This might be the case of a building no longer serving the needs of a growing city.
But that’s the case for all heritage buildings, isn’t it? Their very existence isn’t practical to the needs of a growing city. They’re old, notoriously temperamental, use outdated construction techniques, are obsolete in style, are undersized for the areas they inhabit, aren’t worth the land they sit on… Sure, it’s fair to say that a building like the
Balfour Manor isn’t the best use of prime Oliver real-estate nowadays, but that’s not why we keep it around. We keep these places because they’re all those weird things: they’re old, they use strange, often extinct construction methods, they’re built in styles that will never see a revival, they’re undersized which represents what the area once was… Not everything has to be one-hundred percent optimized to the city's present to have some kind of worth.
The lack of a photo is telling me that the building was not significant enough for people to care about taking a photo of it back then.
As I said in my previous comment, one doesn’t exist
online. That doesn’t mean one doesn’t exist
at all. Take it from someone who’s spent dozens of hours digging through the actual, physical photo collections held at the City and Provincial Archives. Their digitized collections represent maybe one-tenth of what they actually have — if that! Digitization of film negatives or prints is a delicate, time consuming job (as anyone who shoots film for fun nowadays can attest to). Even more so if you want quality scans that've been cleaned or retouched to remove damage, hair, dust, etc.
Just because there isn’t one online isn’t a smoking gun that says the Archibald isn't important. Hell, even more “important” buildings like Whyte Ave’s own Douglas, Tipton, or Hulbert Blocks lack any good, head on pictures in the digitized collections either. Again, photographers of the era documented everything, including
men peeling potatoes,
bird house competitions, and
doggos driving trucks. A picture likely exists somewhere in one of the physical collections, it just hasn't been scanned yet.