Windebank Block

Location:

32995 First Avenue

Historic Neighbourhood:

Mission City

Date of Original Construction:

1908

Category:

Residential/Commercial

Status:

Private low-cost apartments

Description:

A square cement-block building on the corner of First Avenue and Grand Street with two storeys above ground. The building is currently white with green trim and has many windows on all sides and old-fashioned overhangs. Over the years, many businesses have been operated in this building including the Thomas Motor Inn providing small low-cost apartments.

History:

In 1908, the building was owned by Hori Windebank, built at a cost of about $12,000. The original construction also included suites on the upper two floors that may have been used for residential purposes at the time. Hori set up a dynamo in the basement, driven by water sluicing down a pen-stock from a nearby creek. This power system operated years before commercial electrical power was available, provided both light and heat for his hotel, his lunch-counter at the CPR station, and any townspeople who were willing to supply their own wire to hook up to the plant. The system powered the city’s first public street lights on Washington Street (now First Avenue).

As time progressed, many different commercial ventures have used the space such as: the Dug Out Restaurant in 1919, which changed its name to City restaurant in 1920, the Liquor Control Board office opened by Mr. Faulkner in 1921. It has also housed a meat market, a hotel, the Mission Water, Power and Light Company, an ice-making plant, a drugstore, a Grocery store called Perkin’s Grocery, and the Thomas Motor Inn in more recent years. Today the building is used for apartments.

People Associated with the Site:

Hori Windebank, formerly a British navy sea captain, and his wife Jenny came from England in 1889. He was present on July 14, 1892, when the Corporation of the Municipality of Mission was formed. He built the Matsqui Hotel on the Mission flats, and after the flood of 1894 owned 305 lots where he established a feedlot, a piggery, a slaughterhouse, a sawmill, an ice plant, and a storage warehouse. In 1893, he purchased Ontario House, which he renamed the first Bellevue Hotel. Hori was an amazing entrepreneur, responsible for most of Mission’s City’s early power and water utilities, and by 1910 owned a large amount of the City’s real estate and many business enterprises both in the downtown area and on the flats.

With his nephew, he established the Mission Water, Light & Power Company, dammed silver Creek in the Cedar Valley and Fourteenth Avenue area, ran 16-inch wooden water main down to Calgary Street (now 7th Avenue), east to Grand, and all the way down to Railway Avenue. A network of small wooden distribution pipes branched off to supply water to local residents.

Besides his business enterprises, Hori was also well-known for his numerous legal disputes with federal bureaucrats and the CPR as well as his fight against prohibition in Mission. Hori Windebank passed away in 1947 at the age of 95.

William J. Windebank, a plumber and electrician, came to join his uncle Hori in 1905. He founded and operated Windebank Electric and Plumbing. After many years as a councilor, he was Mission City’s first mayor, elected in 1957 when it officially became a town. Windebank Elementary is named after him.

Mr. James Allan was involved in the construction of the building, making the cement blocks for the original construction on site. These blocks were then used to fill in the windows at some point in time by Sam Bannister, a later owner of the building.

Dr. Campbell, who was a dentist, died in the building when a fire broke out, but the date is unknown.

Architectural Features:

Built with hand-cast cement blocks using casting moulds purchased from the Sears Catalogue after the steel-band system. About 5000 bricks were used for the first two storeys and 2500 for the third. The building has one storey underground and two storeys above ground. Originally, it featured a second storey balcony, which has since been removed.

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