Casa Loma

Casa LomaCasa Loma in Toronto, Canada.

Casa Loma, lavish sandstone, twin-towered, Gothic Revival, castle-style mansion built as a home by Canadian financier Sir Henry Mill Pellatt in the early years of the 20th century in Toronto, Canada.

In 1903 Pellatt purchased 25 lots of land on a hill overlooking Davenport Road and hired architect E.J. Lennox, who incorporated his client’s castle sketches into one grand medieval mélange. Construction began in 1911, beginning with the two-story Hunting Lodge. Some three years, $3.5 million (Canadian), and 300 workers later, the 98-room house was completed. Casa Loma boasts 21 fireplaces, a central vacuuming system, its own telephone exchange with 59 telephones, an oven big enough to cook an ox, a great hall with a 60-foot (18-m) ceiling hung with flags, chandeliers, and suits of armour, an 800-foot (250-m) -long secret tunnel linking the house to the fine carriage room and stables, and 5 acres (2 ha) of gardens.

Pellatt lived at Casa Loma only until 1923, and it was seized by the city for unpaid taxes the following year. It remained largely vacant until 1937, when the local Kiwanis Club chapter began operating it as a tourist attraction and event venue. In 1941, during World War II, U-boat sonar detectors were secretly developed in the mansion’s stables, disguised by signs saying the stables were under repair. Badly needed exterior renovations took place from 1997 to 2012, and in 2014 the Liberty Entertainment Group became the venue’s new operator. In 2017 a fine-dining restaurant opened within Casa Loma.

James Harrison