Provincial Government Mine Rescue Station

Building Details
Name: Provincial Government Mine Rescue Station
Address: 1009 Farquhar Street
Architectural Style: Mine Related Structure
Building Use: Institutional
Year of Construction: 1913
Builder or Architect: Unknown
Protected Heritage Property: No

Heritage Value Statement

Built in 1913, the Provincial Government Mine Rescue Station is a good example of a vernacular, utilitarian building and one of the oldest known local uses of corrugated iron cladding.



The building is exceptionally important as a rare, direct link to Nanaimo’s coal mining industry, the most important economic activity for almost 100 years. Nanaimo’s coalmines were among the most dangerous in the world with over 2000 injuries and fatalities recorded during the coalmining era. During this period, from the early 1850s to the early 1950s, the threat of mining disasters was always present and mining conditions were the source of repeated labour conflicts and community disruptions. Although accidents could never be completely prevented, Mine Rescue Station operations did much to improve the situation by providing practical training and communicating provincial-level commitment to the community.



The Station’s value resides in its location in one of the City’s oldest mixed-use neigbhourhoods, adjacent to the former site of one of the largest coal mining complexes in British Columbia history (the No. 1 Mine).