King of Kensington
Senior Member
These maps show the growth of built-up area of Toronto over the 20th century (note they are for Toronto only not the 905 suburbs).
http://www.torontotransforms.com/maps-of-the-urban-growth-of-the-city-of-toronto-feb-2014/
You can see that in 1901, the built-up area more or less corresponds with the city's boundaries at the time, stretching out to Riverdale and Parkdale. During the 1900s and 1910s, "streetcar suburbs" such St. Clair West, the Beaches and the Danforth develop. North Toronto takes off largely in the 1920s, but a lot of the growth is now outside the city with streetcar lines leading to growth in the Lakeshore communities of Mimico, New Toronto and Long Branch and out to Birch Cliff, Scarborough. By 1931, the City of Toronto is fully built up, as is most of York and a good amount of East York.
Growth continues to spread outward in the 1930s and 1940s, but the big expansion to suburbia occurs in the 1950s, with much of North York, Etobicoke and the southern half of Scarborough built up in 1961. North York and Etobicoke are pretty much completely built up by 1971, and Scarborough north of the 401 - the final frontier - by 1991.
http://www.torontotransforms.com/maps-of-the-urban-growth-of-the-city-of-toronto-feb-2014/
You can see that in 1901, the built-up area more or less corresponds with the city's boundaries at the time, stretching out to Riverdale and Parkdale. During the 1900s and 1910s, "streetcar suburbs" such St. Clair West, the Beaches and the Danforth develop. North Toronto takes off largely in the 1920s, but a lot of the growth is now outside the city with streetcar lines leading to growth in the Lakeshore communities of Mimico, New Toronto and Long Branch and out to Birch Cliff, Scarborough. By 1931, the City of Toronto is fully built up, as is most of York and a good amount of East York.
Growth continues to spread outward in the 1930s and 1940s, but the big expansion to suburbia occurs in the 1950s, with much of North York, Etobicoke and the southern half of Scarborough built up in 1961. North York and Etobicoke are pretty much completely built up by 1971, and Scarborough north of the 401 - the final frontier - by 1991.
Last edited: