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The Seagram Museum was a museum in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, preserving the heritage of the once venerable Canadian distillery Seagram. Located at 57 Erb Street West, the museum operated from May 1984 to March 1997. Designed by architect Barton Myers, it was built at a cost of $4.75 million and its entrance was a renovated late-19th century rack warehouse from the Seagram plant. Plans for the museum were announced in 1981. Peter Swann, a former director of the Royal Ontario Museum, was hired as the first director and oversaw the creation of the Seagram Museum. It had a variety of exhibits illustrating everyday life in the liquor distillery in the late 19th and early 20th century.
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