
Tag Archives: Scarborough
20180604. A structure-free dusk skyline from Bluffer’s Park Beach.

20180518. The oblong spirals of a concrete stairwell at the University of Toronto Scarborough Andrews Building.

20180424. Two of three prongs at the massive Cambridge Place apartment tower.

20180417. Catholic Modernism at Our Lady of Fatima Shrine (1960).

20180414. Brimley Forest’s Forest Manor I and II are well-crafted concrete aparthigh-rises.

20180410. A 48-year aged and fire-damaged concrete facade at Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute. Can such surfaces be restored?

20180402. The one-of-a-kind modernist Saint Maria Goretti Parish.

20180328. Living under a massive apartment high-rise.

20180327. The pointy part of Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute (architect Moriyama & Teshima).

20180326. Masterful modernism at Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute. Scarborough, Toronto, Allward & Gouinlock, 1959.

20180324. The massive hulking brutalist entrance to the modernist Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute.

20180320. Classic Brutalism at Tecumseh Senior Public School by Fairfield and DuBois (1967).

20180318. Brutalist ghost wall.

20180317. Brutalism in the Toronto District School Board – Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute.

20180316. Electrical paraphernalia and their shadows on a precast concrete school wall. Minimal Aesthetic 123.

A wooden construction hoarding walkway in the late afternoon sun.

20180104. Following the seam between bridge spans in the underpass. CN Rail bridge, St. Clair Ave E, Scarborough Junction.

20171123. The impressive facade of brick, stone, copper and concrete at the Blessed Cardinal Newman Catholic School church.

20171027. Descending into the pedestrian tunnel at Scarborough GO Station II.

20171025. The epically modern Scarborough Church of God with its appropriately shaped array of solar panels.

20171024. The unusual and uncomely modernism / postmodernism of the R Square Restaurant & Bar, your pepper soup joint.

20171023. Descending into the pedestrian tunnel at the 50-year-old Scarborough GO Station.

The blur of people passing under the Rouge River Bridge at Illuminations by Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, soon to be replaced by a bigger bridge that can accomodate additional trackways.

A GO Train zooms over a lit Rouge River bridge at night.
