed in 1910
10 Adelaide Street East Toronto Canada
10 Adelaide Street East Toronto Canada

The Birkbeck Building is a four-storey office building in downtown Toronto, Ontario. It is a National Historic Site of Canada and is protected under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act since 1976 with an Ontario Heritage Trust easement on the property.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Birkbeck Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Birkbeck Building
Adelaide Street East, Toronto

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Wikipedia: Birkbeck BuildingContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 43.6508 ° E -79.3779 °
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Ontario Heritage Centre

Adelaide Street East 10
M5C 2T6 Toronto
Ontario, Canada
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10 Adelaide Street East Toronto Canada
10 Adelaide Street East Toronto Canada
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Dineen Building
Dineen Building

The Dineen Building is a registered heritage property on Yonge Street, at the corner of Temperance Street, in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The building was built in 1897, and was extensively renovated in 2012.On November 21, 1973, the City of Toronto listed the property on the City of Toronto Heritage Property Inventory. and designated it as being of cultural heritage value or interest, under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act by City of Toronto By-law No.1062-2009, enacted by City Council on November 25, 2009. The original architect was F. H. Herbert. The building cost $30,000. The building used bronze and aluminum plates on its ceilings—aluminum being used for the first time in Canada. According to the Daily Mail and Empire the building's Sprague automatic elevator was also a remarkable feature. A Sprague automatic elevator is also a feature not to be found in any store in Canada, this being the first time one has been placed in any building outside of New York State. A fire triggered by an electrical fault caused significant damage in 1917.The new owner, Commercial Realty Group, decided to employ the more expensive adaptive reuse method to restoring the building.The storefront on Yonge Street has had its fifteen foot ceilings re-exposed, and houses a boutique style coffee shop called the Dineen Coffee Co. Two restaurants, "The Chase" and "The Chase Fish and Oyster", has opened on the Temperance Street facade.