BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives
  • By Time
  • By Place
  • By Story
⌘K
BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives

Discover the structures, places, and stories that shaped Edmonton's built environment.

Resources

NewsFAQsLinks

Contact

City of Edmonton Archivesarchives@edmonton.ca780-496-8711

We acknowledge that the land on which Edmonton is built is Treaty Six Territory. We thank the diverse Indigenous Peoples whose footsteps have marked this territory for centuries, such as nêhiyaw (Cree), Dené, Anishinaabe (Saulteaux), Nakota Isga (Nakota Sioux), and Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) peoples. We also acknowledge this as the Métis homeland and the home of one of the largest communities of Inuit south of the 60th parallel. It is a welcoming place for all peoples who come from around the world to share Edmonton as a home. It is important that we not only recognize our shared histories, but also each other's contributions to establishing the built heritage of Edmonton and Area.

© 2026 City of Edmonton Archives
Privacy Policy•Terms of Use•Accessibility
  1. Structures

Empire Block

Edmontonians John A. McDougall and Richard Secord erected this four-storey office block in 1905 on the location that still bears its name over 100 years later.

On this record

Connections
14Connections
Stories
1Stories
Photos
3Photos
Empire Block, 1905

On this page

Details

Built
1905
Neighbourhood
Downtown
Address
10084 Jasper Avenue, Edmonton, AB, T5J 1V9
Historic designation
Demolished
Time period
Urban Growth: 1905-1913
People
TBD
Architectural styles
Edwardian
Character defining elements
Brick Structure, Cornice, Date Stone, Dentil, Flat Roof, Keystone, Lintel, Parapet, Pilaster, Rectangular Footprint

Location

About

The Empire Block, on the northeast corner of Jasper and 101 Street, was a basic rectangular building elegantly adorned with classic Edwardian elements. Primarily clad in red brick, the banded main floor, arched doorways, and window details were stone. Oversized keystones capped the entrances and circular ornamentation appeared on the third level. A large cornice topped the structure. The many mid-level windows were more pronounced with two-storey pilasters and stone voussoirs; those at street level were capped with exaggerated lintels. The main façade featured a corner entrance, and understated arched window and door treatments looked out onto Jasper Avenue.

McDougall opened a fur trading and retail business on this site when he arrived in Edmonton from Ontario in 1879. Secord worked as a clerk in McDougall's store for a time. The two formed the McDougall and Secord Ltd. company in 1897 and amassed great wealth through government contracts and industries like Métis Scrip speculation. They built the Empire Block as an investment on this prominent corner of Jasper Avenue.

The top floors contained offices while the Bank of Nova Scotia and subsequent drug stores, barber shops, hat cleaners, jeweller, tobacconists, and opticians were located on the main floor. The newly formed Alberta Government had its first offices in the Empire Block in 1905. Liggett's Owl Drug Store, which was taken over by Tamblyn Drug's, was the longest main floor tenant of the building, residing there for about fifty years beginning in 1920.

A four-storey addition was built on the north side in 1920. In 1942 a fire gutted the top two floors and resulted in extensive water damage on the lower levels. Completely renovated with a new roof, new woodwork, ceilings, and floors, the block reopened in 1943. Edmonton's oldest privately-owned business, McDougall & Secord, Ltd., still owns this corner of Edmonton by way of the Empire Building, an eleven-storey office tower built in 1963.

Stories

Media

Emily Murphy ResidencePrevious structure

Structure 56 of 185

Ernest Brown BlockNext structure