Tremont House , also known as the Tremont Hotel, is a historic building in the Creative Simcoe Street neighbourhood of the Collingwood Heritage Conservation District . It is located at 80 Simcoe Street in Collingwood , Ontario, Canada.
9-670: Tremont House may refer to: Canada [ edit ] Tremont House (Collingwood, Ontario) , a historic building in the Collingwood Heritage Conservation District United States [ edit ] Tremont House (Bellevue, Ohio) , on the National Register of Historic Places Tremont House (Boston) , the first hotel with indoor plumbing Tremont House (Chicago) , 1860 Republican National Convention Headquarters Tremont House (Galveston) ,
18-570: A historic hotel in the Strand Historic District Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Tremont House . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tremont_House&oldid=974833245 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
27-514: A modest, well-appointed hotel and boarding house. The hotel continued to operate for several decades but ultimately "... ended its life as a dingy bar" and closed, leaving a "...decrepit building ready for demolition...". In 2004, the Collingwood town council announced its intention to demolish the building to create parking space for the downtown and in 2005 the town purchased the property The proposal met with objection as heritage advocates in
36-496: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Tremont House (Collingwood, Ontario) The Tremont House was built in 1889 by John McCormick. Located across the street from the townβs train station at the time, it was originally a 24 room, luxury hotel. Started in March, the construction was completed in only three months. The hotel opened on June 27, 1889. The three-storey structure
45-473: The building. The Cultural Centre suggestion generated enough support for the town to sign a memorandum of understanding with Theatre Collingwood in 2008. However, the agreement was terminated that same year under pressure from the Heritage Committee and residents to preserve the building. On May 25, 2009 town council approved private sale of the building. The town retained the surrounding land to build
54-506: The community lobbied to preserve the building. In 2007 an affordable housing group proposed that the Tremont building be converted into an 18-unit affordable housing development. The project was realized at a different location. In August 2007 then mayor, Chris Carrier, said the plan to tear down the building remained but he was open to other ideas, including building a new Cultural Centre. Some town councillors remained in favour of preserving
63-535: The parking lot originally proposed five years earlier. The Tremont rehabilitation returned several exterior features of the building to the original aesthetic. The brick facade around the ground level of the building and the white paint that covered the upper two stories were removed to reveal the original brick. The words "Tremont House", painted on the exterior during the original construction, are once again visible. The rooftop parapets were restored, although only to about half their original height. With support from
72-543: The town to use the adjacent parking lot for outdoor celebrations, the restored Tremont Hotel had a grand reopening celebration on September 17, 2010. The restoration won a Heritage Award from Heritage Collingwood, the 2010 Peter Stokes Award for Restoration from the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario, and a national revitalization award in the Building Rehabilitation and Conservation category from
81-442: Was built after a fire destroyed dozens of businesses in the downtown Collingwood area, at the time when many of the town's wooden buildings were being replaced by brick. McCormick sold the building in 1922. The new owner did not fare well financially and tried to burn down the building but was unsuccessful. (Evidence of the fire exists today. ) In 1936 the business was purchased by John (Jack) Armitage, who restored its reputation as
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