Nature Museum - Ottawa
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The distinctive Victoria Memorial Museum Building (VMMB) has been the home of the Canadian Museum of Nature (formerly the
National Museum of Natural Sciences) since 1912. Over the many years since its construction, the VMMB has become a national
monument and landmark in Ottawa, the nation's capital. Nature's Natural Heritage Building in Aylmer, Quebec is the site of
our administrative, research and collections operations.
Most of Nature's exhibitions and programmes are housed or take place in the Victoria Memorial Museum Building. This fine example
of early 20th century architecture, the "castle" (as it is affectionately known) has a long and lively history. In 1905, in
a field in the south of Ottawa, work began on a massive new building formed out of local sandstone. The chief architect and
designer David Ewart created a fanciful castle-like building that has been described as "Scottish baronial" in design. The
building was intended to mirror the Centre Block of Canada's Parliament Buildings, due north of the VMMB's building site.
Both buildings share similar stonework on the facade and, at one time, shared a similar tower. Unfortunately, in 1915, the
top of the VMMB's tower was removed as the foundation could not sustain the tower's weight.
Over the decades, the Museum has shared the VMMB with a number of notable tenants. In 1916, the building became the emergency
headquarters for the Canadian government, after the fire at the Parliament Buildings. The House of Commons sat in the Auditorium
for four years, while the Senate occupied the Hall of Invertebrate Fossils. When the former Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier
died, his body was lain in state in the Museum's Auditorium.
It wasn't until 1988 that the castle became the exclusive home of the Canadian Museum of Nature. Today, the VMMB is as majestic
and beautiful as it was at the turn of the century. A major rehabilitation project resulted in newly cleaned stonework and
new windows. When you visit Nature, be sure to take time to admire some of the architectural details of this fine, stone
heritage building.
Picture(s) Canadian museum of nature