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Looks like they totally rebuilt the facade on the south side of the building in "The Case of the Shrunken Building" .


They did; and a nice neat job of it too, and by neat I mean it looks like the building was always that way.
 
THE DUNCAN HOUSE

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Thank you Goldie. Dinner here is nice too. I last dined here about 8 years ago but recent reviews are still good.
 
Then and Now for March 22, 2013.






Then. Otis-Fensom Elevator Company Building. 50 Bay Street. c1914. Note the location of the fire hydrant. We will use that as a reference point.

1021170formerly50Bayc1914.jpg





Now. September 2012. Note the location of the fire hydrant again. I'll venture a guess that the Otis-Fensom building survived until the early 70s, when this block was razed for the development of Royal Bank Plaza.

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Now, for additional Then and Now entertainment, go back to page 579 of this thread to see Mr. Fensom's Rosedale house. :)

Many thanks to wwwebster and JTCunningham for making many of these Then and Nows possible.
 
If I might be permitted to add some additional Jolly Miller images [sorry if these have been previously posted]... Alas, I do not have dates for the last two. Identification, anyone?

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Early 1930s at the latest. In the ca 1936 photo a fire escape's been added and the sign 'DANCING' is gone, so it's before then. Contrast with the 1931 photo. At the earliest, the tracks were laid in 1892.
 
Otis-Fensom Elevator Company Building. 50 Bay Street. c1914. Note the location of the fire hydrant. We will use that as a reference point.

1021170formerly50Bayc1914.jpg

The hydrant intrigues me. Unless my eyes are deceiving me, it is one of a rare type of hydrant allegedly manufactured by the St Lawrence Foundry at Front & Parliament.

The very same hydrant appears in this image from 1902:

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Another of the same type appears more clearly in this image:

pictures-r-3994.jpg


I like to call this type “Robbie the Hydrant.â€

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Hydrant image courtesy of:

http://firehydrant.org/pictures/toronto-water-works.html
 
Hey wwwebster: What and where was that last building? Has touches of Louis Sullivan. Thanks.
 
Then and Now for March 25, 2013.





A Very Happy Passover to UT's Jewish audience. :)





Tonite, let's read about how a matzo ball factory becomes a trendy Parkdale coffee shop - 'The Mascot‏'.





Then. '1267 Queen W. Gula's Matza Factory. 1948.' Picture sent to us by a UTer... let's call her 'RF'.

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Now. March 23, 2013. Our old matza factory is the Mascot Coffee Shop.

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Eclectic decor. And hey,... it's not part of a corporate chain. :)

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You can grab one of the best espressos in the city [my opinion] and sit at a tiny childs school desk. It's like punishment, with a caffeine buzz.

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The tip jar here is an old TTC bus farebox; a charming place the Mascot; worth the price of a cup of coffee admittance.
 
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Villiers St. looking E. towards Munitions St. - 1932
Once part of the Ashbridges Bay swamp-land.
Still a pretty desolate stretch of Toronto's industrial landscape.

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Villiers St. looking E. towards Munitions St. - 1932
Once part of the Ashbridges Bay swamp-land.
Still a pretty desolate stretch of Toronto's industrial landscape.

View attachment 11435

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I've spent many many hours on this 'desolate stretch'. I taught all three of my kids to drive here. The wide quiet streets here make it perfect for the first-time-behind-the-wheel driver. I'm not the only one that thinks this; lot's of driving school cars down here on most days.
 

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