The eastern end of the Kay Gardner Belt Line Park crosses over Yonge St and the subway just south of Davisville station. It then runs across the north side of Mt. Pleasant cemetery. It comes to an end at Mt. Pleasant Road where the trail merges into the roads that run through the cemetery.
In 2014 students from Greenwood School painted a mural at this location. The mural has three main elements. A train to represent the Belt Line, the name of the community that it is located in (Mt Pleasant Village), and the words ‘use Dominion Coal and Wood’. The last part is because not long ago, on this site, stood the large concrete silos that the Dominion Coal and Wood company used to store coal and wood. The shape of the black background is very similar to the shape of the silos if viewed from above.
below: Mural, with Mt. Pleasant Road above it.
below: Plaque located on the site of the old silos (now in the bushes beside a condo)
transcription of the Heritage Toronto plaque:
“Dominion Coal and Wood
Originally located on Danforth Avenue, the Dominion Coal and Wood Company was founded in 1912 by William H. Smith. In 1929, the company opened a landmark facility on this site. Its nine adjoining concrete silos were designed by E.P. Muntz Engineering Company. Coal and wood were transported here by rail car along the former Belt Line Railway and then sold as heating fuel to local businesses and home owners.
Originally just one among many similar suppliers in the city, Dominion Coal and Wood outlasted most of its competitors. The company expanded into building supplies as coal sales dwindled, but continued to sell coal here until the site was closed in 1999. Although recognized as an increasingly rare type of industrial architecture, the historic silos were demolished in 2001. “
below: The nine silos, about 1972. The photo is from City of Toronto Archives and was found online at JB’s Warehouse (a good source if you are interested in more information at Dominion Coal and Wood)
below: I tried to replicate the above photo, about 42 years later. The Mt. Pleasant streetcars are long gone as is the gas station on the NW corner of Merton and Mt. Pleasant. A corner of the tall white apartment building on the right can be seen peaking from behind newer condo buildings. Of course, the dominant part of the picture is the condo development that was built on the site of the Dominion silos in 2002.
Very nice! I remember Dominion Coal, & the end of that era. That whole street, Merton, is totally changed now.