Community & Culture

1684 Yale Street

The Rowland Powell House is a two storey, symmetrical square plan Edwardian style residence. It has a pyramidal hip roof and the front elevation has a verandah running the full width of the first storey and a balcony running the full width of the second with a porte-cochere under a second balcony on the north elevation. The house is clad in roughcast stucco with half-timbering on the second storey and narrow shiplap siding on the first. It is one of largest homes in the area and is located on a prominent rise on large lot with side yard with original stonework.

Heritage Value

Built in 1913, Rowland Powell House is of value for its association with Jesse Milton Warren (1889-1953), a San Francisco-born architect who trained in San Francisco and New York before opening an office in Victoria in 1911.

His work includes a number of civic commissions such as the Pantages Theatre (now the McPherson Playhouse) and the Central Building on View Street as well as a number of residences. Warren was a renowned city booster and lectured on ‘Why Victoria is destined to be the New York of the Pacific’ and was a founding member of the Victoria Rotary Club in 1914.

This large two storey Edwardian house originally had all of the land at the top rise of Yale Street. Extensive views would have been possible from the verandah and upper balconies when the house was built. The owner was Rowland H. Powell, of George Powell and Sons, who had a successful hardware and crockery store on Government Street. The Powell residence has notably fine exterior features and is of value as an example of the type of residence that prominent businessmen would commission, with a large porte-cochere and gracious verandah.

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