Architect: William Ridgeway Wilson 
This late Victorian two-storey commercial building features rusticated
stone piers on the main floor that visually link the building to the
ground. On the second storey, architectural highlights include a
balustrade cornice and a name plate on the Douglas Street facade in
unglazed terra cotta, decorative multi-colored brick detailing and
round-headed windows with stone on the upper portions.
The building was noted as "among the larger and more costly structures which have been erected ... during the year" in the British Daily Colonist of September 14, 1900. The cost of construction was $13,000.
The original owner, Robert J. Porter, was born in Dorset, England in
1834. He sailed to Vancouver Island to work for the Hudson Bay Company
in a trip that took 6 1/2 months. Once in Victoria, he worked as a
farmer, surveyor, brick maker, and butcher. He opened this wholesale
and retail butcher shop and later had two shops in Victoria and two in
Vancouver. His firm Porter and Sons was eventually purchased by P.
Burns & Co. Between 1890 and 1928 Burns built one of the largest
packing and provisioning businesses in the world.
Robert Porter served as a City alderman from 1912-1916 and 1918, and
was Mayor of Victoria from 1919-1921. His family home at 649 Superior
Street was designed by Samuel Maclure.
The building has housed many diverse businesses over the last century,
but has retained its architectural integrity and is still a landmark on
the downtown Victoria streets.
This Hallmark Society project has been funded by the Hbc Foundation and the BC150-Heritage Legacy Fund.
Project manager and researcher: Helen Edwards.
Principal Photography & Consultant:
Ron Bukta, West Ventures Photography.