Hanging out and Yonge and Dundas and trying to stay dry
Posts Tagged ‘TTC’
rainy day people
Posted: September 26, 2022 in locations, peopleTags: Dundas, families, hoodies, people, puddles, rain, rain coats, splashing, streetcars, TTC, umbrellas, walking, wet, Yonge Dundas Square, Yonge St.
in transit
Posted: August 1, 2022 in old buildings, people, transportationTags: architecture, bus, College St., downtown, Dundas St., Filmores Hotel, mural, people, redevelopment, Ryerson, Ryerson School of Management, streetcar, TMU, Toronto Metropolitan University, transit, TTC
Yesterday, Sunday of the long August weekend, I was sitting on a streetcar after walking around downtown. I was in no rush; I was enjoying the scenery and the people watching. The streetcar detoured off route so I didn’t end up where I expected to. But no problem, I had my camera with me.
These photos are glimpses of life in the city as seen through a streetcar window as it passes by. Most of them were taken through glass… and often the streetcar was moving… so please don’t expect technically perfect shots!
below: Northeast corner of Spadina and College streets.
below: “The Best in Town”for banana boats! cones! sundaes! shakes!
below: Dundas at Bay. Ryerson School of Management, Best Buy, and Canadian Tire.
below: Reflections on Dundas
below: Surfacing from Dundas subway station
below: The newest mural near Dundas and Victoria.
below: University buildings at Dundas and Church – and the rebranding of Ryerson as TMU (Toronto Metropolitan University).
below: Ran out of gas, northeast corner of Dundas and Church
below: Dundas and Mutual. An old building put to a modern use.
below: The sign says it all. Every time I pass Filmores I am surprised to still see it standing. I thought that it was supposed to be torn down months (years?) ago. I was also surprised to see Filmores on sites like Expedia, Hotel.com and Booking.com. You can’t actually book one of their “straight forward rooms” on these sites, you have to call or email the hotel directly. If you want to know more than that, you’ll have to do your own research!
below: You might be able to stay at Filmores, but you can’t eat at The Love Cafe anymore.
below: Christmas wreaths on the doors of Dunhill Electric Co.
below: Dundas and Ontario Streets, Royal Oak Inn
below: Dundas and Parliament, north side
Happy trails!
snowy morning on Queen West
Posted: March 20, 2022 in alleys, graffiti and street art, landmarks, storesTags: alley, buildings, bus shelters, daisy, dolls, graffiti, Graffiti Alley, hoardings, Jeremy Lynch, jumblefacefoto, kode 905, kyara cabrera Fong, Life©️, lovebot, luvs, mannequins, murals, paint, pasteups, Poetaia, Queen West, Rush Lane, slaps, snow, Spadina, stickers, street art, streetcars, th!nk, TTC, uber5000, urban ninja squadron, visual noise, Windigo Army, winter
… and Graffiti Alley
below: Northeast corner of Spadina and Queen West
below: Mannequins on orange
below: Queen Street westbound approaching Bathurst
below: It’s always nice to see that there’s at least one Lovebot still hanging out in Graffiti Alley.
below: On the door, a jumblefacefoto collage
below: Reach out and touch someone
below: Open your eyes
below: Are you smiling? Are you happy?
below: Southeast corner, Queen & Niagara
below: Same intersection slightly later in the morning and from a slightly different angle
below: Windigo Army piece
below: A little orange character pasted to a pole; the work of kode_dipz aka Kyara Cabrera Fong
below: Because of the construction of a new condo at Richmond and Augusta there has been scaffolding in a section of Graffiti Alley. The other day some of it was being dismantled. This woman is more visible now but some of the bars remain.
below: Life©️ one eyed red daisy supersized
below: Part of UBER5000’s Toronto mural.
below: By luvs – a woman and her dog, with duplicate vision
below: A properly worn mask…..
What is creepier? Dolls or mannequins?
below: Poetaia wants to know what you’re up to, wink, wink.
below: Peeling paper makes the gold words difficult to read
below: There’s a yellow eye and possibly a blue one too?
Jarus at Teesdale
Posted: July 5, 2021 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: blue jay, cardinal, children, Jarus, murals, Pharmacy Ave., Scarborough, subway, Teesdale Place, train, TTC
Teesdale Place runs west off of Pharmacy Ave., just east of Victoria Park subway station.
below: Victoria Park subway station is on the far left. As the tracks cross Pharmacy Avenue, there is a mural by Jarus of a boy holding a blue jay that covers all of the underpass.
