Posts Tagged ‘Wilson Ave.’

A look at another intersection (and its surroundings)…….

below: Swimming by the 401 highway – You might recognize this image as Georges Pierre Seurat’s  1884 pointillism painting, “Bathers at Asnières”.  Man in hat lying with his dog, sailboats in the distance, people sitting on the shore and people playing in the water – these are all elements in that famous Seurat painting.

mural, painted in pointilism style, of beach scene, on wall of 401 overpass at Wilson and Bathurst

It appears as part of a large mural that Ian Leventhal painted in 2006; it covers the wall that helps support the 401 as it cuts across the Bathurst and Wilson intersection.  The large triangle created by this wall and the two streets is a park with the very unimaginative name of Bathurst-Wilson Parkette.

below: Looking east on Wilson at Bathurst.

on wilson ave, just west of 401, beside street with traffic, a pole with directional sign for 401 highway as well as blue and white street sign for bathurst street

below: Both Bathurst and Wilson pre-date the building of the 401 highway.  This old photo (1950)  is taken from an excellent article in the Toronto Star written by Shawn Micallef, (28 Sept 2019) that details the history of the 401 highway development around Bathurst Street.  The brown lines show the original layout of the highway and the on/off ramps.  Not all of these ramps exist now.  I have added a bright red line to show the present day on-ramp from Bathurst (northbound) to the EB 401.  You may have noticed that the original on and off ramps were residential streets!

But changes are always happening.   Now it is the southwest corner of Bathurst and Wilson that is about to be transformed…. or at least it was.  At the moment the property is under court ordered receivership as the developer is having “financial issues” to the tune of at least 28 million dollars.  The property is for sale.   Tims is open but everything around it is vacant.  Condo development was booming in Toronto until it wasn’t.  I don’t have an exact number, but there are a lot of vacant/abandoned properties like this around the city.

below: Brooklyn Furniture Emporium – boarded up and forgotten.   They started business in 1958 and survived for more than 60 years.

boarded up old furniture store,

below: Gone is the gas station that was here.

below: Looking north up Bathurst.

The development property that is on the market also includes a couple of addresses on the next street west, Richelieu Road whose properties back onto Bathurst.

empty building, rear view, waiting for demolition

empty building, rear view, brick, two storeys, waiting for demolition

below: Another proposal includes the remaining houses on Richelieu (across the street from those backing onto Bathurst).   I am unsure of its status, but it makes for a rather sad looking little street.

redevelopment notice on wood fence in front of a house on Richelieu Road

below: This area was originally developed at a time when the 2 storey brick mini plaza (or strip mall) was popular.   A line of stores/restaurants/businesses with some parking in front became a feature of large segments of Toronto’s main streets.   Will we mourn their loss once it is their turn to be replaced?  They may be ugly but they provide a space for local businesses.

red brick strip mall on Wilson Avenue

below: Bathurst and Wilson has become predominantly Filipino.   This place specializes in ensaynadas which is something that I had never heard of.   It’s a Filipino bun with different flavorings/toppings such as cheese, or almond (or many others).   Filipino, but from Mallorca (Spain) too … and possibly with a Jewish origin.

looking southwest at corner of Bathurst and Wilson, pedestrian crossing the street, some traffic, Tims in the background

strip mall with small businesses, parking lot in front,

looking north up Bathurst, east side of the street, Flower Market with empty display shelves by the sidewalk, man on phone waiting for a green light

below: Beaver Cleaners – where to go when the beaver needs a good scrub.  More importantly, just beyond it is The Inside Scoop which sells fabulous ice cream!

