The first building on the site was the Chapel of Bishop's Palace, which was ordered built by BishopSaint-Vallier from 1693 to 1695 to replace a stone house purchased by Saint-Vallier in 1688.[1]
1777 British government rents the Chapel of Bishop's Palace within the Episcopal Palace of Quebec for the Legislative Council
1830s demolition of Chapel of Bishop's Palace (1833) and addition added with new main building and first wing of new Parliament Buildings to the Episcopal Palace (1830-1831)
Quebec City Courthouse – a three-storey wooden building built between 1799 and 1804; it burned down in 1873 (now home to Old Courthouse of Quebec)
2nd Parliament Buildings:
1859–1860 new Parliament Building at Côte de la Montagne completed and served sessions from 1860 to 1865
1866 capital of the province of Canada moves to Ottawa for final time (and becomes federal Parliament in 1867), and Quebec buildings becomes vacant briefly
1867–1883 the province of Quebec is created and the Parliament Buildings is designated home to new provincial Parliament
1883 Parliament Buildings destroyed in fire and relocated to the current buildings (began construction in 1877 and nearing completion
1884 – Parliament moved to the current Parliament Building (Quebec); the old building is demolished and reopened known as Parc Montmorency in 1894
The 2nd parliament building was a Greek Revival structure with a dome in the central structure flanked by two wings. Built between 1830 and 1850, it was destroyed by a fire in 1854.[2]
The building's interior is featured in Robert Harris' 1884 painting Conference at Quebec in 1864.