On Gerrard Street East, beside a parkette, is a grey concrete building that has been brightened by some paintings by Spud1 and kreech9 (and others?)
….And around the corner, past a pile of tires, is a wall of flowers, a happy face, and a rainbow.
Most people who visit Graffiti Alley don’t realize that there is another section of street art to the west. Technically, Graffiti Alley is the lane behind the south side of Queen Street West between Spadina and Augusta. The next section of the alley, from Augusta to Portland, is Rush Lane. Unfortunately there is a large Loblaws/Winners that blocks the lane on the west side of Portland.
To access the next couple of blocks of laneway, you have to detour down to Richmond Street and turn right. Public Lane is a few steps away from Richmond & Portland.
below: Public Lane turns to the left, regardless of what the arrow says.
below: Between here and Bathurst Street, a lot of street art has disappeared as redevelopment of Richmond has progressed. The large black building on the right has its garage entrance from the lane so watch for cars when you’re back there.
below: A few circles of colour on a grey wall, a reminder that there was once street art here.
below: Beyond Bathurst there is a long stretch of laneway. A lot of the paintings here are older and some may have already appeared in this blog.
below: A 2020 mural by Elicser Elliot
below: Huey Newton by elicser
below: Feelings Boi and a pink daisy from Life©
below: Woodstock love
below: By luvsomone
below: Yosemite Sam is now boxed in.
below: A resting UBER 5000 yellow birdie. Or is that a yoga mat?!
below: This little unicorn has always been a favorite of mine. Definitely an oldie now.
below: Collaboration between luvsomone, vuducats/Christina Mazzulla
below: Mural by Rodwell Soller
below: Happy face skulls
Sandown Lane runs behind the buildings on the north side of Kingston Road, west of Midland Avenue in Scarborough.
I was walking here because I was on the lookout for a series of murals by B.C. Johnson that have been painted over the past few years.
B.C. Johnson is the person responsible for first painting the rainbow arch beside the Don Valley Parkway – way back in the 1970’s. I blogged about the Moccasin Trail, which leads to the arch, last year. Just in case you’ve never seen it, here it is from last fall:
Back to Sandown Lane….
below: A deer with large antlers, a man fishing.
below: Sunflowers and butterflies by the gate on a (real) door.
below: Waterfalls
below: That’s an inventive way to advertise your handyman business!
While I was in the area, I walked back along Kingston Road.
I have walked this portion of Kingston Road before. There are many large Mural Routes paintings of historic Scarborough scenes. They can be seen in the 2017 blog post, Cliffside murals, so I won’t repeat them here except for this one photo: ‘H.M. Schooner, Onondaga c. 1793’ by Jeff Jackson 1992.
below: Back in 2017 this was a sushi restaurant and it was covered on all four sides by ‘Let’s Take a Walk on the Wildside’ painted by B.C. Johnson the year previously. Some of the scenes from that mural can be same in the same Cliffside blog post linked to above.
below: Tara Inn, the Irish Pub, beside the Banglabazar Supermarket.
below: St Pauls United Church, near the west end of Sandown Lane.
below: A Roman Catholic church, Saint Theresa, Shine of the Little Flower at Midland and Kingston Road. The church was built in 1966 to replace a smaller one, also built in a Spanish style, from 1933. The Church was dedicated as a Shrine in honour of St Therese of Lisieux, a saint who had been canonized in 1925.
UPDATE:
Two developments on Kingston Road will impact this stretch of the lane. First, an 8 storey mixed use building at 2448-2450 (the Cat Hospital) as well as a slightly shorter 6 storey mixed use development at 2380-2382 (a vacant lot, Wongs Martial Arts). Both developments have had their site plans approved at city council.
Recently I was in the area east of Danforth and Main when I had one of those moments where I stop and say to myself “I’ve been here before”. I recognized some of the street art in the lane (see Alleyway of Dreams, 2016). For this blog post, I have started with the artwork that I didn’t remember on the assumption that it is newer. The murals that remain from 2016 all seem to be in good shape.
below: A collage of pictures called “Against All Odds” in the shape of a map.
below: On the same wall as the above is this mural of a swan. My apolgies to Alika, Angela, Dylan, Molly, Serval, Bandi, Ludo and Weal (?) whose names I chopped off. To the right of the swan, and behind a parked car is a piece by Mediah.
below: A hummingbird with a red hibiscus flower.