Beaver Cleaners on Bathurst St., also The Inside Scoop ice cream shop

below: You can also find a mural by Nick Sweetman nearby.  It lines both sides of the Bathurst underpass at the 401.  I have blogged about it previously – in fact, it was the previous post: Animals under the 401

part of an animal themed mural by Nick Sweetman in Toronto, bee and butterfly

below: A banner to advertise a production of ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ in Yiddish with English subtitles that was playing at the Elgin Theatre (downtown).

banner on hydro pole that is advertising a production of Fiddler on the Roof, in Yiddish, with English subtitles

commercial buildings on Bathurst street, Alminz bakeshop, Le Rich,

businesses on Bathurst, north of Wilson, inclusing breezy vapes, also pho duong vietnamese restaurant, billboard on top of building for clutch dot ca,

looking south on Bathurst past lowrise brick apartment buildings

brick apartment buildings

Sixplex residential building with balconies across the front

Sixplex residential building with balconies across the front, side angle

large sign in parking lot in front of commercial buildings, smile dentistry, also words in arabic, also sign for Pancers original deli

brick wall with black and white no dumping sign. Sign is faded, and some layers are peeling off

side of metal bell box on sidewalk painted with red and white checkerboard pattern with some pink hearts.    Sticker telling us that Jesus is coming back soon and that the rapture in imminent

painted metal Bell telephone box beside a residential street

metal bell box on sidewalk painted with the word smile such that letters look like slices of watermelon

 

Back in mid October I blogged about the new murals on the south side Wilson Ave as it passes under the Allen Expressway (where Wilson subway station is).

below: Looking across Wilson Avenue to part of the mural on the south side.

looking across Wilson Avenue, under the Allen Expressway towards a mural that has been painted on the pillars and supports on the other side. A face is painted there.

When I was there last,  the murals on the north side were not completed.   The other day I remembered that I hadn’t seen the finished work, so I took the subway back to Wilson station to see what the pillars on the north side look like.   There is more light on the north side as there are entrances to the subway along the sidewalk here.   There is also more pedestrian traffic.

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak

This side was also painted by shalak and smoky (as was the south side).

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak - swirls of purples and yellows

below: In the center by one of the well-lit subway entrances.

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak - red pillars with blue geometric patterns in a band around it near the bottom

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak - a face showing eyes and top of nose

below: Looking east along Wilson Avenue.

pillars and supports under an overpass that have been painted in bright colours by smoky and shalak - a large face in the center pillar, with hands gripping the outer pillars on each side of the face

below: A little street artist with his can of spray paint has been left in a corner.
He’s not easily spotted.

a grey tones painting of a man with a spray can in his hand, from the waist up

 

 

Wilson subway station is nestled between the northbound and southbound lanes of the Allen Expressway.  It’s functional, but not pretty.  All that concrete!

below: Wilson subway station from the parking lot on the SW corner of Wilson and the Allen.
view od Wilson station from the south side of Wilson, directly opposite the bus loop.

If you look closely at the above picture, you might be able to see that one of the pillars holding up the Allen has been painted purple.  That’s part of the latest mural painting project by Shalak Attack, with help from Bruno Smoky.  What you can’t see is that the mural covers all of the underpass supports on both sides of Wilson Ave.

below: The mural on the south side of Wilson Ave has been painted on all sides.  Here, a face is between two hands gripping the poles.

painting on bents on an underpass, a face in the middle and a hand on either side, holding onto the concrete pillars, entrance to subway TTC station in the background,
close up of an eye from a face on a mural by Shalak Attack

below: More pillars on the south side.

a woman's face in a mural, eyes closed, by Shalak Attack, other pillars painted with green, red and orange petals.

below: A large spider on a web is in the center of the mural.

part of a mural, a large blue and red spider with orange legs, on a verylarge spider web

a Shalak Attack face painted on a concrete bent under the Allen Expressway on Wilson Ave., other bents have geometric patterns and a large spider web on green.
view along the sidewalk leading from the Wilson subway station to Wilson Ave., grass covered embankment on either side of the sidewalk, Expressway higher up on either side of sidewalk as well as straight ahead.

below: The back side of the supports have also been painted.  Just be careful not to bump your head on the road above if you want to get a closer look!

bright and bold pink flowers and green leaves and vines are part of a mural on concrete supports of an underpass.

geometric designs in a mural on concrete pillars on an underpass, by a TTC subway station

below: The north side of the underpass is being painted at the moment. Stay tuned for updates!

a ladder, people working on a mural of a blue face,

part of a mural, two purple fingers on yellow background.