On the other side of the underpass is another mural by Jarus – a young girl holding a cardinal carefully in her hand.
below: Teesdale Place


on a mission to Kennedy station
Posted: June 5, 2021 in locations, transportationTags: Crosstown, Eglinton, graffiti, Kennedy, LRT, stores, train, TTC
Sometimes I choose my walks randomly and sometimes I am on a mission to find something in particular. The other day, June 1st, definitely falls in the latter category. I have been following the Crosstown LRT/subway construction so when I heard that the new LRT trains were arriving for testing near Kennedy I knew that I had to see it for myself. While I was there, why not check out the area?
below: On Eglinton, east of Kennedy
below: It’s not the most pedestrian friendly stretch of road but it’s also a bridge over railway tracks.
below: Kennedy station is already a GO train station. The east end of line 2 (Bloor-Danforth line) swings north as it crosses Scarborough. By Kennedy it is at Eglinton Ave and here it connects with the above ground TTC line 3 (Sheppard line). The blue train is the latter.
below: Looking west towards the intersection of Kennedy and Eglinton.
below: Northwest corner of Kennedy and Eglinton
below: The Crosstown LRT tracks are on the surface for
most of the Scarborough portion of its route. Just west of Kennedy station they go underground.
below: A new LRT train on the tracks between Ionview and Kennedy stations. It had been unloaded from a truck minutes before I arrived. At least two other trains where scheduled to arrive that day.
below: Ionview station
below: Traffic flow
below: That’s one way to use a construction sign. Whether Mike is responsible or has been pranked is anybody’s guess
below: The new Kennedy LRT station (at the eastern end of the line) is almost complete. The LRT is scheduled to be operational “sometime in 2022”.
below: What people keep on their dashboards…..
below: Kiss ‘n Ride at Kennedy station
below: TTC subway train, line 3, enters Kennedy station.
below: Danger due to yetis
below: Parking for an underground church? Or underground parking for a church?
Keep Smiling!
Cabbagetown graffiti and street art
Posted: May 26, 2021 in graffiti and street artTags: cabbagetown, cat, Colin Tea, eyes, faces, graffiti, lovebot, monster, murals, paint, paste up, raccoon, slaps, stickers, street art, T-bonez, Timmy Drift, TTC, urban ninja squadron
below: A new TTC streetcar on a Toronto street, a mural by Colin Tea
below: Another Colin Tea mural, a larger than life raccoon looms over a city neighbourhood
below: CN Tower and Toronto skyline on a very blue sky
below: A Tokyo Meow
below: Lovebot and the city beside a woman in square glasses and black flats.
below: Two faces, one in better shape than the other

below: Another drawing paste-up that is peeling around the edges. They are rather intriguing and I wish that I had seen them when they were whole.
below: T-bonez as the boy wonder, Urban Ninja Squadron
below: T-bonez with Timmy Drift

below: Horny and green with big white teeth
below: Email God – church’s closed, 2021
below: You are not your mistakes
Agincourt
Posted: March 26, 2021 in construction, intersections, locations, stores, transportationTags: #practicesafe6ix, Agincourt, bus, construction, covid, GO station, industry, multi cultural, railway, Sheppard Ave East, stores, TTC, underpass, used car sales, used trucks, window
A few weeks ago I read a blog post about Agincourt history in Bob Georgiou’s Scenes from a City. It reminded me that I had once tried to walk that area but I only got discouraged because of weather (grey, damp) and nostalgia. Sheppard Avenue just east of Kennedy now has this large concrete underpass (Metrolinx/GO trains) which was a shocking change from my childhood memories. My parents were living here with their parents when then met and my paternal grandparents remained in the neighbourhood until they passed. One of my great-grandfathers lived on Agincourt Drive in a house that backed onto the railway tracks.
This time round, I waited for a sunny day before I tried walking here again. For the most part, I walked Sheppard Avenue East between Kennedy and Brimley and the photos below are what I saw – what you see there these days. If you are more interested in the history of the area, then you need to be reading Bob’s blog as mentioned above.
Let’s walk!
below: The area’s Asian character is very obvious.
below: Nutriever?
below: West Highland Creek, north of Sheppard
below: Are you in the market for a used truck?
below: If not a truck, how about a car? I passed at least three used car lots.
below: The old Agincourt GO station has been demolished and a new one is being built.
below: Bell Canada (It’s a white building)
below: In a front yard on a nearby street….. I have many questions.
below: Looking east just before Midland Avenue
below: Part of the reason that Sheppard and Midland looks so empty is this vacant site on the southwest corner. There was once a Lumber King Home Centre here, then it was a flea market and used car lot, but now it’s an empty building on an otherwise vacant 4.7 acres. A plan for 80 townhouses and a park was filed back in 2015 and seems to have been winding its way through the development process ever since.
below: A quick rest at the intersection where there are actually some people. I miss interacting with the people that I see as I walk around… and I’m sure that you’ve noticed the lack of people in these blog posts.