Love birds of a different colour
below: There had been a fire in the back of a furniture store not long before I walked the alley this summer.
below: A black cat in the moonlight, sitting on some very curly branches. This row of fences was painted in 2016.
below: This blue pug was here previously but the rabbit that was once beside it seems to have disappeared.
below: The blue rhinoceros with the whimsical horn hasn’t moved either.
below: Stay Out is still sprayed on the old wood door but now it has a new lock. The blue 666 is also an addition.
below: “Bee Haven” from 2014. One of the earliest bee/pollinator murals in the city.
below: Signatures. The mural was painted by Elie J. Saad, Sarah Van Dusen, and Curtia Wright with help from Community Centre 55 kids.
This blog post is a result of a walk down the alley behind Bloor Street West between Dundas West and Keele where the lane runs between the back of the stores and buildings on Bloor and the subway tracks. Some of the street art in this lane can be seen from the subway and some of it I have shown in the past. Whether it’s because of Covid or because I was lucky that day, there were very few cars parked in the lane.
below: I can see you, reflected back
below: Another part of the Uber5000 mural. Everybody is a winner!!
below: An old elicser mural
below: Float away in the 416
below: Mary prays in a small garden at the end of a backyard along the subway tracks.
My walk the other day started with a coffee and a croissant from Broadview Espresso, just north of the Danforth. It was a bit chilly and damp to be eating & drinking outside but that’s the way of the world at the moment, at least in Toronto. At least walking helps keep you warm! Anyhow, just outside the coffee shop was a sidewalk unicorn painted by whatsvictorupto. There was one on each of the 4 corners of the intersection of Broadview and Pretoria. Here are two of them.
whether you’re walking
or on a bike
there’s always something to see along the Danforth or behind in its alleys.
There are windows to look in
below: A great assortment of Covid masks
below: Multilingual covid signs on the window of the Greek grocery – where shelves with oregano, tomato paste, pasta, coffee beans, grape juice, eggplant, and candy are all display.
There is more street art and graffiti to find, sometimes at your feet
below: Grounded Together, A painting by Caitlin Taguibao on the sidewalk
and sometimes closer to eye level.
below: Skull and sticker
Posters with social/political messages can also be found.
below: End White supremacy above, and now a poster re stats in Toronto “Black people in Toronto are 20 times more likely to be shot and killed by the police”. Source: from the Human Rights Commission, 2018.
In this case, wake up and see the climate crisis. A faded bee on pink juxtaposed with the black, red, and white butterfly painted on the street box.
below: I get the no peeing part. I suspect that those aren’t eggs and this is a warning? or a threat?
And then there is artwork of a different kind – on the front of St. Irene Chrisovalantoy Greek Orthodox Church built in 1974
stained glass over the front entrance, from the inside
Even on a grey day there are colours to be found, not just in the artwork and stained glass windows, but in the nature around us.
below: Some sunshine in bloom
below: autumn vines with a street art background
below: This tree dominates with its abundance of red leaves. You may have also spotted the murals in the background.
below: These are the murals in the second Butterfly Laneway project (2018). Check this link (metamorphosis in the lane) to see all the murals.
below: One of the murals is carefully put aside while work is done on the back of this house.
below: More renovations. Apparently, people staying home because of covid = a boom in home renovations. Both Home Depot and Lowes reported increases in revenue for the second quarter of 2020, both were more than expected.
below: The unusual roofline and trim on these two houses caught my eye. I also love the fact that they are attached yet have a distinct character of their own. Brick vs stone, little peaked roof over the door vs. green and white metal awning, rectangular window vs bay window. Like identical twins trying to be their own person.
Danforth subway line, Donlands station. Ten years ago, it was decided that Donlands station needed a second exit and that it would be on the corner of Strathmore and Donlands, One building, 17 and 19 Dewhurst would have to be torn down to make way for the new exit. 19 Dewhurst was sold to the city in 2018 and just last year the property at 17 Dewhurst was expropriated.
Across the street at 14 Dewhurst, the old Temple Baptist Church (1925) is being redeveloped as condos, the Sunday School Lofts.
The home remodeling business may be doing well but the restaurants are hurting. As of the end of October, indoor dining in Toronto was prohibited.
below: Abyssinia restaurant. One of the many different ethnic restaurants along the Danforth. Although it is still referred to as Greektown, and the Greek influence is still strong, you can eat a wide range of foods from different cultures. As you move east along the Danforth, there is a strong African (especially Ethiopian) presence.
below: Did you know that gourmet cinnamon rolls was a thing? Did I run across the street to buy one? (Almost!!).
below: The northwest corner of Danforth and Donlands. You can choose between halal chicken and pizza, or dim sum.
