
Tag Archives: architecture
20200610. The 1967 Richview Branch of the Toronto Public Library with its rough brick brutalism.

20200609. The West Transcept Facade at the 1964 Humbervale United Church.

20200607. The postmodern gothic townhouse.

20200604. Classic modernism at Wymilwood, Eric Arthur’s 1952 Student Union building and now the Goldring Student Centre.

20200603. The 20 modern curves of Kipling Station, quite mid-century expressionist for a subway station that opened in 1980.

20200602. The very elegant and modern Westway United Church.

20200601. St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Humber Heights (1960) is hexagonal in shape with a zig zag roof.

20200530. On Harbour Street near the wedge known as 10 York.

20200527. Monochrome Honeycomb.

20200522. Although the Scarborough Rapid Transit opened at Kennedy station in 1985, it has a mid-century modern space age look.

20200520. Donvale Manor looks rather regal with its crown of cell site panel antennas.

20200519. Finance and psychiatry go pretty good together. Ministry of Finance vs. Toronto Psychiatric Hospital (Surrey Place).

20200518. Laneway to a modern 1968 high-rise at Pelham Park Gardens.

20200515. The uniquely clad postmodern St. Dunstan’s Roman Catholic Church (1981).

20200514. Today marks the ninth anniversary of this daily Toronto photography blog as we look up at a fancy ceiling inside some new condo. Thanks for looking!!

20200513. Ripley vs Delta.

20200512. The aluminum-paneled SQ2 in the new Alexandra Park features colours of the old Alexandra Park.

20200511. The 1965 St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral.

20200510. Another chunk of old Alexandra Park’s ‘brick brutalist’ townhouses are ready for demolition.

20200506. Bloor Dundas Square seems to have three entirely different tower sections unappealingly stacked on top of each other – retail, office and residential.

20200505. The 1930 East Toronto Masonic Temple clubhouse

20200504. With the East United Condos nearing completion, it isn’t to early to say that this development is discordant at best.

20200503. Toronto Hydro’s Windsor Station was built in 1950, uses equipment past its useful life but puts out a maxed out 300 MW of power for the area west of the downtown core.

20200501. The patterned concrete of the enwave Walton Street Steam Plant north facade.
