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Massey Hall

Massey Hall
Massey Hall sign of snow.jpg
Massey Hall in February 2011
(showing entrance on Shuter Street)
Address 178 Victoria Street
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates 43°39′15″N 79°22′44.50″W / 43.65417°N 79.3790278°W / 43.65417; -79.3790278Coordinates: 43°39′15″N 79°22′44.50″W / 43.65417°N 79.3790278°W / 43.65417; -79.3790278
Owner The Corporation of Massey Hall and Roy Thomson Hall
Type Concert hall
Capacity 2,752
Construction
Opened July 14, 1894 (1894-07-14)
Years active 1894–present
Architect Sidney Badgley
Website

masseyhall.com

Official name Massey Hall National Historic Site of Canada
Designated June 15, 1981 (1981-06-15)
Type Municipally-designated
Designated 1975 (1975)

masseyhall.com

Massey Hall is a performing arts theatre in the Garden District of downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The theatre was designed to seat 3,500 patrons, but after extensive renovations in the 1940s it now seats up to 2,765.

Massey Hall and the more intimate Eaton Auditorium were the only substantial concert venues in Toronto before the opening of Roy Thomson Hall as the new home of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir.

Massey Hall was designated a National Historic Site of Canada on June 15, 1981.

Massey Hall was built to fill the need for a secular meeting place where people from Toronto and area could meet and enjoy choral music not of a religious theme. It was designed with a neoclassical facade, and features moorish arches that span the width of the interior hall. This interior was inspired by the Alhambra Palace in Spain as well as Louis Sullivan's Chicago Auditorium. The exterior neoclassical facade was a preference voiced from Lillian, Hart Massey's daughter.

Designed by architect Sidney Badgley, Massey Hall was completed in 1894 at a cost of $152,390.75. Construction was financed by Hart Massey of Massey-Harris (later Massey Ferguson) holding company. The hall's debut concert was on June 14, 1894. The Albert Building, at 15 Shuter Street, was added as a janitorial residence in 1917, and later converted as backstage space. However, it will be demolished and replaced by a new addition during pending renovations in spite of potential historic value (featuring a two storey oriel window).

The exterior is Palladian architecture while the interior is Moorish Revival architecture.


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