News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 8.9K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 40K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 5.1K     0 

There has been a persistent rumor the past few days that the ROB fetish retailer from Europe is going to enter the North American market with a store in the old Crews/Tango space. Makes some sense because some of their stores in Europe also have accommodations above them. This locations would allow for that. Wish I had more facts, but hopefully some of you sleuths can find the truth, if their is any.
 
EYE Magazine
The worry over the Church congregation
By Shawn Micallef

ChurchStreet.jpg


There are two Church Streets in Toronto — the one below Gerrard and the one above. Lately everybody’s been talking about the above part, worried that it is becoming ungay. That is, straighter. People have been worried about the state of “The Village” for at least a decade now, and every time a bar or gay-owned shop closes, the fretting begins. Places like Church Street are always delicate matters, as both community and the free market have to be directed by synchronous alchemy to produce a beloved neighbourhood.

But well away from those queer concerns, Church Street has a rather unglamorous beginning in a parking garage just south of The Esplanade in what was once Lake Ontario. Though unsung, the city view from down here in the St. Lawrence neighbourhood is Toronto’s urbanity at its zenith, as a bowl of buildings — some old, some new — rises in each direction. It feels safe and solid. The steep slope up to Front Street by The Keg and what was, until recently, the Jamie Kennedy Wine Bar, is the result of fill that softened a 20-foot cliff to the beach below where the Town of York’s first substantial wharf was built.

Though the lake view is gone at Front, the Gooderham flatiron building is likely photographed hundreds of times a day. This part of Toronto is our most Parisian quarter, in terms of scale, but also feels like a 1980 period piece. Maybe it’s the font of the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts logo or Derek Michael Besant’s “peeling façade” mural on the back of the Flatiron, but Front evokes the last days of Toronto’s 1970s “City That Works” era. The odd little cabana-like Pizza Pizza building on the northwest corner (it replaced a fine old bank) is from the 1980s “City That’s Broken” era.

North of here, Church Street quiets down, a state it remains in for quite a number of blocks. Just below King Street at Colborne is perhaps one of the few parking lots that may actually be all right, as it affords a view of the side of the King Edward Hotel from tiny Leader Lane — once the brokerage centre of Toronto — up to the still-mothballed penthouse ballroom. It’s another bored-out urban canyon view and, unlike from the west side of downtown, approaching the core from the east is not gradual, as buildings go from low-rise to high rather quickly, like a sheer electrical mountain range.

At King Street, St. James — the first of three churches that give the street its name — was, for a time (and still is for some), the centre of social life in old York and the source of all things Toronto the Good. A few blocks north, the Metropolitan United Church at Queen remains a hub of community meetings — it was home to the anti-amalgamation rallies of John Sewell’s Citizens For Local Democracy in the 1990s, and its front lawn is now home to tables populated with chess hustlers, which were relocated from outside the Yonge and Gould Sam the Record Man in 2003.

A block north, St. Michael’s Cathedral is the Catholic counterpoint to St. James’ Anglican redoubt. All three churches form a kind of religious triumvirate that, like Toronto itself, seems to effortlessly contain a variety of divergent viewpoints. In the middle of this, the new Spire condo building rises above all their steeples, the triumph of civic secularism in a city that still seems to dig the church but whose steeple shadows no longer dominate the streets and the culture.

Opposite the Metropolitan United Church is Toronto’s pawnshop row. It looks like a 1960s or ’70s film scene from an ungentrified city (The French Connection or even Midnight Cowboy). McTamney’s is Toronto’s oldest and has been here since 1860, and though the pawn industry is on the up and up, this block is where underground and hidden desperation can manifest, as emotional bonds between people and objects are broken for quick cash.

At Dundas, Ryerson University and its giant “RU” signage dominates Church and, as all campuses do, makes the street less interesting because individual storefront variety becomes a mono-block. A recent block-long addition on the east side (filling in a parking lot between Church and the magnificent Merchandise Building, once a Simpsons-then-Sears warehouse and now a residential loft conversion) is the George Vari Engineering and Computing Centre, a four-storey glass fishbowl of student life designed by Moriyama & Teshima Architects (of Toronto Reference Library and Scarborough Civic Centre fame).

