City Beautiful book launches as a bestseller

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What began as a hit multimedia series in the Winnipeg Free Press topped the local bestseller list Thursday night, even before its formal launch.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 03/12/2014 (3577 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

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What began as a hit multimedia series in the Winnipeg Free Press topped the local bestseller list Thursday night, even before its formal launch.

Local architects, journalists and even Mayor Brian Bowman gathered at McNally Robinson Booksellers for the unveiling of City Beautiful, the exploration of Winnipeg’s largely hidden architectural history, development and recent renaissance.

Reporter Randy Turner, who penned the original three-part series this fall, said Winnipeg’s history of beautiful buildings, even in the lean decades, is a testament to the strength of local architects.

Melissa Tait / Winnipeg Free Press
Pages from the Winnipeg Free Press' City Beautiful book come hot off the press. The book launched Thursday night and is currently on McNally Robinson's best-seller list.
Melissa Tait / Winnipeg Free Press Pages from the Winnipeg Free Press' City Beautiful book come hot off the press. The book launched Thursday night and is currently on McNally Robinson's best-seller list.

“Just the fact that we’re still here is a testament to that resilience,” said Turner. “The renaissance of today is based on the fact that they went through such hard times. They had to be innovative, they had to be creative, because they had to compete with less.”

The glossy coffee-table book – on sale now at McNally, Indigo and Chapters for $29.95 – features dozens of historic photos as well as new ones taken by the Free Press’s Melissa Tait and other staff photographers. It was the product of a partnership between the Free Press and the Manitoba Association of Architects (MAA), which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

MAA President Lee McCormick said the book serves as a tour guide to the city’s best buildings and a tribute to those who helped create them, from interior designers to trades people to government officials.

“Great architecture can shape the future of a city and change the lives of those who live in it,” he said.

Free Press Editor Paul Samyn said the paper’s year-long project was eye-opening for him, a born and bred Winnipegger, who, like many, has a blind spot about his hometown. He said Winnipeg’s remarkable urban history has been hiding in plain sight, until now.

“I never saw the whole picture,” said Samyn. “I never really appreciated the vision and ambition that built my hometown.”

Mayor Brian Bowman received a copy Thursday night and touted the ”architectural might” that already exists in Winnipeg.

City Beautiful debuted at number one on McNally Robinson’s bestseller list Thursday.

History

Updated on Thursday, December 4, 2014 10:11 PM CST: Adds slideshow

Updated on Thursday, December 4, 2014 10:45 PM CST: Corrects typos

Updated on Friday, December 5, 2014 12:24 AM CST: Adds video

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