Tag Archives: vik pahwa
20140521. The Fort York Branch, the 99th Toronto Public Library is almost ready (Bathurst St and Fort York Blvd).
20140520. Buffalo’s grand Standard Elevator (c.1928, Architect A.E. Baxter).
– Note the architectural details at the front of the elevator.
– The two large dark towers are moveable “marine legs” that take up grain from docked ships.
– Buffalo is/was considered the “elevator capital” of America.
20140519. LED street lamp on a dusk blue sky. Minimal Aesthetic #33.
20140517. Entering the Pape Avenue – CNR Pedestrian Overpass (Riverdale neighbourhood. Toronto).
20140517. The Pape Avenue – CNR Pedestrian Overpass just before sunset (Riverdale neighbourhood, Toronto).
20140513. The sun has set on these houses at Redpath and Roehampton. Yet another condo will rise near Yonge and Eglinton in Toronto.
20140512. The Toronto Transit Commission’s new Toronto Rocket subway car vs. the old T-1 series car.
20140511. Buffalo’s City Court Building is the epitome of Brutalism (c.1974)
20140510. Night light in black vestibule. Minimal aesthetic #32.
20140509. Buffalo’s awesome Ohio Street Lift Bridge has two towers housing the cables and counter-weights that lift the bridge.
20140508. Sheds on sale sit like a street of suburban houses.
20140507. On weekdays, this vast space under the I-190 at Main St in Buffalo is used as a parking lot.
In Toronto such spaces exist under the Gardiner Expressway west of Spadina Avenue. Some areas are used informally as parking lots while others sit vacant.
With new developments rising next to the Gardiner Expressway, many of these spaces could be reprogrammed whereas in Buffalo, with so much office space unused, new uses for these dead spaces are unlikely.
With the steel beams running into the distance, I find this space intriguing.
20140506. My first on-street view of the TTC’s new Toronto Flexity Outlook streetcar (exiting Bathurst Stn).
20140505. Under the I-190 in Buffalo – reminiscent of being under the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto.
This is the third image in a series looking under elevated expressways in Buffalo.
20140504. Looking southeast along the Buffalo Skyway in a city that has fully embraced its elevated expressways.
20140502. A side view of the rusty, abandoned pedestrian overpass in Thornhill.
20140501. A rusty, abandoned pedestrian overpass in Thornhill.
20140430. The depth of rust on a forgotten overpass.
20140429. Rusty railing, lamp post and railing. Minimal Aesthetic #31.
20140428. The glass-covered interior court of the Ellicott Square Building – “one of Buffalo’s most ornamental public spaces.”
I was excited to get inside here for a reason other than the grandeur of this place named after the founder of Buffalo. There was a Charlie the Butcher outlet serving Beef on Weck (to the right and mostly out of frame) which I was told was amazing. Sadly, I completely forgot about the sandwich after photographing the court.