North of Gerrard, Church is busy and diverse again. This stretch, all the way up to Bloor, was once residential, but over time those big houses were either torn down or converted to stores and bars. The venerable Barn, carved out of a rambling Victorian, was closed for a few years after the owner’s murder, but is open again and functioning as the kind of gay bar every good city has: big, a little dirty but a social trawler where everybody from any scene can collect now and then. It, like those pawnshops, seems from another era and sensibility.

b09132c644c1a3beea5528195c9d.gif


As Toronto’s gay scene moved from Yonge to Church Street in the 1980s, that old sensibility of queer bars behind darkened windows evolved into a much more conspicuous street presence. It was always a gay area, though, from the legendary days of possibly gay magistrate Alexander Wood in the early 1800s (that’s his statue at Alexander and Church) to the 1950s and ’60s, when the City Park Co-Op and Village Green apartment complexes were built (the latter includes a round building endearingly nicknamed “Vaseline Tower”), residential structures where a single man or (less frequently) woman could live in relative privacy and alone.

The Church-Wellesley kind of urbanism is ideal. That’s why so many less-gay people are moving in, and why the neighbourhood pretended to be Pittsburgh when Queer as Folk was filmed here. At the same time, the security need for cultural ghettos in mostly tolerant Toronto has decreased as the rest of city has become kind of gay.

In the Diversity-Our-Strength-motto sense, it’s all good, but for those worried about the demise of Church, it’s useful to think of how other ethnic strips have evolved. The Greeks don’t live en masse on the Danforth anymore, nor do the Italians along St. Clair and so forth, but the ethnic strip remains, and people visit because it feels Italian or Greek. Bars may come and go, but Church is anchored by visible institutions and places like the 519 Community Centre; the AIDS Memorial and Cawthra Park; the AIDS Committee of Toronto or that Alexander Wood statue. Even the CBC’s Battle of the Blades that recently put life back into Maple Leaf Gardens is good for the community, because it was the gayest event the place has witnessed since Liberace performed there.

While Church Street isn’t cool with the hipster queer kids (all it takes is a few promoters to change that) The Village is still critical if only for this moment: imagine a gay kid coming from less tolerant places like Timmins, Jamaica or Afghanistan arriving at Church and Wellesley and, for the first time, seeing this vibrant, celebratory strip. No offense to those three places, but this is why cities are salvation: you can see, immediately, that you belong here, just as you are.
 
Last edited:
Great article Dark Star. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. It's true that retail and restaurants are fickle and ever changing but the essence of the neighbourhood can never be lost. In the mindset of the city this area will always be the gay village. By the way, those embedded gold street signs at the Churwell intersections are treacherous in the winter. Once covered in slush (the dry granular type) they are a death trap waiting for unfamiliar souls. I could have snapped a hip bone if I were a bit older the first time they trip me onto my butt.
Thanks Threnody for the rainbow pic. Never seen that angle of the village before.
 
By the way, those embedded gold street signs at the Churwell intersections are treacherous in the winter. Once covered in slush (the dry granular type) they are a death trap waiting for unfamiliar souls. I could have snapped a hip bone if I were a bit older the first time they trip me onto my butt.

Those are indeed treacherous, even with winter boots or sneakers one can slip and go down hard. One of those sidewalk signs has been removed, it's likely just a matter of time before the others are taken out.

New Christmas -er, "holiday" lights were being installed late last night through The Village. It's kind of a soaring star type design installed on the light standards. They look pretty good, I'll try to get a snap tonight.
 
Rolyn Chambers just sent me this press release about next week's opening of Grasp...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Tuesday, November 24, 2009

A FIRST FOR CANADA!

ST.MARC SPA ANNOUNCES THE LAUNCH OF GRASP EROTICA BAR

Grab hold! It’s coming! St. Marc Spa is pleased to announce the grand opening of GRASP Erotic Bar. GRASP is the first fully operational bar and dance club located inside but separate from an actual bathhouse. Though this concept has proven successful in other parts of the world, it has yet to be tried in North America. As one of Toronto’s biggest bathhouse with the most rooms at its disposal, St. Marc Spa, known for its many off centre activities including the only all student bathhouse night for both men and women, is the only venue who dares such a venture.