Other little graffiti stickers, posters, and paste-ups:
below: Another flying bicycle
below: Mad Dog Wrecking Crew
below: A very sad man
below: Checkerboard sneaker and a big tooth-ed skull by mr. Toon.
below: The paper is torn but it is: “She clasped my face in her bones and kissed silence into my mouth” a quote by Amiri Bakara (I saw one exactly the same in Kensington last summer).
below: With a car parked in its mouth
below: Does the blue haired woman know whats lurking behind her?
Happy November – let’s keep walking and see what we can see along the way…. and in case you need help…!
Most of these pictures were taken on a walk within the area bounded by Dundas East, Broadview, Queen East, and Carlaw.
below: All or nothing
below: Same same but different.
below: “We miss you” at Queen Alexandra Middle School. An older school, built in 1904/5, used to be on this site. It was named after the Queen of England at the time, the wife of King Edward VII, Queen Alexandra.
below: Also at Queen Alexandra Middle School, about 200 large black and white portraits of staff and students were on display on the exterior wall of the school. This installation is part of the global ‘Inside Out’ project. To date, Inside Out has appeared in 129 countries and has involved more than 260,000 people. In fact, they were in Toronto for Nuit Blanche back in 2015.
below: Public art at Carlaw and Dundas. I had mentioned this structure by Pierre Poussin back in March of this year. Not a lot has been done on it in the meantime except for the preparations for some sort of pattern at ground level.
below: The railway tracks cross Dundas Street just west of Carlaw. The tracks run on a NE – SW diagonal as they travel south from Gerrard.
below: Save Jimmie Simpson park poster. The Ontario Line, or the Relief Line of the subway/LRT may or may not come this way. The Relief Line was once planned as an underground line under Pape to almost Eastern before swinging west towards downtown. Someone then said why not run it above ground where the tracks already exist between Gerrard & Pape and the south end of the Don Valley Parkway at Corktown Common- and we can have a Leslieville stop. Has any decision been made? Is Toronto going to leave it all in limbo, or in the discussion/planning stage, forever and ever… and ever….
below: The north part of Jimmie Simpson Park. The park is a right angle triangle with a peak at Dundas East and a base along Queen East. The long side of the triangle is railway tracks which run behind the trees.
below: Once upon a time there was a railway station here, on Queen East at De Grassi that is. It was operational between 1896 and 1932 and demolished in 1974. In the beginning there was a level crossing here but after a number of accidents, including a collision between a freight train and a street car in 1904, the railway corridor was elevated.
below: Old black and white photo from the City of Toronto Archives, found online at “Old Time Trains”
below: Aged and peeling painting of a Canada goose that was on the railway underpass.
below: Eat the rich – and a picnic table is provided for your convenience. Don’t worry about the trains, they’re long gone. This was once a spur line and it hasn’t existed for years . You can still find small sections of track but most of it has been paved over. (near Carlaw and Dundas)
below: Looking west, towards downtown, along Dundas East. The old red brick building is on the northeast corner of Dundas and Broadview.

below: Flipped around and now looking east from Broadview in 1954. The red brick building from the above photo appears to be Dennis House and it seems that they are advertising the fact that they have televisions. On the south side of Dundas is a drug store. That building is still there but now it is a variety store whose windows are often covered with Lotto649 and LottoMax ads. In fact, the picture of the Bell telephone boxes near the beginning of this post was taken here.

photo credit: City of Toronto Archives, found online on a Blog TO page
below: This jumble of colours and lines can be found just east of Broadview and they are just visible in the background of the above picture. I love the little white door that probably leads to a basement apartment (or a secret garden in the front yard?!)
below: If you walk farther east on Dundas from Broadview you will see a collection of old two storey houses with their slate mansard roofs and dormer windows. This roof style is typical of “Second Empire” houses built in the late 1800s. I’ve always been intrigued by this group of houses but I have never been able to find out much about their history.
below: The end houses, at Boulton, have already been replaced.
below: And there are houses with similar architecture on nearby side streets.
