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McLean House
The history of McLean House dates back to 1928 when James Stanley
McLean, President and founder of Canada Packers, commissioned architects
George Moorhouse
and King Associates to design a unique home for his
family on 50 acres of rolling land that he had purchased
for $92,000.
The result was Bay View, now known as McLean House, one
of Ontario's most splendid Georgian-style mansions. The fieldstone
manor house was embellished with Palladian windows, classic moldings,
a grand staircase, high ceilings,
and spacious rooms. The acres of gardens were spectacularly landscaped
by Gordon Culham, a landscape architect who worked in the grand
English country house tradition.
McLean House remained the home of the McLean family until 1966,
when the widow of J.S. McLean moved to a smaller home. The University
of Toronto took over the property, and it was converted by Sunnybrook
Hospital into a clinical facility. In 1982 McLean House was renovated
and revitalized by the Junior League of Toronto and the Interior
Designers of Ontario, who opened it to the public as a Designers’
Showcase home. Following this revitalization, McLean House was opened
by Sunnybrook as a venue for social and corporate events, with proceeds
going to fund medical research at the hospital.
Vaughan
Estate
The Vaughan Estate, originally known as Donningvale,
was built in 1931 as a family home for John James Vaughan, Vice
President of the T. Eaton Company.
The house was designed by architects Burden and Gouinlock
in a simple Elizabethan style; typical of a large country manor.
The home was sumptuously appointed with massive
fireplaces, intricate cornice moldings, carved plaster ceilings,
and leaded casement windows with gracefully curved handles. The
grandeur continued through beautiful walkouts onto a series of tiered
patios, gardens and stone pathways, overlooking their extensive
grounds and the Don River Ravine.
After the death of Vaughan, his estate was also used as a clinical
facility for the Sunnybrook Health Science Centre. Its restoration
came in 1991 when six interior designers donated their time and
talent to renovating and revitalizing the home. Now, along with
its neighbour, McLean House, it provides a stunning backdrop for
private social and corporate events.
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