“The definition of the bathhouse in the era of online hook-ups, internet porn, chat lines and the overall acceptance of gay and bisexual men in Canada brings into question the current role of the bathhouse,†says St. Marc Spa’s Director of Operations, Rolyn Chambers. “We believe the new role of the bathhouse will revert to its origins as not just a place for sex but a place for community and entertainment.†GRASP Erotica Bar, St. Marc’s little brother has been created to further this belief.

This new venture is months in the making. By removing 20 rooms on its west wing, and by uncovering panoramic windows which have been sealed over with drywall for almost 20 years, an amazing loft space has been created. With the best view of Yonge Street of any queer establishment, the space also boasts a new DJ booth, a new bar, new stage, 4 windowed performance rooms equipped with bed and TV, plus 3 dark rooms dubbed “Cell Phone Booths.†It is not just a space to be seen but to be experienced.

LAUNCH PARTY- Saturday-December 5th • 8PM to 4 AM

Just like several of St.. Marc’s past events, the FREE Launch Party of GRASP is open to both men and women! Hosted by the one and only Mighty Miss Lena Love, it stars International Titan Porn Star Tyler Saint who will perform one free show with a local up and coming Toronto porn star. Tyler will then perform a $20 men only private show in the exclusive Northbound Leather VIP Sling Room. Limited tickets for this show are available in advance at St. Marc Spa.

Bringing a little kink to the night is fetish fiend Jason B Punished who will orchestrate a wild wet jock strap contest. Jason, the star of the recent Northbound Leather Tribe Fetish show, promises a filthy judging system with over $400 in cash and prizes (donated by various promotional partners) to be won. GRASP thanks our prize sponsors including by not limited to Bud Light, Northbound Leather, Priape, Squirt.org, Manhunt.net, Woody’s, Play, Zelda’s Muscle411.com, BentBoys.net, Titan, Wet and St. Marc Spa.

Need a little more porn with your stars? Meet the guys of Bentboys.com and Muscle 411com for photos and autographs.

Need even more eye candy? Watch one of the cute young things do their thing in one of the four glassed viewing rooms located on the east side of the bar.

Need to dance off all that pent up energy? DJs A&R will be spinning dance music all night to pack the panoramic windowed dance floor. Grasp Go Go Boys will be on hand to get the party started.

Need an excuse to see what a bathhouse is all about? During the opening, small guided tours will be given to men. Please do not feed or bother the patrons.

Healthy snacks provided by Hair of the Dog.

NO COVER ALL NIGHT! DOOR PRIZES AND DRINK SPECIALS!

Great to see the Europeanization/Montrealization of our gay scene continue. :p
 
Last edited:
New Christmas -er, "holiday" lights were being installed late last night through The Village. It's kind of a soaring star type design installed on the light standards. They look pretty good, I'll try to get a snap tonight.


Click on the thumbnail to enlarge, then click again on the image for full size.

Also note the new street lighting fixtures and decorative supports which were installed last spring in the last photo

 
Very nice dt. I've gotta say, I'd prefer the village stay on Church. Church has more of an 'enclave' feel than Yonge could ever have.
 
I know this probably belongs in another section relating to restaurants, but I want to report a repeatedly good restaurant experience rather than a dud.

This year we rediscovered Hair of the Dog, at Wood and Church Sts. We hadn't been there in about 8 years (bad experience then). This past summer we went to the patio 4 times -- probably one of the nicest patios in Toronto, definitely one of the sexiest, if you judge that by the denizens and the walkers by (not only gay men but other hotties with their wives / girlfriends -- good eye candy is always so welcome).

The servers? We haven't encountered any attitude at Hair of the Dog. Only good, helpful servers who tend to know the menu. As for the menu -- this is two notches above standard pub fair, and the wine list is really very good.

It calls itself a pub and resturant, and its motto is "Come. Sit. Stay". Cute, eh?

Go there in summer or winter, sit downstairs (I feel isolated upstairs). But go. No typical Church St. attitude there, just a good time waiting for you.

:)
 
I'll third that, it's a great place inside and out and the food is really good. My ex and I had our 10th anniversary party upstairs there and they made such a big fuss over us which was extra nice and made for such a memorable evening.
 

Back
Top