Last but not least, a little bit of graffiti to close off this post.
below: Urban ninja squadron
A while ago, a group of street artists took over Graffiti Alley and painted a number of murals and street art pieces dedicated to the Black Lives Matter movement. This is a large sample of the work that was completed as part of that project ‘Paint the City Black’.
below: A tribute to Breonna Taylor by elicsereliot
below: Martin Luther King Jr with “Police brutality ends now. RIP Jamal”
below: Free the Revolution
below: A Lovebot heart supported by a black hand a white hand working together.
below: No Justice, No peace, a mandala by Opola Karim
below: A mural by @sumartist (Paul Glyn-Williams) – I can’t breathe, the last words of George Floyd, surrounded by the words “But we can hear you”.
below: A poser bunny
below: RIP Jamal Francique by bubzart (aka Bubzlitto Brigante). Jamal was shot by Peel Region police earlier this year.
below: A portrait of James Baldwin (1924-1987) painted by Phillip Saunders. Baldwin was an American writer and activist.
below: A large paste up by Adeyemi Adegbesan
below: Leyland Adams painted this portrait of Malcolm X.
“You don’t have to be a man to fight for freedom.
All you have to be is an intelligent human.”
Yesterday’s meandering walk around a neighbourhood was a loop from Bathurst subway station.
below: So happy to see this pair yesterday! When I was walking down Yonge street a few days ago, they passed me and I didn’t notice until they were out of camera range.
You can’t talk about Bloor and Bathurst without mentioning the redevelopment of Mirvish Village.
below: Purple door
below: Pale blue door
below: Pink, well probably faded red, door – and yes, it became a game of how many different coloured doors could I find. It looks too small doesn’t it?
below: Dobgoblin and drawings on the greenish door.
below: Anchored vs held down?
below: Chalk heart
below: Chalkboard philosophy, I think, I can’t be certain though. Maybe the gnomes know.
below: It’s still Covid-19 time, still line-ups in the grocery store
below: The Green Beanery coffee shop at Bloor and Bathurst is now permanently closed. What I have missed most these past few weeks is discovering little coffee shops to stop at as I walk.
below: A riot of magnolia blossoms just about to be in full bloom
below: The sign has become not a running stop
below: Christie and Garnet
below: Perly Family Lane with its painted garage doors. For more pictures of the garages, see my blog post from 2016.
below: Old and new side by side
below: And nearby, short and tall
below: Small house, large yard
below: A large and impressive sycamore tree reaching up to grab the sky.
below: Basketball in the alley
below: An old Pontiac Parisienne with its rear bumper on the ground. It seems to have its own lot. Parisiennes were produced through the 1960s and 1970s ans then well into the 1980s. Would a car maker today call a car model a Parisienne?
below: A white picket fence. Is there something nostalgic or sentimental about a white picket fence? Or is that only if you’re “of a certain age”? Why did it become a symbol of middle class suburbia?
below: Keeping an eye on the street
I came across the garage belonging to Albino Carreira that I saw, and blogged about, back in 2016. He has added more shells, beads, and small objects.
below: Side of the garage
below: As a bonus, there was a brief encounter with this van – complete with a wave.
below: Before I go, one last door. This time it’s mottled brown as there is some creamy orangey colour being revealed as the brown peels away.
Most people are still staying home or at least close to home. You’re still not going to see many people in my photos because I am still avoiding them, still walking in quieter places. Sometimes those places happen to be streets that once upon a time (only a month ago?) were busy.
below: An empty parking lot.
below: A very quiet Broadview subway station.
below: A very tall and lanky animal on a pole. It’s missing a leg or two.
below: The TTC streetcar tracks in the middle of being replaced, on Broadview just south of Danforth.
below: More TTC construction, this time another access to Chester station is being built.
below: After a month of no shopping except for food and even no window shopping, this bright red telephone caught me eye as I walked past. Salt and pepper shakers in a store window: Flamingoes, pink swans, penguins, cats, monkeys, and little yellow chicks – cute ones and funny ones like the hot dogs, as well as political ones like Trump and his North Korean counterpart.
below: Inspired to do stuff? I think I identify more with the mug beside these days.
below: A Covid-19 message from the Danforth Music Hall – “Please take care of each other”.
below: Posters reminding people to share smiles and kindness
below: An electric sign outside Eastend United Church invites people to join their Sunday services on Facebook.
below: The mannequins had the most stylish face masks.
below: Beware of rabbit.
below: A hummingbird is painted on the pillar.
below: Takeout with distancing – a story that is repeated all over the city as restaurants try to stay afloat.
below: Social distancing leads to line ups outside Tims
below: “See you after the curve flattens”