Historically designated Gallinger Terrace, a rare example of an architect-designed red brick residential terrace in Williamsville, Kingston.

Gallinger Terrace

Gallinger Terrace Situated in the Williamsville area, and spanning over nine separate properties andthe city block of Chatham Street between Elm St and Linton St, the Gallinger Terrace consists of eight attached two storey red brick residential buildings and a two-storey red brick residential (formerly commercial at grade) building at the corner of Elm Street….

35 Johnson St., (Lynch House)

Lynch House

Lynch House Located on the North side of Johnson Street between Ontario and King St E., the Lynch House property includes a representative example of a 5-bay limestone building with Georgian influences built for both residential and commercial purposes. The property is associated with Daniel Lynch who constructed the building, and both lived and operated…

344-350 Bagot Street, (Artillery Park Barracks)

Artillery Park Barracks

Artillery Park Barracks Situated on the west side of Bagot St, north of Queen St, at the terminus of Barrack Street, so named for the subject property. The property includes a well-crafted example of an early-19th century stone military personnel residence, known as the Artillery Park Barracks. The property is associated with the Royal Regiment…

2643 Bur Brook Road, (Jackson Mills Schoolhouse)

Jackson Mills Schoolhouse

Jackson Mills Schoolhouse Located on a 0.3 ha. parcel on the south side of the road, the property contains a rare example of a limestone bank-house-style schoolhouse, the Jackson Mills Schoolhouse. The property is associated with the educational history of the area and operated for over 100 years as School Section No.13. Heritage attributes include…

160 Belmont Avenue (the Everitt-Miller House) Built in 1878.

Everitt-Miller House

Everitt-Miller House Situated on a 740 square metre residential lot in the Henderson Place area on the corner of Belmont Ave. and Camberley Cres., the Everitt-Miller property contains an excellent example of a vernacular stone house characteristic of early farmhouses in the area. The property displays the former historic rural character of the area. Heritage…

131-7 Princess Street, Kingston Ontario - Designated Heritage building

LaSalle Mews

LaSalle Mews On the north side of Princess St at the intersection with Bagot St., is a 3-storey Georgian limestone commercial row, built dating back to 1851 and modified over time, becoming now the LaSalle Mews. Formerly the building was a longstanding hotel, the City Hotel, and later as the Randolf Hotel in downtown Kingston….

743 King Street West FHF 2022 Award winner.

Church of Good Thief Rectory

Church of Good Thief Rectory This is the rectory of the city’s second oldest Catholic church in which services began in 1894. The church and the rectory have been designated under the Ontario Heritage Act since 1978. The former Parish Hall, a former stable have been demolished. In 2019 a conversion from a single residence…

2802 Pine Grove Kingston FHF Award winner

2802 Pine Grove Road

2802 Pine Grove Road The one and a half storey house is located on Concession 8, lot 23, and dates approximately to 1850. Based on original surveys of the area, the land was owned by a man named John McKendry, who arrived in Canada in 1841. The structure has been repointed, and on one side,…

Spirit Garden Lake Ontario Park, FHF Award winner.

Manidoo Ogitigan

Manidoo Ogitigan (Spirit Garden) The City of Kingston has a new and quite remarkable public art installation at Lake Ontario Park. Manidoo Ogitigan, is also known as the Spirit Garden and is a deeply moving and symbolic form of built heritage. The Alderville First Nation approached the City of Kingston in 2013 to develop a…

53 King St., after new roof, FHF Award winner

Murney House

Murney House, Kingston 53 King Street E., called the Murney House, was protected under Pt. IV of the Ontario Heritage Act before the Old Sydenham Heritage Conservation District was approved in 2015. According to the Property Evaluation, the stone house was the first house constructed on the block. It was built in 1841 for Mrs….

222 Johnson St, 2022 FHF Award Winner

222 Johnson Street

222 Johnson Street 222 Johnson Street is one of many buildings which was protected under Pt. IV of the Ontario Heritage Act, as an individual building before the Old Sydenham Heritage District was approved in 2015. The large three bay, two and a half storey limestone building was built in 1860 by Dr. J. R….

7 George St Barriefield after lineseed oil paint - FHF Award Winner

7 George Street

7 George Street, Barriefield 7 George Street has heritage building status and is situated in the Barriefield Village Heritage Conservation District, the oldest heritage district in the Province of Ontario. The 1 and ½ storey, frame building described as a vernacular style which is common in the Village, with a front gable and two bays….

