Alterations: 1910-12; 1928
The Empress Hotel is an early-20th-century stone hotel, constructed in
the Chateau style. It is prominently located at the head of the inner
harbour in the city of Victoria. Built for the Canadian Pacific Railway
(CPR), the Empress is one of a series of Chateau-style hotels built by
Canadian railway companies in the early 20th century to encourage
tourists to travel their transcontinental routes. Popular with the
travelling public for their elaborate decor and comfortable elegance,
these hotels quickly became national symbols of quality accommodation.
The Chateau-style vocabulary used by the railway hotels evolved as a
distinctly Canadian architectural type. The Empress signals the
beginning of this evolution from a strictly Chateau-style design
towards one that incorporated contemporary forms.
Built in 1904-08 to designs by Francis M. Rattenbury, the Empress was
enlarged in 1910-12 to designs by W.S. Painter and in 1928 to designs
by J.W. Orrock.

It is an important visual clue to the harbour - the reason that
Victoria was chosen for the Hudson Bay Company Fort north of the new
American border - and its proximity to the Legislative Buildings
(Rattenbury, 1897) illustrate the architect's grand plan for this
important harbour.
Built
after the draining of the James Bay mudflats and the construction of
the Inner Harbour Causeway, the hotel would be first thing that
travellers arriving by water, presumably on a Canadian Pacific ocean
liner, would see.
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.