Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex National Historic Site of Canada
Riding Mountain National Park of Canada, Manitoba
General view
© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, 2001.
Address :
Norgate Road, Riding Mountain National Park of Canada, Manitoba
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
1992-11-06
Dates:
-
1933 to 1936
(Construction)
-
1933 to 1936
(Significant)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
Riding Mountain National Park
(Organization)
-
National Parks Branch, Architectural Division
(Architect)
-
Depression Relief Program
(Builder)
Other Name(s):
-
Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex
(Designation Name)
-
East Gate Entrance Complex
(Plaque name)
Research Report Number:
RUSTIC BLDGS. IN CANADA'S NATIONAL PARKS - 1992; NOV 92-A02, SUA, SUB
DFRP Number:
12897 00
Plaque(s)
Existing plaque: Norgate Road, Riding Mountain National Park of Canada, Manitoba
This registration building and two nearby staff cabins typify the rustic architecture that became a hallmark of the national parks during the 1930s. At Riding Mountain National Park, Depression relief funding enabled skilled local craftsmen to create a legacy of enduring landmarks from the abundant supplies of timber. This structure is the last of three log entrance gates that once greeted visitors and introduced them to the rustic character of other key facilities within the park.
Description of Historic Place
The Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex National Historic Site of Canada comprises three log buildings of exceptional rustic design, the Whirlpool Warden’s Residence, the East Gate Entrance Building, and the Gatekeeper’s Cottage, in addition to a remnant of Norgate Road that passes through the complex. Their design and materials establish their identity as the eastern entrance to Riding Mountain National Park of Canada. Nearby are several more recent wood-frame service buildings.
Heritage Value
The Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1992 because: it is a nationally significant example of the rustic design tradition of the 1930s in Canada’s National Parks, in accordance with this tradition, the complex was constructed of indigenous materials by skilled local craftsmen hired through the Federal government’s Depression Relief program, the East Gate Complex is associated with tourism development and outdoor recreation, and gives a distinctive sense of identity to Riding Mountain National Park of Canada.
The heritage value of the site lies in the complex’s illustration of exceptional rustic design in a National Park of Canada. The Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex was constructed in 1933-36 by the National Parks Service to provide an eastern entrance to Riding Mountain National Park of Canada for automobiles travelling on Norgate Road (Highway 19). Both residences follow standard plans prepared by the Architectural Division of the National Parks Branch.
Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, October 1992 ; Commemorative Integrity Statement, November 1999.
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements that contribute to the heritage character of the site include: the location, at the entrance to Riding Mountain National Park of Canada; the treed setting with the cultivated landscape around the Gate; viewplanes from within the complex to service buildings, to the Norgate Road approach, and between the park gateway and the warden’s residence; the Norgate Road in its location within the complex, its original width and surface level; the architectural components of the complex, comprising the Whirlpool Warden’s Residence and Gatekeeper’s Cottage and the East Gate Entrance Building in their location, spatial relationships to each other and to the road, rustic local construction materials and simple construction technologies; the East Gate Entrance Building in its siting, straddling the approach road to the park, its design as a truss bridge stretching across the road between parallel standards in the form of cubic kiosks topped by open-trussed lanterns with shingled caps, and its log and stone construction materials; the Whirlpool Warden’s Residence in its massing as a one-and-a-half storey rectangular structure with gable roof, central porch and one-storey rear addition, its symmetrically organized three bay entry facade, its multiple casement windows, its use of contrasting surfaces such as half timbered gable ends, exposed peeled log rafter ends, and local rustic materials including fieldstone cladding on foundation, log walls, wood shingle roof, and its original interior layout; the Gatekeeper’s Cottage in its massing as a one-and-a-half storey rectangle with a central gable roof and an asymmetrical gabled entry porch, its multiple casement windows, its use of contrasting surfaces such as stucco and half timbering eave finish, exposed rafter ends, its use of local materials including random coursed field stone sheathed foundation, log walls, its craftsmanship such as saddle notching of log walls, and its intact ground floor plan.