Ludger Lemieux | |
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Born | 1872 Farnham, Quebec Quebec |
Died | 1953 Montreal Quebec |
Nationality | Canadian |
Alma mater | McGill University |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | Saint-Henri Fire Station |
Ludger Lemieux (1872–1953) was a Quebec architect who designed a number of notable Art deco structures in Montreal's Saint-Henri district. While he often worked in partnership with Joseph-Honoré MacDuff, his best-known structure, the Atwater Market, was designed not with MacDuff but with Paul Lemieux, reported to be either his son or brother.
He was born in Farnham, Quebec and studied at McGill University.
Along with his collaboration with Joseph-Honoré MacDuff, Lemieux's other buildings include the Tooke Brothers factory, the Workman Building, the Sainte-Irénée church next to Atwater Market, the Sainte-Jeanne-de-Chantal school and the Saint-Henri Fire Station. Along with his collaboration with Paul Lemieux, Lemieux collaborated on the Saint-Zotique church with René Charbonneau, the architect of the Outremont Theatre.