My previous post was about wandering around the Distillery District which by the way is 20 years old now. Back in 2003 it was surrounded by a part of the city that seemed to have been forgotten. In 2015 the PanAm games were held in Toronto. Athletes Village, i.e. housing for the athletes competing in the games was built new in what was now being called the West Don Lands. After the games, this housing was converted to “746 market-priced condos, 41 market-priced town homes, 250 affordable-rent apartments, 257 student dormitory units for George Brown College, office and retail units, and a YMCA recreation centre.” (Wikipedia) Development in the area continues on all sides of the Distillery.
below: Southside view of the new development on Mill Street (east of Cherry).
below: Northeast corner of Mill and Cherry. Part of this complex is a new Anishnawbe health centre.
below: Eastbound on Eastern Avenue at Trinity Street
below: Fire hydrant in a field of chicory, vacant lot surrounded by a fence.
below: Down and out. Grounded. Election signs left over from the recent by-election for mayor.
below: A large section of land at Parliament and Front that will become the site of Corktown station on the new Ontario Line is surrounded by hoardings. From here the line goes northwest to a new Moss Park station at Queen & Sherbourne – or it goes southeast to the existing railway tracks by the Lakeshore where it surfaces before a new station, East Harbour, at the foot of Broadview ( south of Eastern).
below: Nicholson Lane
below: There is a new mural on the St. Lawrence Community Recreation Centre painted by Darwin Peters from Pikangikum First Nation..
below: On the Esplanade
below: Photography exhibit along the Esplanade, “Mashkiki” by Morningstar Quill about life in Pikangikum First Nation. This photo shows a group of young women making ribbon skirts.
below: The exhibit was produced with the support of Jamii, a non-profit arts organization.
below: For those hot summer days when we’re all looking for a bit of relief!
below: Post more Bills
below: Working on the new north market building, St. Lawrence Market.
below: Looking westward from Front and George streets.
below: Lower Sherbourne
below: McVeighs Irish pub in an old building that is now surrounded by new developments, Richmond and Church.
below: The steeple of St James Cathedral peaks through the gap.
below: This is “Afrophilia”, an installation at the Toronto Sculpture Garden by Frantz Brent-Harris, a Jamaican artist now based in Toronto.
below: A closer look at two of the heads.
below: Crossing King Street.
below: Queen Street East
below: The present state of the northeast corner of Queen and Church (60 Queen St. East). Before becoming a placeholder for yet another condo development, it was a Shawarma’s King restaurant. That old yellow building may be living out its final days – since 2018 a very tall (54 to 57 storeys) building has been proposed for this site. The original proposal had the usual blah glass and steel at street level as shown on the condo website (queenchurch.com) but in November 2020 the existing building (and a couple of nearby buildings on Church St) was added to Toronto’s Heritage Register.
below: Queen Street is now closed at Church Street for work on the new Ontario Line subway. Rumour says that it will be closed 4 (5?) years. Yes, years. The subway will run under Queen Street and connect to the Yonge line at Queen and the University line at Osgoode.
below: Peering over the fence?
below: Looking west along Queen Street towards Yonge (behind the hoardings).
below: Trying to look west along Queen at Yonge.
below: The glass roof of the Eaton Centre is also being renovated and updated. Scaffolding now dominates the upper level of the mall.
below: More Queen Street closed… the closure runs as far west as Bay Street and Old City Hall.
below: Feeding the pigeons at Nathan Phillips square.
below: Group shot! A school group visiting City Hall.
below: Constructing a rainbow heart
below: …. which became an attraction before it was finished
below: Empty planters. Ugliness on Queen Street, right in front of Nathan Phillips Square and City Hall. Neglectful. Toronto can build it but Toronto can’t maintain it.
below: Mayor Gao for mayor! I don’t think that this was a serious candidate?! But then again, there were 101 people on the ballot in that by-election so maybe he was…..










































