Building name | Year of construction |
---|---|
Arts Building | 1843 |
Duggan House | 1861 |
Allan Memorial Institute (Ravenscrag) | 1863 |
Wilson Hall (Wesleyan Theological College) | 1866 |
Redpath Museum | 1880 |
Morrice Hall (Presbyterian College) | 1882 |
Faculty Club | 1886 |
Chancellor Day Hall | 1892 |
Redpath Hall/Library | 1893 |
Macdonald Physics Building | 1893 |
Macdonald-Stewart Library Building | 1893 |
Macdonald-Harrington Building | 1896 |
(Lady) Meredith House (Ardvarna) | 1897 |
Royal Victoria College | 1899 |
Strathcona Hall | 1899 |
Hosmer House | 1901 |
McCord Museum (formerly Student Union) | 1904 |
Macdonald Campus | 1905-1909 |
Purvis Hall | 1907 |
(Charles) Meredith House | 1907 |
Macdonald Engineering Building | 1907/08 |
Strathcona Anatomy and Dentistry | 1907/08 |
(James T.) Davis House | 1909 |
(James) Ferrier Building | 1909 |
(JKL) Ross House | 1909 |
Beatty Hall | 1912 |
(Percival) Molson Stadium | 1920 |
James Administration Building | 1922 |
Lyman Duff Building | 1923 |
Montreal Neurological Institute | 1923 |
Pathological Institute | 1923 |
Roddick Gates | 1924 |
Martlet House (Hallward House) | 1925 |
Pulp and Paper Research Institute | 1927 |
(William and Henry) Birks Building | 1929/31 |
Peterson Hall | 1933 |
(David) Thomson House | 1935 |
Douglas Hall | 1936 |
(Sir Arthur) Currie Gym | 1939 |
Donner Building | 1947 |
Wong Chemical Building Engineering Building | 1948/1996 |
Frank Dawson Adams Building | 1951 |
McConnell Winter Stadium | 1956 |
McConnell Engineering Building | 1958/59 |
Bishop Mountain Hall | 1961 |
McConnell Hall | 1961 |
Molson Hall | 1961 |
Gardner Hall | 1961 |
Otto Maass Chemistry Building | 1963/64 |
Leacock Building | 1965 |
Stewart Biology Building | 1965 |
McIntyre Medical Building | 1965 |
University Centre | 1965 |
McLennan Library | 1967/69 |
Burnside Hall | 1969/70 |
(Samuel) Bronfman Building | 1971 |
Education Building | 1971 |
(Ernest) Rutherford Physics Building | 1977 |
McGill University Bookstore | 1990 |
McGill University is on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We acknowledge and thank the diverse Indigenous peoples whose presence marks this territory on which peoples of the world now gather. The McGill Libraries recognize the harm that cultural heritage organizations, as colonial institutions, have inflicted on Indigenous peoples. We are committed to the ongoing process of reconciliation as a way to begin to right these wrongs.