Université de Montréal – Roger Gaudry Building Cormier's major work is the central building of the
Université de Montréal (now known as the Roger Gaudry Building) on the north slope of
Mount Royal. This huge example of the Art Deco style was built between World War I and the middle of World War II, and it has been kept in a nearly pristine shape over the decades. It is a composition of simple forms of planes and surfaces in successive relief, emphasizing vertical lines. The light buff vitrified brick has trimmings of Missisquoi marble. The only major destruction of his designs took place within the interior spaces. These changes occurred in the 1970s, when the great multi-storey hall of the central library was filled up with several smaller, single-storey rooms for the faculty of medicine and its library.
Université Laval – Casault pavilion Another important example of Cormier's work can be found on another Quebec university campus, the of
Université Laval (named after the first rector of the university), familiarly known by students as the 'Louis-Jacques'. The design was originally started by the Benedictine architect monk
Dom Bellot but completed by Cormier after Dom Bellot's death. Plans were laid out in 1948 but only completed in 1960, it is a massive cathedral-like building, originally designed as Quebec City's
Grand Séminaire, which is particularly spectacular viewed from a distance along the impressive mall that runs along the east–west axis of the campus grounds. Despite an unfortunate renovation scheme in the 1970s, which gutted the chapel, filled in the magnificent enclosed courtyard and transformed the interior into an undecipherable labyrinth, the building has become the most recognized landmark of the second-oldest university in North America and home to Laval's faculties of Music and Communications, as well as to Quebec's National Archives (in the former church).
Rhode Island churches Cormier also designed two important Roman Catholic Churches for the
Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island, USA. One of them,
St. John the Baptist Church of
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, has been placed on the
National Register of Historic Places. His other work as Notre Dame du Sacre Coeur, 666 Broad Street in
Central Falls.
Cormier House Cormier's own home, on Montreal's
Pine Avenue, is one of the finest examples of an Art Deco dwelling in the world. Former Canadian prime minister
Pierre Trudeau purchased the building in 1979, and he lived there following his retirement until his death in 2000.
Supreme Court of Canada Building Cormier is also responsible for the classic
château-style
Supreme Court of Canada Building (1939–40) in
Ottawa.
Other commissions He was a design consultant for the
United Nations building in
New York City. In
Toronto, Cormier designed
St. Michael's College School (1950) and Carr Hall at
St. Michael's College (
University of Toronto, 1954). ==Style and legacy==