
20190307. The narrowest building of Toronto’s Waterlink at Pier 27 condos and its industry-separating wall.

20190306. Another parking garage and a great place for elevated views bites the dust. Yorkville between Bay, Yonge, Yorkville and Cumberland.

20190305. The King Street facade of 122 Dowling Ave.

20190304. The 1833 Thomas Thompson Building (corner) with its 1880 second empire roof and the 1842 173-179 King St E (to the right) with its 1870 mansard roof are part of one of the oldest rows of buildings standing in Toronto.

20190303. The 150 m Bell Canada Pharmacy Avenue Telecommunications Tower was built primarily for long range microwave radio links in the mid 20th century, largely replaced by fibre optic networks today.

20190302. Postmodern retrofit industrial architecture.

20190301. The 1865 Gothic St. Stephen-In-The-Fields Church.

20190228. Blizzard at TD Centre.

20190227. Baldwin Street in the weird and wonderful neighbourhood at the heart of the city known as Kensington Market.

20190226. The Mother of God of Prousa Greek Orthodox Church and its chapter building at 457-461 Richmond St E.

20190225. The 1913 Marks and Cohen Building, a commercial block in Little Italy.

20190224. The eminent Nicholas Metivier Gallery, representing impressive photographers such as Edward Burtynsky, Michael Awad and Sebastião Salgado, has moved to a handsome building at 190 Richmond St E.

20190223. The rounded board formed concrete exterior of the 1969 Brutalist Toronto District School Board West Education Office.

20190222. The Valhalla Executive Centre at 300 The East Mall, with its tallest building vacant, awaits a mixed use redevelopment with 1100 units in four condo towers.


20190221. Archetypal octagonal zig zag modernist architecture in Etobicoke.

20190220. Muscular Modernist Mid-rise.

20190219. Moving the Kipling Station Passenger Pick-up building for the construction of the future Kipling Mobility Hub.

20190218. Moon rising at sunset over skyline.

20190216. The Extreme Architecture of the nearly completed River City Phase 3 is visible down Adelaide Street East.

20190215. Three ornate warehouse buildings (1872-74) on Front St E. From left to right: Dixon Building (the last Toronto building with a cast iron facade), Perkins Inc. and Co., Beardmore Building.

20190214. The Ambassador’s angled balconies provide a creative twist to a modernist apartment building.

20190213. This part of the Globe and Mail Centre’s podium has a sympathetic aesthetic in that it follows the height of neighbouring buildings.

20190212. 100 Roehampton Ave features modernist elements including a folded concrete roof, folded concrete entrance canopy and matching balconies.

20190211. The Ambassador’s concrete canopies on Roehampton Ave are an example of mushroom modernism.
