Sun Life Building

Sun Life Building
Édifice Sun Life
General information
Type Office
Location 1155, rue Metcalfe
Montreal, Quebec
H3B 2V6
Coordinates 45°30′0.75″N 73°34′12.81″W / 45.5002083°N 73.5702250°W / 45.5002083; -73.5702250Coordinates: 45°30′0.75″N 73°34′12.81″W / 45.5002083°N 73.5702250°W / 45.5002083; -73.5702250
Construction started 1913
Completed 1931
Height
Roof 122 m (400 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 24
Lifts/elevators 25
Design and construction
Architect Darling, Pearson and Cleveland
Le Groupe Arcop
References
[1][2]

The Sun Life Building (French: Édifice Sun Life) is a historic 122 m (400 ft), 24 storey office building at 1155 Metcalfe Street on Dorchester Square in downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

The building was completed in 1931 after three stages of construction. It was built exclusively for the Sun Life Insurance Company. Although the then-new head office of the Royal Bank of Canada at 360 Saint Jacques Street in Montreal was taller by several floors, the Sun Life Building was at the time the largest building in square footage anywhere in the British Empire. The Sun Life Building went through three different stages of construction, the first one starting as early as 1913, but it was not until 1931 that its main 24-storey tower was erected, thus completing the project.

Construction

Building in 1948

The stages of construction were as follows:

Today, the "Sun Life" is Montreal's 17th tallest building and stands in the middle of the central business district centred on Dorchester Square, dwarfed by neighbouring Place Ville-Marie and the nearby CIBC building.

Previous structure

The first Sun Life Building, designed by Buffalo architect Richard Waite, was built in 1889 and expanded by Robert Findlay in 1890. The red brick building was home to Sun Life until 1913, when the company moved to the first stage of the newer building.

Operation Fish

During the Second World War, during Operation Fish, Britain's gold reserves and negotiable foreign securities were secretly packed in crates labelled 'Fish' and shipped across the Atlantic Ocean to Canada. The securities, arriving at Halifax on July 1, 1940, were locked in an underground vault three stories beneath the Sun Life Building, guarded around the clock by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The gold was shipped on to Ottawa. The extremely secretive United Kingdom Security Deposit, operating in the vault, arranged for the sale of Britain's negotiable securities on the New York Stock Exchange over the next few years to pay for Britain's war expenses. The 5,000 Sun Life employees never knew what was stored away beneath them and not a single piece of the cargo went missing nor was any information about the operation ever leaked.[3]

Harry S. Truman

U.S. President Harry S. Truman confided in his memoirs that the "Sun Insurance building in Montreal" was his favourite building in the world.

See also

References

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