Buildings

115 East Gate

Formerly:Brault Residence
Home of Edwin D. and Violet Brault
Address:115 East Gate
Original Use:Dwelling
Constructed:1953
Other Work:1954, renovation to second storey and addition of a garage
Architects:Fred Francis LeMaistre
Contractors:Brault

More Information

Armstrong’s Point, is a 21.8 hectare residential district, sited within a promontory formed by the winding Assiniboine River. The headland is physically isolated from the surrounding West End neighbourhood both by its peninsular shape, and by the gates located on each of the neighbourhood’s three entrances — Middle, West and East Gates. These gates were designed by the architect Lt. Col. Henry Norland Ruttan in 1911, and designated by the City of Winnipeg as historically significant in 1993.

Armstrong's Point received its historic name in the mid-1800s, when the land was first granted by the Hudson's Bay Company to Captain Joseph Hill. Hill left the area five years later, leaving his batman, or personal servant, James Armstrong, to oversee the property. A rise in property and land values encouraged Hill’s later return and he reestablished title on the land, later selling it to a speculator’s syndicate.

This was a subdivision built by early property owners, rather than a developer, and construction began in the semi-rural subdivision in 1882. By 1904 there were 20 homes within the development, with the most concentrated period of growth between 1910 and 1920. Historically the neighbourhood has been a suburban haven for upper-middle class families, and the neighbourhood’s original homes were sizeable, beautifully detailed dwellings sited on generous landscaped lots with winding drives and extensive gardens. Of the over 100 homes on the Point, 75 are on the City of Winnipeg’s Inventory of Historically Noteworthy Buildings. Ralph Connor House (54 West Gate) home to the University Women’s Club, has been designated municipally and provincially and was named a National Historic Site. Beechmount (134 West Gate) is on the Canadian Registry of Historic Places.

With the expansion of Winnipeg, the demand for land use within the Point intensified and the large lots were subdivided. In the early twentieth century many of the original homes were duplexed or triplexed, with some subsumed by organizations or demolished. Earlier, in 1913, a zoning bylaw was established to protect the area from intensive high-density housing and commercial development, the results of which can be seen today. The post-war demand for housing and the resultant spread and growth of the city saw additional subdividing of the previously vast lots, and the insertion of a number of modern bungalows and ranch-style homes.

Design Characteristics

Doors:The main entryway is located at the front of the house four steps above grade within a porch.
Materials:Stucco, horizontal siding and brick
Size:Two storey
2,086
Style:Eight room two storey
Suburb:Armstrong's Point
Garage:Attached double garage with an enclosed breezeway.
Frontage  Direction:West
  • Two chimneys with one fireplace chimney

Sources

  • Basham, Ardythe Ed. Rising to the Occasion: A Community History of Wolseley, West Broadway and Armstrong’s Point. Winnipeg: Robert A. Steen Memorial Community Centre, 2000.
  • Rostecki, Randy R. Armstrong’s Point: A History. Winnipeg: Heritage Winnipeg Corporation, 2009.