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Quite right. As attractive as the two parkettes are at Macpherson and Dupont, the village that once existed there would have been a great asset to the neighbourhood.
1959, pre-widening, west side of Avenue Road north of Dupont:
Thanks for these, Mustapha. It's clear in the east side photo, when comparing the church steps, that the block would have to go if the street was to be widened. "Something's got to give", as the expression goes.
Though I'm part of the problem, being a frequent driver on Avenue Road, part of me wishes the street had never been widened (if only all those other drivers would stay away.....)
Neither of the buildings shown are the Toronto Star. The building on the NE corner is the Bank of Nova Scotia; the building on the NW corner was the Bank of Montreal. The Star was to the west.
Just a quick question- was that gorgeous little building on the corner behind the old Bank of Montreal HQ also torn down when First Canadian Place was built? Or did it succumb earlier on?
Just a quick question- was that gorgeous little building on the corner behind the old Bank of Montreal HQ also torn down when First Canadian Place was built? Or did it succumb earlier on?
Looks like it succumbed earlier.
It first appears in the Goad atlases in 1910 labelled the Molson's Bank:
By the 1950's, it's gone:
July 26 Then and Now.
Then. 533 College. This is at Euclid, on the SE corner. c1914. Picture provided by wwwebster. "Crown[??] Tailoring" it says? Not sure...
Which is odd, since the photo we were looking at shows the Bank of Nova Scotia under construction, which dates it to late 40s or even 1950, and it's still there at that point.
The Goads is also a little confusing for this block. What the heck is going on at the southwest corner of Bay & Adelaide? I know what was going on there, because I'm sitting in it right now, but it seems to show an odd little warren of buildings on that corner instead of the Canada Permanent.
Suddenly I'm hungry.