It was a rainy commute home for many people last night. Not too miserable though, just enough drizzle to bring out a few umbrellas and create some wonderful reflections to play with.
Posts Tagged ‘streetcar’
it rained last night
Posted: October 24, 2017 in people, reflections, transportationTags: bike, car, city, crosswalk, dark, downtown, lights, night, pedestrians, people, rain, reflections, sidewalk, sky, streetcar, tree, TTC, umbrella, wet, windows
milky way revisited
Posted: July 21, 2017 in alleys, graffiti and street artTags: aliens, alley, face, graffiti, green people, lane, lion, Milky Way, mural, naked, painted, parkdale, people, rose, space aliens, stickers, street art, streetcar, tree, vines, weeds, women
Sometimes graffiti and street art have a short life span. Many taggers don’t care about what they are tagging over. Street art can also be “interactive” in that stickers and paste ups can get “added” to a piece. Anyone with a marker can have their say. On the bright side, new murals get painted and new paste -ups appear. And that is why I go back to the my favorite alleys every once in a while. This morning I walked the Milky Way again.
below: The Parkdale mural by Race Williams is still looking good.
below: The naked women are a bit more modestly dressed than they once were .
The most noticeable change is the fact that many pieces are now at least partially covered by greenery – small shrubs and tall weeds have proliferated and are looking quite healthy.
below: This lion is looking more and more like the king of the jungle even as the words faded and peel.
below: The small aliens at the top of the building are now in the shade of a fast growing tree.
below: And the larger aliens on the fence really need a hair cut now.
below: A large pink peony (at least that’s what it looks like)
below: The fence around the garden.
Previous Milky Way posts
Back to the Milky Way – Sept 2015
Walking the Milky Way – Oct 2014
Spadina open doors
Posted: June 29, 2017 in doorsTags: asian, Chinatown, Chinese, clothing, food, fruit, people, sale, shops, Spadina, stores, streetcar, TTC, vegetables
Spadina doors, stores with doors wide open to take advantage of the summer days. Spadina was once the center of the garment industry in Toronto. Then it evolved into Chinatown, especially the area south of College and north of Queen. It still retains some of its Chinese character although there are many other Asian and South Asian influences. There have also been some changes as the Asian merchants and residents move to the suburbs.
below: Racks of clothing for sale on the sidewalk
below: A quiet corner for a cigarette break
below: She’s standing outside a restaurant that’s covered with signs and menus.
below: There are usually many vendors with small tables of items for sale, such jewellery, herbs & other plants, small household items, clothing, knick knacks, etc.
below: And last, an open door of a different kind.
As you can see, the doors themselves are uninteresting, it’s the context that counts here.
This is a “Thursday Door” post. If you are interested in doors, there are lots of blogs that feature door photos on Thursdays…. check out Thursday Doors organized by Norm 2.0 for more information.
a streetcar, a giraffe, and a few dinosaurs
Posted: June 10, 2017 in graffiti and street artTags: alley, alleys, birdo, dinosaurs, giraffe, mural, old, outside, peeling, Sears St., stegasaurus, streetcar, streets, TTC, wall
Streetcar, giraffe, and dinosaurs – these are three words that most people would never have the opportunity to put together in one sentence without talking nonsense.
First, here is the streetcar that I am refering to. It is a mural on Connaught Avenue, on a building that is part of the TTC’s Russell Carhouse (also called Connaught Carhouse). The house in the mural is the Ashbridge Estate which is across Queen Street from the TTC yard. The sign over the door of the streetcar says 505 Hillsdale; I haven’t been able to find out why it says that.
Next on the list is the giraffe – a mural by birdo.
I’m sure that you can see the pattern developing! You’re obviously thinking, “Because the third word is dinosaurs, there must be a mural depicting dinosaurs.” .. and you’d be right. There are four dinosaurs on Sears street to be exact.
Three of the dinosaurs are on the same wall – the two above and the one below. All of them were painted by Mike Kennedy.
The fourth one is across the street. Sears is a street in name only, it’s narrow like an alley.
