Volume 32, Issue 1
The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada is a learned society devoted to the examination of the role of the built environment in Canadian society. Its membership includes structural and landscape architects, architectural historians and planners, sociologists, ethnologists, and specialists in such fields as heritage conservation and landscape history. Founded in 1974, the Society is currently the sole national society whose focus of interest is Canada’s built environment in all of its manifestations. The Journal of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, published twice a year, is a refereed journal.
Recent Submissions
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Call for papers
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A Wigwam in Venice: The National Gallery of Canada Builds a Pavilion, 1954-1958
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2007) -
Phyllis-Lambert prize: call for candidacies
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2007) -
Table of Contents
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Saskatchewan Legislative Building and Grounds
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Two Churches by Frank Wills: St. Peter's, Barton, and St. Paul's, Glanford, and the Ecclesiological Gothic Revival in Ontario
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William Grey: 'Missionary' of Gothic in Newfoundland
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2007) -
Visuality and the Emergence of City Planning in Early Twentieth-Century Toronto and Montreal
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2007) -
La creation d'une petite Armenie ou les multiples usages d'un sous-sol au Quebec
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2007)