Category Archives: photos
20160118. The Exhibit across from the museum in Toronto.
20160117. A top down view of Toronto’s River City Phase 2.
20160116. An aerial view of Regent Park’s white aluminum-cladded One Park Place Condos.
20160115. Archetypal octagonal zig-zag modernist architecture in Etobicoke.
20160114. White lines on the Sheppard subway line.
20160113. A quintuplet of chapels at Guelph’s Church of our Lady Immaculate.
20160112. The impressive Canada Square Complex at Yonge and Eglinton (Kenneth Cooper 1963, 1972).
20160111. A matrix of scaffolding floats above the stairs in Toronto’s Union Station Great Hall.
20160110. The Duke of York / Regent Park Junior Public School, a decrepit but excellent example of institutional modernism is now gone.
20160109. Approaching the bright Dufferin Street underpass at night.
20160108. John Parkin Brutalist gem and heritage listed Simpson tower to be destroyed by re-cladding.
What do you think of the redesign? https://s3.amazonaws.com/spacelist-paperclip/datas/000/263/760/original/401_Bay_Street__Toronto__ON.pdf?1440846050
20160107. Toronto’s UTIAS monochrome Marsdome.
20160106. An east-facing GO train races westbound on the Lakeshore corridor.
20160105. Enjoying a lovely horizon while crossing the Gardiner.
20160104. A three-alarm fire at 314 Jarvis Street in Toronto today has left an abandoned 1865 house gutted.
20160103. Peering through steel bridge piers across the West Don River.
20160102. Staring down a cathedral in a frontier suburb.
20160101. Scarborough Senior Public School Brutalism II. Canadian Architect Raymond Moriyama, 1969.
20151231. Post modern monochromatic pentagons at Scarborough’s St. David’s Village.
20151230. Scarborough Public School Brutalism. Canadian Architect Raymond Moriyama, 1969.
20151229. HVAC shiny stainless steel security. St. Lawrence Temporary North Market.
20151228. Derelict Ward’s Island Eastern Gap pier points to Toronto’s skyline.
The first image is how the pier looks today. The second image is how it looked in 1954. What a difference! Black and white photo courtesy of Toronto Public Library Digital Archives.