None of these murals is new but they are in out of the way places and I suspect that not many people have seen them. I hope that they were new to you!
from Castle Frank to Cabbagetown
Posted: March 3, 2017 in alleys, doors, graffiti and street art, history, locations, old buildings, stores, transportation, windows and wallsTags: angel, apartment buildings, architecture, Bloor St. East, bridge, cabbage, Castle Frank, Christmas wreath, door, flamingos, ghost sign, gothic cottage, graffiti, high rise buildings, Jesus, Mary, mural, rainbow shoelaces, religious, Ryan Dineen, station, statues, stores, street, streetcar, subway, the Daily Herald, trees, TTC, umbrellas, urban, window, winter, words, workers cottage
Another nice day, another ramble.
below: My starting point the other day was Castle Frank subway station (Bloor Street East, close to the top of Parliament Street). This station opened in 1966 although the entrance that you see in the photo was an addition that was added only a few years ago.
below: An interesting round window in the station entrance. You can see part of the window in the picture above, peaking from around the side of the tree trunk.
below: The subway “tunnel” between Sherbourne and Castle Frank stations isn’t really a tunnel at all. This view surprised me – I know that I have driven under this structure on Rosedale Valley Road. I don’t recall knowing that it was for the subway.
below: “It’s never too cold for rainbow shoelaces.” Sage advice for the winter time.
below: Graffiti under the bridge… even though I am drawn to bridges I didn’t go down the hill to investigate. That can be another blog post at another not so muddy time. This spot can be accessed from the Rekai Family Parkette which is at the SE corner of Bloor and Parliament, tucked in between Bloor and St. James Cemetery.
below: More graffiti seen from the parkette.
below: St. James Cemetery was opened in July of 1844 at a time when the population of Toronto was around 18,000 and most of them lived south of Queen Street. The cemetery would have been out in the country but now, more than 150 years later, the cemetery is in the middle of the city. There are 89,000 interments here including two of my great x 2 (or 3?) grandparents and some of their descendants (they’re not shown in the picture though!).
below: A little reminder that Christmas wasn’t all that long ago.
The fastest route from Castle Frank to Cabbagetown is straight down Parliament Street. But of course, the direct route is rarely the one that I take. The area is full of little alleys and lanes and they all call to me.
below: These animals are part of a mural painted in support of Riverdale Farm which is nearby.
below: Reading the news, many newses.
below: In Flos Williams Lane there are a number of stenciled words. “Guilty until proven rich” I first saw here a couple of years ago. I don’t walk this lane very often so I’m not sure how long ago the other sayings appeared.
below: Like most walks, there were interesting windows to be seen.
below: …and doors too. A very bright orange door!
below: But unlike most walks, there was a giant gecko or lizard.
One of the appeals of Cabbagetown is the number of older houses, many of which are heritage buildings.
below: This house was built in 1858 and its first resident was Charles MacKay, a customs official who lived here from 1858 to 1865. The infill line of townhouses behind it are a much more recent development.
below: Cabbagetown has more of these ‘workers cottages’ or ‘gothic cottages’ than anywhere else I’ve walked. This arrangement of three identical houses in a row is especially rare (but not unique, at least not yet).
below: This cottage is in the middle of another threesome but they are not identical. The yellow door on the pale blue house is a wonderful colour combination. A little bit of sunshine.
below: Even though it has been renovated and an addition added to the back, this house still retains some of its historical roots.
below: And more history… I was attracted to this building by the beautiful double doors. Once I was close to the house, I noticed the ghost sign hiding behind the tree branches. The Daily Herald is no longer but it the mark it made here remains. A mysterious mark though because I can find no record of such a publication. In fact, probably “the sign had been part of a play or film that the home’s owner was involved in and he installed the sign on an act of whimsy.” (source, bottom of page) You gotta love whimsy!
below: Whimsy you say? Bright pink flamingo whimsy in a store window. They look like they’re ready for a rainy day.
below: There were also some store windows that were a bit more serious.
below: I think that Carlton and Parliament is one of the most colourful intersections in the city and I always enjoy passing this way. This is the view if you are standing in the middle of Carlton street and looking east towards Parliament.
below: This large colourful mural on the wall of Cabbagetown Corner Convenience, NE corner of Carlton and Parliament, has become a landmark since it was painted by Ryan Dineen in 2005.
below: The 506 Carlton streetcar makes its left turn from Parliament. It’s never a quick and easy turn. In fact, it’s usually frustratingly slow.

And in case you were wondering, yes, you can find cabbages in cabbagetown. This big one is on the Cabbagetown mural on the side of the LCBO building.
And yes, there is a lot more to Cabbagetown than this…
and I will use that as an excuse to return another time!
from Riverside to Leslieville
Posted: April 22, 2016 in locationsTags: bench, cafes, Canada Dry, graffiti, history, Leslieville, mountie, mugs, murals, people, Queen Elizabeth, Queen St. East, reflection, rubiks cube, statue of liberty, stores, street scenes, streetcar, tea, troll, windows
A walk along Queen Street East from Broadview to Greenwood.
below: Welcome to Riverside, mural at the corner of Queen and Grant streets featuring the sign on the Queen bridge as it crosses over the Don River.
below: Farther east on Queen Street, at Curzon, there is this ‘Greetings from Leslieville’ mural.
