Saint Mary's Basilica in Halifax to enforce parking rules
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 44° 38.650 W 063° 34.381
20T E 454558 N 4943582
Large and impressive, St. Mary's Basilica Cathedral was reborn in 1860, doubtless with the intent being to impress and intimidate.
Waymark Code: WMQZ2N
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 04/17/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 9

When construction on the cathedral began in 1820 there was only one other Catholic cathedral in Canada. Its cornerstone was laid June 29, 1820 but St. Mary's did not officially open until 1929. It was built to replace St' Peter's Church, a smaller 1874 wood frame building which, upon completion of St. Mary's, was dismantled, ferried across the harbour and rebuilt in Dartmouth.
With a city's growth, there invariably follows congestion and limitations on available space. This is proving especially true for parking space in downtown Halifax and has become a serious problem for St. Mary's Basilica. They've decided to fight back and CBC TV has posted a story on the situation, reproduced in part below.
Saint Mary's Basilica in Halifax
to enforce parking rules
CBC News Posted: Jun 19, 2014 7:16 AM AT
The Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth is cracking down on those who commit the sin of illegal parking by hiring a company to enforce parking rules at two lots near Saint Mary's Cathedral Basilica in downtown Halifax.

As of July 2, the lot adjacent to the church will become the designated parking lot for staff and parishioners. The lot behind the cathedral will become a paid parking lot for members of the public.

"We're making a change because we have parishioners who can't use the lot. We're full all the time from people who shouldn't be here," said Peter Browne, the financial administrator of the Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth.

"We have our custodian whose time is being inefficiently used to try and keep people out who shouldn't be here to begin with."

In a notice placed on windshields, the church said it had hired Target Park to put a tire boot on any car that's parked in the lots without the proper authority or payment.

The boot will only be removed after $92.50 is paid to Target Park.

Temporary parking permits are available for visitors and volunteers and there will also be times - such as during mass and other liturgical celebrations - that the parking rules are not enforced.

"The church is seen as, 'We won't bother you because we're too nice.' I think that's what's led us to where we are today, is we've been too nice," said Browne.

"Regardless of what we've done - whether we've had our custodian ticket every day, whether we've towed people away - we're not getting the message across that this is a lot that we need to use for our purposes."
Read more at CBC News
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St. Mary's Basilica
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
St. Mary's Basilica is located on Spring Garden Road in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia, and it sits immediately at the streetline. This Gothic Revival, granite and ironstone structure was built between 1820 and 1829. Its front façade, with three large entranceways and a tall spire, is noticeable from a distance, and is considered a local landmark. Only the building on its footprint is included in the provincial designation.

HERITAGE VALUE
St. Mary's Basilica is valued for its association with and importance to the history of the Roman Catholic community in Nova Scotia, and it is also valued for its fine degree of architectural detail. St. Mary's Basilica is the oldest Roman Catholic church and first stone church in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The cornerstone for the Basilica was laid on June 29, 1820, and the first mass held in the completed church was in November 1829.

St. Mary's Basilica was originally named St. Peter's, taking its name from the first Roman Catholic church in Halifax, which it replaced in 1829. The first church was a small wooden structure built in 1784. After St. Mary's was built, St. Peter's was dismantled and ferried across the harbour to become the first Roman Catholic church in neighbouring Dartmouth. It was the former rector of the first St. Peter's and the first Roman Catholic Bishop in Halifax, the Right Reverend Edmund Burke, who began the construction of St. Mary's. In 1833, the name of the church was changed from St. Peter's Church to St. Mary's Cathedral.

The walls were constructed of ironstone with freestone trimmings. In 1836, a wooden steeple was placed on top of the stone tower. The thirty years following saw many changes to the exterior of St. Mary's.

Nothing now remains of the first façade which had been completed in 1829 and which stood where the inner wall of the porch now stands. It was taken away to make room for the supports needed for the present tower. The beautiful pillars of Aberdeen polished granite were imported from Scotland in 1868 to set off the new granite façade which was completed in 1873. When the cross was placed atop the new spire, it stood one hundred and eighty-nine feet above the sidewalk, reportedly the tallest free standing granite spire in North America.

The exterior façade of the church remains much the same as it was when completed in the late nineteenth century. However, none of the original windows at St. Mary's have survived; all were destroyed in the Halifax Explosion of December 6, 1917.

On August 15, 1950, Pope Pius XII officially bestowed upon St. Mary's Cathedral the honorary title of Basilica.

St. Mary's Basilica is considered one of the finest examples of Gothic Revival architecture in Nova Scotia. This large church, measuring approximately thirty-one metres, has a rectangular main plan with an apse and narthex. The main construction material is near-black local ironstone arranged on a coursed line, while the façade is granite. The roof is a medium gable.

One of the most striking features of the façade is the three gables. Typical of the Gothic Revival style, the center gable is separated from and noticeably larger than the other gables. Each gable contains one large pointed window with multiple decorative panes arranged around a circular design. This design scheme is carried down to the transoms of the three doors which are found one under each gable.

Most of the windows and doors, both on the façade and other walls, are deeply recessed and feature pointed or arched heads. The windows on the east and west walls contain stained glass whose patterns were designed for the exact size of each window. These windows also include plain lug sills. The large granite spire is placed above and behind the central gable. The façade's wall design also includes six polished granite columns with ionic capitals, engaged columns, pilasters, buttresses, plinths, and a number of carvings.

St. Mary's Basilica continues to hold regular services.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
- granite front façade with three gables and three doors under each gable on the façade;
- large granite spire placed above and behind the central gable and rises to a height of one hundred and eighty-nine feet above the ground;
- stone construction, specifically near black local ironstone with freestone trimmings on the main building and granite on the façade and spire;
- rectangular main plan with an apse and narthex;
- medium gable roof;
- one large pointed window with multiple decorative panes arranged around a circular design located in each gable on the façade;
- windows on the east and west walls containing stained glass whose patterns were designed for the exact size of each window;
- plain lug sill windows on the east and west walls;
- façade's wall design including six polished granite columns with ionic capitals, engaged columns, pilasters, buttress, plinths and a number of carvings;
- central location in downtown Halifax.
From Historic Places Canada
Type of publication: Television

When was the article reported?: 06/19/2014

Publication: CBC News

Article Url: [Web Link]

Is Registration Required?: no

How widespread was the article reported?: national

News Category: Arts/Culture

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