16. Two Terraces - Dundas and Wellner After the death of Owen Connolly his trustees erected (below) in 1889, a typical William Harris design, and yet with its own unique assembly of characteristic Harris elements. The asymmetrical facade boasts snub and hipped gables, monumental chimneys, a balcony, verandas with spool ornamentation, scalloped and straight shingles, board and batten cladding, and the flared string courses common to Queen Anne Style buildings. The architectural integrity of has been maintained over the years, and it remains today after 100 years one of the landmark buildings of Charlottetown . (right), 55 - , shows some of the same characteristics as , but it was built 11 years later in 1900. Harris's treatment of verandas underwent change in the meanwhile. Lathe- turned ornament is gone, replaced by horseshoe shaped openings related to the umbrages within which he set the front doors of several of his houses. was built by W.W. Wellner out of materials salvaged from the demolition of a 32 room hotel built in in 1879 that had turned out to be a financial disaster for its owner, Henry Coombs . Mr. Wellner was Mr. Coombs mortgagee, and like Mr. Cundall and Mr. Beales before him, came into possession of a building its builder failed to pay for. was restored by Ron Cameron in the early 1980s. A scale model of the building made from a photocopy of Harris's plans is preserved at the Confederation Centre Art Gallery .