- GAP.06.79
- Series
- 1979-1980
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 2 business cards.
Graphic Arts Printing
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Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 2 business cards.
Graphic Arts Printing
Placing the piles for the new hospital.
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 1 business card, 1 letterhead, and 1 page of graph paper.
Graphic Arts Printing
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 1 invoice form.
Graphic Arts Printing
Health Sciences Building - Addition - Construction
Looking south at the final stages of construction of the Health Sciences Building B Wing.
Bio/Historical Note: The Health Sciences Building B Wing was completed in 1971.
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 1 envelope, 1 invoice form, and 1 letterhead.
Graphic Arts Printing
Geology Building - Construction
Looking northwest across the Bowl at the Geology Building under construction.
Bio/Historical Note: The construction of the Geology Building marked a return to the early style of campus architecture. The Department of Geology had been formed in 1927 and for the next six decades was based in the east wing of the Engineering Building. A growing faculty and student population had forced the department to cobble together makeshift accommodation in trailers and remote campus buildings. Designed by the architectural firm Black, McMillan and Larson of Regina, the building was given a neo-Collegiate Gothic exterior to blend harmoniously with the other buildings in the central campus. The two-and-a-half-storey building was erected just south or the Bowl side of the W.P. Thompson Biology Building, providing 8,543 square metres for office, laboratory, library, classroom, and storage space for rock and fossil samples. The exterior was clad with greystone and dressed with tyndal limestone. The dominant feature of the interior was a two-story atrium that featured the mosaics for the former exterior walls of the Thompson Building, a life-size skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex and geological and biological displays. The $18.5 million Geology Building was completed in 1988 and fused the space between Physics and Biology and linked, through a walkway, with Chemistry, creating an integrated science complex on campus.
Geology Building - Construction
Image of excavation for foundation of the Geology Building. Chemistry (Thorvaldson) Building at left.
Bio/Historical Note: The construction of the Geology Building marked a return to the early style of campus architecture. The Department of Geology had been formed in 1927 and for the next six decades was based in the east wing of the Engineering Building. A growing faculty and student population had forced the department to cobble together makeshift accommodation in trailers and remote campus buildings. Designed by the architectural firm Black, McMillan and Larson of Regina, the building was given a neo-Collegiate Gothic exterior to blend harmoniously with the other buildings in the central campus. The two-and-a-half-storey building was erected just south or the Bowl side of the W.P. Thompson Biology Building, providing 8,543 square metres for office, laboratory, library, classroom, and storage space for rock and fossil samples. The exterior was clad with greystone and dressed with tyndal limestone. The dominant feature of the interior was a two-story atrium that featured the mosaics for the former exterior walls of the Thompson Building, a life-size skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex and geological and biological displays. The $18.5 million Geology Building was completed in 1988 and fused the space between Physics and Biology and linked, through a walkway, with Chemistry, creating an integrated science complex on campus.
Geology Building - Construction
Construction nearing completion of the Geology Building; winter scene.
Bio/Historical Note: The construction of the Geology Building marked a return to the early style of campus architecture. The Department of Geology had been formed in 1927 and for the next six decades was based in the east wing of the Engineering Building. A growing faculty and student population had forced the department to cobble together makeshift accommodation in trailers and remote campus buildings. Designed by the architectural firm Black, McMillan and Larson of Regina, the building was given a neo-Collegiate Gothic exterior to blend harmoniously with the other buildings in the central campus. The two-and-a-half-storey building was erected just south or the Bowl side of the W.P. Thompson Biology Building, providing 8,543 square metres for office, laboratory, library, classroom, and storage space for rock and fossil samples. The exterior was clad with greystone and dressed with tyndal limestone. The dominant feature of the interior was a two-story atrium that featured the mosaics for the former exterior walls of the Thompson Building, a life-size skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Rex and geological and biological displays. The $18.5 million Geology Building was completed in 1988 and fused the space between Physics and Biology and linked, through a walkway, with Chemistry, creating an integrated science complex on campus.
Garry C. Biggs - Painting and Decorating
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 1 letterheads.
Graphic Arts Printing
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 2 business cards, and 1 offer form.
Graphic Arts Printing
Part of Graphic Arts Printing fonds
This series contains 1 invoice form, and 1 offer form.
Graphic Arts Printing
RM equipment and operators lined up.
Enlarging of Canadian National railway Station
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
An exterior view of the Canadian National Railway (CNR) station in Biggar, Saskatchewan under renovation.
Engineering Building - Exterior
Looking southwest at Engineering Building shortly after completion. Power house at left; cars parked in front. North addition nearing completion.
Bio/historical note: The original Engineering Building was destroyed by fire on Friday, 13 March 1925.