Also, re the TTC – this is Sheppard Avenue, home of the Sheppard subway, or is it LRT now? As I was researching development at 4181 Sheppard, I discovered that Metrolinx has been applying for easements along Sheppard in preparation for anything that might be built on that street.
below: There is always something to remind us of life’s situation these days, such as this ad that was on a bus shelter. I liked the hashtag at the end, #PracticeSafe6ix
below: Knox United Church was built as a Free Presbyterian church in the 1840’s but became Knox United in 1925. This was when the Presbyterians merged with the Methodists to form the United Church of Canada. (Although not all Presbyterian churches went along with the merger).
below: Agincourt Baptist Church

below: There is a second overpass in the area. The CPR tracks pass over Sheppard between Midland and Brimley, just west of Canadian Pacific’s Toronto Yard.
below: On this overpass is a mural by elicser
below: Running parallel to the south side of the CPR line and Sheppard Avenue is a large industrial complex belonging to the International Group of Companies.
below: Toronto has 85 BIAs (Business Improvement Areas) including Sheppard East Village which includes Sheppard between Midland and Markham Road.
below: At Glen Watford and Sheppard there is a large new Seniors residence planned.
below: In the meantime, there are empty stores.
below: North Scarborough Memorial being renovated but the old gate remains.
below: Agincourt Elementary School. Built in 1915 as a Continuation School, (grades 9 and 10) but used as an elementary school since Agincourt Collegiate was built in 1930.



below: (Snow)man down! You’d be tired too if you had to stand outside all winter!
below: Mystery ‘All Way Stop’ in the Walmart parking lot.
Finch and Morningside
Posted: November 7, 2020 in graffiti and street art, intersections, locationsTags: bear, bridge, bus, Canadian Pacific, engine, Finch Ave., Interoh Gale, kids, Lacey and Layla, Lacey Jane, Layla Folkmann, Malvern, Malvern Family Resource Centre, maple leaf, Mediah, MFRC, Morningside Heights, mural, mural routes, Scarborough, skate board, train, TTC, underpass
I heard that there was a new mural near Finch and Morningside which of course means that I have to try and find it. In doing so, I found three murals. This is their story.
This is Morningside Heights at the far eastern side of Scarborough. The Rouge River, the border between Scarborough and Pickering, is not far away. The Toronto Zoo is also nearby.
below: Bus 133, Neilson Road, waits at a stop on Finch just west of Morningside. The houses that you see in the background are on Morningside.
The Canadian Pacific railway tracks run on a diagonal at this intersection. They cross Morningside south of Finch and they also cross Finch just west of Morningside. The bridges, and underpasses, are very close to each other. In this photo, the train is on the bridge over Finch. Do people often stand outside the front of a train?
In the above picture, the wall of the underpass on the left is unpainted. The wall on the right, the one that you can’t see has a mural by Mediah.
It is called “Interoh Gale” and Mural Routes was a partner in its development last year.
below: west end
below: east end
below: Construction has begun on the southwest corner of this intersection. The site plan, approved last year, shows a Shell gas station with retail on three sides of it. Leases are available! (you’ll have to google it).
below: There is a pond with a walking trail around it almost directly across Morningside from the above construction site.
below: Two people, after being on the trail around the pond, walk south on Morningside via an underpass that has murals on both sides. This is mural on the east side. It is older than the others but it is in reasonably good shape.
below: A boy on a skate board and a girl doing what? The two green signs say Love and Malvern. I don’t know Scarborough well enough to know if the buildings in the mural represent real ones. Malvern is just to the west.
below: MFRC is Malvern Family Resource Centre and there is a picture on their website of the unveiling of this mural in September 2015.
below: This is the newest mural. It is called “Colour Outside the Lines” and it is the work of Lacey and Layla Art (aka Lacey Jane and Layla Folkmann)
below: Looking north on Morningside from Finch.
On the northwest corner of this intersection, there is a large piece of vacant land. The railway tracks run along the west side of it. I can’t find any information about it online. There isn’t the usual blue and white Notice of Development sign. The website on the billboard shows some of the houses that they have built/remodeled but there is nothing about this particular project.
Once it was fenced in by the looks of it. Not much of the black cloth remains. It looks a bit creepy, as nature undoes man’s work.
But now it’s for sale maybe? LOL. A cliff hanger ending for this post!
light and colour on the TTC
Posted: April 4, 2020 in public art, transportation, windows and wallsTags: colour, escalator, Finch West, glass, Hwy 407, light, Pioneer Village, reflections, subway stations, TTC, Vaughan, windows, York University
We all need some light and colour these days. So I went through old files and found these colourful pictures of the newest TTC subway stations that I took back in February, on Family Day actually. It seems like a long time ago!
below: Escalators, Pioneer Village subway station
below: From the outside looking in, Pioneer Village station
below: Hwy 407 station. Artwork by David Pearl.
below: The pinks, yellows, and blues from the coloured windows shine and bounce off surfaces
below: Little lights dance around the ceiling and upper part of the walls. This effect is caused by the artwork in the ceiling – a circular opening that you can just see in the upper left corner.