There are many interesting little stores on this stretch of Queen Street.
All the benches have been painted in cheerful colourful stripes.
below: On the 21st of April (yesterday), Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her 90th birthday.
A number of stores and restaurants had displays in her honour.
Queen Street East was developed as long ago as the mid 1800’s and remnants of various decades can be found as one explores the area.
below: … details such as this fading Canada Dry sign. The formula for Canada Dry ginger ale was developed in the early 1900’s by John J. McLaughlin, of the same McLaughlin family whose early automobile factory led to the start of General Motors. This ginger ale was patented in Toronto in 1907. Usually the words ‘Canada Dry’ are written in red, not yellow. Is there a time when Canada Dry used yellow lettering?
below: At the corner of Queen and Coady there is also a ghost sign for Coady Sweets as well as an advertisement for Coca-Cola.

below: Call it luck – even a vintage car drove past while I was there.
below: An old KitKat advertisement on the side of Boston Discount Store. If you look closely, there is also an original Boston Ave street sign at the top right of the KitKat ad.
below: Even older are the buildings in the mural of Queen St. East circa 1926. I am not sure if this an accurate depiction of a particular stretch of Queen Street. It might be interesting to do some research to find out if the picture can be retaken, 90 years later. So far I have been unable to find out anything about a Jackson Brothers store on Queen East.
below: A sign of the new, some of the new TTC streetcars are now running along Queen Street.
below: A mural depicting Frank Zappa along with the words
“Stupidity has a certain charm. Ignorance does not.”
below: Like so many places and streets in Toronto, there are condos going up here too.
below: The railway tracks pass over Queen Street. A number of years ago the underpass was decorated with paintings of different animals and those paintings remain in good shape.
below: Once upon a time trains served this area. There was a railway station here but it is long gone.
transcription:
“In 1896, the Grand Trunk Railway opened its Queen East Station to serve Toronto’s growing east end. Renamed Riverdale Station in 1907, the building stood here on De Grassi Street at Queen Street East. Its dramatic turret, bay window, and a deep overhanging roof were defining features typical of small railway stations of the period.
In 1904, a streetcar collided with a freight train at the level crossing on Queen Street East, killing three people and injuring 18. This and subsequent accidents led to the elevation of the new Union Station railway corridor above city streets and sidewalks. The station was moved in 1927 to accommodate the new embankment for the underpass, the first of nine to be completed. Dwindling passenger numbers during the Great Depression led to the closure of Riverdale Station in 1932 and its demolition in 1974.”
below: Looking west from under the railway bridge.
below: A train themed mural in an alley just off Queen Street.
canary and swan
Posted: April 15, 2016 in locations, public artTags: Borins and Marman, Canary district, Cherry St., corktown, DOn River, lamp posts, no shoes, public art, streetcar, swan, Tadashi Kawabata, The Water Guardian, TTC, YMCA
Within the past week or so, the fences around the new Canary District have come down. Toronto’s newest development is now open to the public so I thought I would check it out.
I started my walk from the streetcar stop at King and Sumach. Walking down Sumach Street I passed the metal fence that separates the school property from the street. This stone building was built in 1887 as Sackville Street School and it has been used as a school ever since. At the moment it is home to Inglenook Community School. The fence with it’s double layer of metal – rusted in the back and shiny in the front – is interesting in the daytime but even more so at night when it is lit with a series of lights located between the layers and near the base of the fence.
When I took the above picture I was standing on the new streetcar tracks that run south from King Street. The tracks are ready and the wires have been installed. Streetcars will begin servicing the route in June as part of route 514. No map or schedule appears on the TTC website yet but apparently this route will run between the Dufferin Gate Loop and the new loop on Cherry Street via King Street
below: Looking north from Eastern Avenue at the new streetcar tracks on Sumach Street.
At Eastern Avenue, Sumach Street becomes Cherry Street. The new Cherry Street YMCA is on the east side of the street. The sidewalk is wide but at the moment the branches of the young trees are at face level and you have to be careful where you walk.
below: The bright red detailing on the YMCA building continues over the entry way. Part of the new residences for George Brown College peak out from behind.
