The façades on Sherbrooke and St-Marc streets and are covered with
Queenston limestone. The main facade, on Sherbrooke, has a base made of rusticated limestone and features four openings as well as a prominent central entrance, flanked by two free-standing columns topped by terrestrial and celestial spheres. The main door is made of detailed architectural bronze. A decorative belt course defines the upper part of the base and consists of ornamental carving and words in relief: FIDES, VERITAS, CARITAS, LIBERTAS, SPES ("Faith", "Truth", "Charity", "Liberty", and "Hope" in Modern English). A December 1930 issue of
Construction, "A Journal for the architectural, engineering and contracting interests of Canada" featured an illustrated article, praised the Temple: Neither our great Canadian classicists nor such well-known American practitioners as
McKim, Mead and White have produced anything finer in Grecian adaptation than this Montreal building. As a work of architectural merit it ranks with
Henry Bacon’s
Lincoln Memorial,
John Russell Pope’s Temple of the Scottish Rite and McKim, Mead and White’s
J.P. Morgan Library. The modern Canadian buildings that are nearest to its class are
Cobb’s Toronto Registry Office and
Lyle’s Bank of Nova Scotia, at Ottawa. One year later, the
Royal Architectural Institute of Canada gave its First Award, Class I, Monumental Buildings, to the Montreal temple. ==Conservation ==