below: Looking straight up into the skylight with it’s many-sided walls that are covered with reflective material.
below: ‘Atmospheric Lens’ by Paul Raff Studio is the artwork that is incorporated into the roof of the station. It features skylights and reflective panels. Vaughan station.
below: Curved, reflective ceiling, Vaughan station
below: Finch West station with its very shiny red hexagonal wall tiles and coloured panes of glass.
below: No colours at York University station, but lots of windows and lots of natural light.
off the beaten track
Posted: February 13, 2020 in alleys, construction, history, locations, transportationTags: architecture, basketball, car, carving, dog, door, houses, lanes, Paul Hahn Lane, rink, roof, skating, slate, stairs, streets, subway, SUmmerhill, TTC
Walking up Yonge Street without actually walking on Yonge Street…. with all it’s distractions and wrong turns. We eventually get somewhere and that somewhere may actually be where we want to be!
below: I didn’t know that such a place existed! It’s at Davenport and Belmont in case you feel the need….
below: I smiled even more when I went around the corner and encountered this sign
below: Toronto layers
below: The old stone stairs at Ramsden Park. A bit muddy at the bottom but that never stopped me.
below: Waiting for spring… or at least for some snow to melt.
below: An after school skate.
below: Old and new – exploring the lanes that run parallel to Yonge. This is Paul Hahn Lane.
below: Trespassers will be prosecuted. If you can’t read the sign, does it still count?
below: As you go north, Paul Hahn Lane becomes Sam Tile Lane.
below: The caterpillar isn’t where it was. Is this an Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland reference? Actually it’s a children’s clothing store but that doesn’t stop my from quoting Lewis Carroll, or at least a short passage. Alice’s interaction with the caterpillar is too long to include here!

“In a minute or two the Caterpillar took the hookah out of its mouth and yawned once or twice, and shook itself. Then it got down off the mushroom, and crawled away in the grass, merely remarking as it went, ‘One side will make you grow taller, and the other side will make you grow shorter.’ ‘One side of what? The other side of what?’ thought Alice to herself. ‘Of the mushroom,’ said the Caterpillar, just as if she had asked it aloud; and in another moment it was out of sight.”
below: At Summerhill there is no way to parallel Yonge because of the train tracks. A shout out to this young man who just previous to this moment stopped to ask me if I’d taken some great photos today. I answered that it was a bit grey to get great pictures and he concurred.
below: Infrequently photographed (the daring architecture!) and not well known, this is Summerhill subway station. It has no bus connections and the only major destination nearby is the large LCBO in the old CPR station a block away (i.e. not many people use this station).
below: Something old ans something new. I was wondering if the slate tiles on the upper storey were originals when I noticed the unobtrusive addition to the white and black house.
below: Looking south towards Rosedale station (view blocked by the white and blue temporary building for the construction next to the bridge). Tall downtown buildings in the distance. The tallest one is at 1 Bloor East and it is partially hidden by the Hudson Bay Centre tower on the other side of Bloor Street (the squarish building) and another tower that I am not sure of.
below: Another of the many “it’s a street, no it’s an alley”, passages that you find in Toronto.
below: The rust and metal of an alley infill house
below: In an area of smaller narrow houses on small lots, some creativity is required if you want to expand.
below: A concrete lined hole in the ground with access from the alley but also from the street? The beginnings of a larger development?
below: Along the way I happened upon the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club in its winter plumage.
below: Foiled! I was going to walk up through and David Balfour Park but the path is blocked… so back to Yonge Street I’m afraid.
below: He looks about as happy as I felt at that moment… but at least my arm is still intact.
below: Once on Yonge Street I discovered that traffic is even worse than usual because of lane closures. Water main repairs and/or replacements by the looks of it.
below: This is now close to St. Clair Ave and a subway station so this is where I called it quits. The days are still short and although the temperatures aren’t too bad, a cup of coffee seemed like a great idea at that moment (see the Aroma sign in the upper right corner? It was calling my name).
below: Someone doesn’t seem to mind being in traffic!
Stay positive & enjoy the trip, you’ll get there!
Oh, by the way, the photos may not be anything special (the grey day and all that) but I still had fun with them.








































































































































































































































