Dawn doesn’t so much break over Toronto on marathon morning as creep in behind the sound of trucks, radios, and zip-ties.
As befits a fall when the Blue Jays have again become contenders, the $10 billion-plus question hanging over the ...
Change in cities is often slow, when using official channels. There is a desire to achieve the perfect plan, one that ...
What happens when four different reports give four different answers to the same housing question? Every few months, a new ...
The north portion of St. Lawrence Market is arguably the second most historic spot in the post-colonial city, after Fort York. A public market has been operating there continuously since 1803, which ...
Heritage Toronto has named Michael McClelland as the recipient of the 2025 Special Achievement Award. Presented for the first time since 2019 by the Heritage Toronto Board of Directors, the Special ...
Vancouver’s former Mayor Kennedy Stewart might’ve called the Broadway Plan tenant protections the “strongest” in Canada, but tenants say it’s important to ...
John Bossons is a retired economist and spokesperson for the Midtown Ravines Group Because the summer of 2025 has been all about infernal heat and drifting smoke, as opposed to the Biblical downpours ...
This walking tour is published in conjunction with Spacing issue 71, which is focused on the waterfront. See also Sarah Mundangepfupfu’s article about public art on the waterfront in the print issue.
"Fish Market, Toronto," Joseph Clayton Bentley, 1837. Credit: Toronto Public Library. This article is published in conjunction with Spacing issue 71, which focuses on Toronto’s waterfront. The issue ...
[Editor’s note: This letter, signed by 27 prominent B.C. experts in urban planning and architecture, was sent last week to Prime Minister Mark Carney and Minister of Housing Gregor Robertson, and was ...