The Anchor Building, King St. E and Brock Shared by Shirley Bailey

The Anchor Building

Anchor Building, Kingston The building known as the Anchor Building, was completed in 1856-1857 and designed in the brick Italianate style, featuring flat-faced facades, regular rows of arched windows with decorative window heads of different styles on each level, and a heavy roof cornice on the roof parapet. The building has historical or associative value…

Image of St. Mark's Church made of limestone with a tall steeple

St. Mark’s Church

St. Mark’s Church This church, a fine example of the early style of Gothic Revival architecture, was built with the aid of funds subscribed by the British Admiralty and by settlers at Barriefield, many of whom had been employees of the Royal Naval dockyard at Navy Bay. John Bennett Marks, a naval paymaster, donated the…

1 Baiden Street, Portsmouth Village, FHF Award Winner

The Pugh House

The Pugh House One of 29 properties designated under a single City of Kingston By-law (80-63):  “Built about 1845 for merchant Samuel W. Brady and owned and occupied for many years by shoemaker John Pugh and his family, this well-proportioned frame dwelling is a good example of the larger wooden dwellings in the village. The…

223 King Street, stately limestone building

223 King Street East

223 King Street East Build in 1834, this two-storey, limestone building was constructed by John Solomon Cartwright to serve as a law office and residence for his law students and is linked to his residence at 221 King Street East. This building has multiple layers of heritage protection with not only municipal designation by-laws (both…

Image of the front of 230 James Street, the James Medley Jr. House in Barriefield, Kingston, Ontario, An icon in the top right corner indicates it is a Frontenac Heritage Foundation award winner.

James Medley Jr. House

James Medley Jr. House The James Medley House is a one and a half storey limestone house built in 1856-7, on the north side of James Street in the Barriefield Heritage Conservation District. The house was reconstructed after damaged by fire in 1980s. James Medley Jr. was the architect/builder. This house has been lovingly restored by owners…

Barriefield House

Barriefield House

Barriefield House Constructed in 1814-15 by William Baker, a British immigrant, this is possibly the oldest surviving limestone house in Barriefield. William Baker was a cabinet maker at the naval dockyard.  In 1863, the house was acquired by St. Mark’s Church as a Rectory.  This house is part of the Barriefield Heritage Conservation District Plan…

191 King St.

Cartwright House

Cartwright House The Cartwright House, built in 1832-33 and owned by Robert David Cartwright (grandson to Richard Cartwright, who was a member of the Legislative Council). Robert and his bride Harriet Dobbs of Dublin, Ireland moved to their new house in 1833; five children were born to them. This well-proportioned limestone house has multiple layers of…

Image of the Spire, at tall cathedral at 82 Sydenham Street, Old Sydenham Heritage District, Kingston, Ontario, An icon in the top right corner indicates it is a Frontenac Heritage Foundation award winner.

The Spire

The Spire In the 1840’s the Methodists hired noted architect and builder William Coverdale to raise this imposing building that looks only slightly like the current Sydenham Street United Church/The Spire. The building was awarded by the Frontenac Heritage Foundation in 1996 when it was the Sydenham Street United Church and in 2018 as the…

McIntosh Castle

McIntosh Castle

McIntosh Castle Said to have been the first major project for architect John Power, construction started in 1852 for Donald McIntosh, a ship owner. It was completed by successive owners, and the tower was added after 1878. The building is a Gothic Revival village built on an L-shaped plan with the octagonal tower set in…

525 Earl street, showing the beautiful red brick building

The Winston

The Winston ‘The Winston’ as this brick row has been called since 1923, comprises two distinctly different architectural styles. No. 52 was designed in 1886 by Joseph Power for Dr. W. G. Anglin, and is known for its distinctive heavy stone and brick circle on the facade enclosing double windows. In 1905, No. 56 was constructed, with its…

Image of the front of City Hall in Kingston, Ontario. An icon in the top right corner indicates it is a Frontenac Heritage Foundation award winner.

Kingston City Hall

Kingston City Hall The Kingston City Hall is considered by many to be a masterpiece of 19th century architecture in Canada. The building was originally designed by George Browne, and at the time of its construction (1843-4), Kingston was for a brief time the capital of the country. The building is a National Historic Site (1961),…

718 Division Street

718 Division Street

718 Division Street Built pre-1869, this small limestone house sits on what was called ‘Prospect Hill’ next to the Roman Catholic Cemetery. Some prospect! Now owned by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation, the storey and a half house has a facade of large dressed stone blocks, with sides of random rubble stone.

Vine Cottage

Vine Cottage

Vine Cottage Imagine when this part of the city near Macdonnell Street and Princess was farmland!  In 1838 Smith Barlett sold part of this farm on Farm Lot 22 to George Smith, who built circa 1840 a house called “Vine Cottage”.  The one and a half storey house has a hipped roof verandah on three…

Bishop’s Folly

Bishop’s Folly

Bishop’s Folly Distinctive in this neighbourhood for its size, this large limestone structure currently stands camouflaged by many trees. Archdeacon George Okill Stuart had construction on this building started in 1861, but after he died in 1862, the building sat unfinished for many years. The plan of this ‘Bishop’s Folly’ is based on the transepts and apse…

Victoria Public School

Victoria Public School

Victoria Public School Originally built in 1892 as an eight-room school, this design by William Newlands is an early red brick building in Kingston with a distinctive tower, and terracotta adornment. The large round arch at the front entrance signifies the architectural style as Romanesque Revival. The structure is an excellent example of adaptive re-use as…

Image of front of 62-66 Brock street showing newly completed paint on the facade.

62-66 Brock Street

62-66 Brock Street 62-66 Brock Street is the last remaining modest tradesman’s shop in the downtown. Consequently, the street façade has been restored to the way it would have looked during the late 19th century. The exact year 62-66 Brock Street was built is uncertain but there is evidence that the land was developed as early as…