Location within Montreal | |
Established | 16 February 1963[1] |
---|---|
Location | 176 Lakeshore Road, Pointe-Claire, Quebec, Canada |
Coordinates | 45°26′04″N 73°48′30″W / 45.4344°N 73.8082°W |
Type | Art gallery |
Collection size | 250 |
Visitors | 10,000[2] |
Director | Micheline Bélanger (Cultural Centre) Jocye Millar (Art Gallery) |
Owner | City of Pointe-Claire |
Stewart Hall (originally Mull Hall) is a cultural centre and art gallery in Pointe-Claire, Quebec, Canada.
Originally built as a private mansion, today Stewart Hall houses a cultural centre, a reading and reference room, an art gallery, and a community centre.
History
Mull Hall was constructed for Charles Wesley MacLean in 1915–16 to plans by architect Robert Findlay.[2] The house was named for the Isle of Mull, which was home of the Clan MacLean in the Scottish Highlands.[2]
The Fathers of Sainte-Croix acquired the mansion in 1940, and continued to operate the farm on the surrounding land.
In 1958, the Fathers of Sainte-Croix sold the land to a real estate developer who had planned to build a high-rise apartment building on the site. The land was soon after purchased by Walter and May Stewart, who donated it to the city of Pointe-Claire in exchange for $1.[2]
The city of Pointe-Claire turned the building into a cultural centre, which was inaugurated on February 16, 1963.[2]
Architecture
The exterior walls of the house are made from locally sourced limestone blocks.[2] The building's design is symmetrical, and consists of thirty five rooms.[2] A large veranda overlooks Lake Saint Louis.[2]