Posts Tagged ‘Eglinton Square’

This has become one of the more forlorn corners in the city – the northeast corner of Eglinton and Vic Park.   I am not sure what the structure was originally used for or what it looked like back in the day.  Now it just stands there, perhaps in limbo like the Eglinton LRT that it sits next to.

concrete and glass rectangular structure beside a large empty parking lot

There is another one at the other end of the Golden Mile Mall (one block east at Pharmacy & Eglinton).  Brutalistic and ugly.

two women with an umbrella on a sunny day, under a concrete and glass structure

The Golden Mile Mall opened in 1954.  And even Queen Elizabeth II visited it (in 1959).

below: Golden Mile Mall parking lot today.  The mall (or plaza) has a No Frills and a Joe Fresh, both of which are part of Loblaws.  In fact, Choice Properties REIT (also Loblaws) owns the 19 acre site and has plans to redevelop it into a mixed use site.   The site runs north of Eglinton from Victoria Park to Pharmacy.  It’s early in the process so anything can happen but if you are interested, the site plan is a downloadable pdf

large parking lot at golden mile mall, not many cars

Did that tall metal structure have a purpose? Or just decoration?

Even back in the 1950s the parking lot was enormous.  I get the impression that the golden mile wasn’t so golden if you didn’t own a car.

black and white photo from 1950s of cars in a parking lot in front of a mall, the golden mile mall

Photo Source: From Old Toronto Series facebook page. If you are interested in the way Toronto used to look, check them out!

below: Part of the mall was destroyed by fire in 1986

black and white photo of firemen rolling up hoses in front of burnt out woolworths store

Photo Credit: Rick Eglinton, Toronto Star Photograph Archive, “Original Toronto Star caption: Fire guts part of Golden Mile plaza. Three of the 50 firefighters called out yesterday to battle a spectacular fire that gutted the west end of Scarborugh’s Golden Mile Plaza roll up their hoses after finally dousing the last ember. The mall, built mostly of wood in the 1950s and once Canada biggest, is now being demolished. The Ontario Fire Marshall’s Office has not yet determined the cause of the blaze. Published in Toronto Star, 16 December 1986”.  Found online at Toronto Public Libbrary Digital

 

development notice sign for redevelopment of golden mile mall property at Eglinton and Victoria Park

two women walking along the sidewalk as a truck passes by

As I alluded to above, the Eglinton LRT has been built here.  As most of you know, this is the mystery transit line – nobody knows when it’s going to be operational.  Not even Metrolinx knows.  Coincidences are such that after I took these photos I discovered that Metrolinx was supposed to make an announcement about the Eglinton LRT this afternoon (Sept 27).  As it turns out the announcement was that there was no announcement but they will make more announcements in a couple of months.

below: So O’Connor LRT station sits waiting…   Just in case you don’t know, O’Connor station is at Eglinton & Vic Park (O’Connor Drive ends at Vic Park a short distance south of here).

empty LRT station with yellow and white barricade

below: O’Connor LRT station, from another angle

LRT station on Eglinton

below: I was shocked to see a streetcar pull into the station!  They really are running tests or training people, or whatever it is they’re doing.  Back in early June 2021 (more than two years ago!) the first LRT vehicles made their debut in Toronto (blog post from that day)

eglinton lrt vehicle at o'connor station

tracks and empty platfor at o'connor lrt station

When the area was first settled it became farmland.  A few apple trees still grow along the side of Pharmacy Ave

apples growing on apple tree

During WW2, the Canadian government bought some of that farmland and built a munitions plant known as GECo (General Engineering Company). This factory was south of Eglinton and east of Pharmacy. After the war, many other industries moved into the area.  Beginning in the 1980s, the industries started leaving.

below: Today there are still a few left such as this IPEX facility – they make thermoplastic pipes (such as PVC pipes used in plumbing)

barbed wire surrounds a group of chemical silos

Another industry, Flexible Packaging Corp, has moved on

front end loader, digger, demolishing a brick industrial building

demolition of industrial building

If you google their address, 1891 Eglinton Ave East, you will discover that there are plans for the latest trend – the mixed use community – here too.  Tall condo towers, retail, and public space (here 5 towers, 4 of which between 30 and 45 storeys).  There are going to be a few of these along Eglinton.  For instance, the Crosstown neighbourhood is well underway at Eglinton and Don Mills.  And there is the Golden Mile Mall redevelopment that I mentioned above.

building being demolished, broken walls, no doors, sign that says truckers report to office

The Eglinton LRT has, not surprisingly, encouraged a lot of redevelopment.  Almost every building along Eglinton between Victoria Park and Pharmacy has a blue and white development notice in front.   I didn’t walk farther east but I suspect that a similar story is playing out there too.

below: At the southwest corner of Eglinton and Pharmacy, one tall tower of 35 storeys

blue and white development notice sign in front of a Burger King

below: North side of Eglinton, 2 towers – 38 and 40 storeys.

blue and white development notice sign in front of a Bank of Montreal building

Across the street from the Golden Mile Mall is Eglinton Square, another mall. It too has a development notice out front.   It was dated 2018 so take it with a grain of salt that the mall is retained but 91 rental units behind it will disappear. … Can we believe that?  So…  A quick google and yikes!  Seven towers, 5 of which are 40 storeys or more for 1 Eglinton Square.   Really?  Are we that short of ideas for housing?  In twenty to thirty years are we going to look around and wonder what the hell happened here?

street scene with little green sign for eglinton square entrance

below: HBC on the west side of Eglinton Square

entrance to Hudsons Bay store at Eglinton Square

below: This is the triangle formed by O’Connor Drive, Eglinton Ave., and Victoria Park Ave.  The parkette that was here is all dug up.   I’m not sure that I want to know what’s happening here.

levelled ground, dirt, construction equipment working there,

Graffiti

small white skull, graffiti painted on a black metal box

below: Danger due to blunt mop.  At first I thought it was someone’s strange humour but on closer look realized that it was an advert for a soundcloud account.

danger due to blunt mop sign on hydro pole

below: Help wanted!  and “help” available at a price

signs on the side of a blue and white free newspaper box, one sign says help wanted, and the other is an ad for viagra and cialis

sidewalk on Vic Park near Eglinton, sign advertising cannabis at lowest prices,

looking through a glass wall where 2 panes of glass are missing and the others have graffiti on them

*****

Additional Note:

This is the “Progress Chart” released by Metrolinx today re the Eglinton LRT.