The city of Montreal is full of old schools having a very formal architecture whose plans were designed by the greatest Montrealers architects of their times such as Ernest Cormier, Ross MacDonald and Alexander & Francis Dunlop.
This section also contains university buildings of all kinds. We list here modern buildings as the last construction of the University of Montreal as much as great old buildings of McGill University, Loyola campus' Concordia University or the first HEC building (Hautes Etudes Commerciales) on Viger street.
With four major universities and more than 9 major affiliated schools, Montreal really is a university city. Discover the Montreal scholar architecture and history thru out 200 buildings pages.
5 most appreciated from our users * | |
1 | Notre-Dame College |
2 | McGill Presbyterian College |
3 | Macdonald-Stewart Library |
4 | McGill Macdonald Engineering Building |
5 | University of Montreal |
Picture Gallery : 1 to 85 of 31 schools and universities found
Outremont
The construction of the College Stanislas was funded by the Quebec government in partnership with France. This building is inspired by the Dom Bellot architectural style. The college offers a Fre...
Downtown
506, boulevard René-Lévesque Est / 1111, rue Berri / René-Lévesque Est
NDG
The central building of the School Villa Maria is the house built for Mr. Monk in 1803. The house also called Monkland, served as a residence for the general governors of Canada between 1844 and 1849....
Downtown
The Convent of the Sacred Heart was founded in 1860 by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. They directed the institution until 1982. This building is the sixth held by the institution. Before th...
Villeray / Saint-Michel
Closed since 2017, the Roberval Academy is still boarded up (2024). The Roberval Academy classrooms are temporarily located in the same building as the George-Vanier High School.
Plateau Mont-Royal
4240, rue de Bordeaux / Rue Rachel / Bordeau / Marie-Anne
Several buildings in the « Schools and Universities » section are also classified according to their former use. For the same reason they may appear in two differents sections