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ARTH3810 2019F Class Projects (Publication)Main MenuThe Tent Room at Rideau HallKyle Kreutner, Page 1 of 6The Webley Shacks: Unconventional Furniture Use in the Context of Ceaseless SurveillanceJose BawaganImperial Theater By Munawar MobinKeagan F - CSTM Sound HistoryIntroductionThe Mayfair TheatreSimran S.An Investigation of Hospital Interiors Effect on Patients144 Loretta Avenue North, Aidan MacNaullAidan MacNaull 144 Loretta Avenue NorthWest Block - Canada's New House of Commonsby Devon RudykRideau Street Chapel: The Effects of Relocation on the Experience of an Interiorby Ty FollisThe Church of St. Andrew's OttawaDavid Bastien-AllardMaking the Past Present: Union Station Restoration – A Political Facelift?by Vivian AstroffDelegation of the Ismali ImamatThe National Arts Centre: Reflecting on its Past and PresentSaint Paul University - A Shift in ValuesReem SiageFilm in Ottawa: The Mayfair theatreby Giovanna Maria SangCGM -An Investigation of Hospital Interiors Effect on PatientsThe Chateau LaurierBy Jessica El-GhazalReusable Space: The Senate of Canada Buildingby Syenne HolderNational Gallery of Canada - Seeing the Colonnade Through a Semiological Lens by Ricky TongRickyTHE OTTAWA STATIONEhidiamen Iyamabo, HomePageAVRC81ff8dad33b7fe77eee9a543209e890531c75438
12019-11-27T18:53:41-08:00History and Context6Reem Siageplain2019-12-08T08:55:11-08:00Saint Paul University’s history plays a significant role in the development of spiritual values of a building. The student body of early Saint Paul University consisted of only seminarians, men that studied to become priests. The university itself was named after Saint Paul, a leader of the first generation of Christians, and considered the most important figure in Christianity, after Jesus. It was intentionally established to be of religious value that is entrusted to the missionary Oblates of May Immaculate. The chapel of the university was therefore the most significant room of the building, providing a place to respect these values. It is located in the heart of LaFramboise Hall, the only building of the campus at the time. It brought the seminarians and priests together, creating a place of prayer and somewhere to perform other religious rituals. Over time, Canada inherited new values, where a shift of views developed in public schooling, forcing catholic schools to adapt to new societal and religious conditions. This resulted in the loss of original value as a religious space of the chapel at Saint Paul University, as well in other public schools in Canada. (Schlitt, 2008)