Lady Meredith House - McGill University (Montreal)
(Click here for another picture)
Ardvarna was built in 1897 for Andrew Allan, a partner in the Allan Line
Steamship Company, by the famous Montreal architects Edward and William
Maxwell. In 1906, Sir Henry Vincent Meredith, president of the Bank of
Montreal, married Isabella Brenda Allan, the daughter of Andrew Allan and the
niece of Hugh Allan, who lived at Ravenscrag. At this time, Ardvarna, a turreted,
brick mansion, bordering on Richarsonian Romanesque, was given to the
newly-weds by Andrew Allan. Sir Vincent died in 1929, but Lady Meredith
continued to occupy the house, at the corner of Peel Street and Pine Avenue, until
1941 at which point she gave it to the Royal Victoria Hospital to use as a nurses'
residence. McGill acquired the use of Ardvarna in 1975, but shared it with the
Hospital for many years. In 1990, McGill's Centre for Medicine, Ethics, and Law
and the McGill Pulmonary Research Lab were both housed in Ardvarna, now
called the Lady Meredith House. On January 7, 1990, the edifice was broken into
and the old mansion, one of the few left with its interior details intact, was set on
fire. Fortunately, the fire department and McGill responded quickly and there was
minimal structural damage. McGill decided to renovate Ardvarna to its original
elegance and hired Julia Gersovitz, a McGill graduate and professor, and her firm,
Gersovitz, Becker, and Moss for the project.
Picture(s) from McGill website