Front Street now has wide sidewalks. None of the businesses have moved into the ground level retail spaces yet but the signs in the windows suggest that a number of cafes, restaurants, and food stores will soon be opening. A couple of public art pieces are also on the sidewalk.
below: ‘Lampposts’ by Tadashi Kawabata
below: Looking up from underneath the artwork.
below: ‘The Water Guardians’ stand over a soft squishy playpad.
It was designed by Jennifer Marman and Daniel Borins.
below: There are a lot of little design elements that have been incorporated into the this development including what I think is a bench. With a light underneath?
below: The sidewalk around the trees is made from two colours of brick. The opening for the tree is just the right size to collect garbage. Whether or not these traps get cleaned out remains to be seen.
below: The Canary District is not yet finished as this sign clearly states.
below: The sculpture ‘No Shoes’ by Mark di Suvero is now accessible. The artwork was completed in 1967 and originally installed in High Park. In 2013 it was renovated and moved to Corktown Common.
below: The pavillion at Corktown Commons in the distance.
below: The Bala Pedestrian Underpass, aka the south exit from Corktown Commons, goes under the railway tracks and merges with the Don Landing part of the Lower Don Valley trail. The artwork was designed by Rolande Souliere and is part of the StreetARToronto initiative. A yellow Lovebot and a happy orange monster have been added to the scene too!
below: Nature in the city. Birds of a different feather. On the Don River, just south of Corktown Common a pair of swans is nesting. One of the swans was swimming a short distance away while the other was sitting on the nest. Cars pass by on the Don Valley Parkway unaware of the domestic scene below them.
old friends
Posted: December 15, 2015 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: alfred hitchcock, alley, animals, blob, butterfly, dog, Dundas West, goalie, graffiti, graffiti animals, graffiti people, keele, king kong, lane, laser, monkey, monster, mural, psycho, raccoon, street art, streetcar, subway, TTC, wall, what's all the noise about
In the world of graffiti and street art, change is usually inevitable and sometimes interesting. One exception seems to be the alley that you can see from subway between Keele and Dundas West stations. The building on the corner of Bloor West and Indian Road is new, but otherwise little is changed. Even though most of the street art is the same as before, I don’t think that I have posted it in the past. Here is documentation of most of it.
below: King Midas still looks over the TTC parking lot at Keele station. Well, I’ve always assumed that it was King Midas although he was the guy whose touch turned everything to gold, not grey.
below: And this monkey is still asking what the noise is all about.
below: ‘Sink or Swim’ by elicser
below: A lovebot shares wall space with an Uber5000 birdie….
below: … because Everybody’s a Winner
below: Laser, not loser. Now with laser vision.
below: Ghostbusters in a hard to reach place
below: Zooks is still on her wall.
below: This turtle has seen better days
below: Guard dog at the bottom of the stairs
below: She seems to turn when the door opens, a mural by EGR art
below: He (she?) still keeps goal on the back porch.
below: This mural also has a painting of Marilyn Monroe in it along with Bruce Lee and Alfred Hitchcock. There were too many cars parked in front of it when I walked past the other day.
below: King Kong dominates this wall.
below: We Rise Up
imagine design create
Posted: November 4, 2015 in graffiti and street artTags: alley, art, balloons, bobby, building, colin makes art, cool ethan, gameboy lovebot, garage, garage doors, gas mask, girl, houses, lane, lovebot, man, Monica on the moon, mural, police, spray paint, stencils, street art, streetcar, TTC
As I sort through the photos that I took this past summer, I keep finding pictures of street art that I have not yet posted. The following collection were taken in the Dupont and Ossington area back in July.
below: A very horizontal piece by Cool Ethan, obviously
below: A TTC streetcar passes by the Massey Harris building, a mural by Colin Turner Bloom. This office building, at 915 King St. West, was built in 1883 as the headquarters for the Massey Harris Co. It was declared a heritage building in 1973. Since then it has been developed as lofts/condos.
below: A city scene mural by Monica on the moon, just off Dupont Avenue.
below: Another garage door
below: Up, up and away with a bunch of red balloons.
below: Bobby with a gas mask, stencil on garage door in a lane.
below: Two lovebots on Dupont.
















































































































































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