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Canadian Urbanism Uncovered

Spacing Toronto named best local blog

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photo by David Topping 

The editors of Spacing were very happy to open up NOW this week and find out that Spacing Toronto was named Best Local Blog. They wrote:

There are dozens of Toronto-centric blogs covering everything from cycling to fashion, but the one that stands on top of the heap is clearly Spacing Toronto (formerly Spacing Wire). Companion site to the beautiful Spacing Magazine, the blog serves up daily content about our city’s public space in a concise and intelligent format. Budding urban activists should make Spacing’s RSS feed part of their daily consumption.

The Best of Toronto issue had a few other connections to Spacing: our shared office space, the Centre for Social Innovation, was named the Best Social Enterprise; Spacing contributor Keith Stewart was named Best Green Activist; and Spacing’s urban spiritual advisor and occasional contributor Pier Giorgio DiCicco, the city’s Poet Laureate, was named Best Defender of the City.

There are a lot of cool public space winners that are worth pointing out (click on “continue reading” link). Also check out all of the Cityscape winners.

Best defender of the city
PIER GIORGIO DI CICCO
As T.O.’s poet laureate, Di Cicco, a Catholic priest, is supposed to open conferences and direct the public gaze to the glories of art and literature. What he’s done, however, is far grander. He’s turned city planning ethereal. In his many speeches and writings, Di Cicco’s provides a spiritual language for that elusive relationship between urban design and the social good. His book Municipal Mind: Manifestos For The Creative City theologizes against any act that “discourages human encounter in the interest of expediency” or breeds “entitlement without patience, tolerance without empathy and a civic mandate to mind your own business.” No planner should start a survey without inhaling Di Cicco’s little benediction.

Best activist group
URBAN REPAIR SQUAD
www.urbanrepairs.blogspot.com

This anonymous group of bike-loving vigilantes, a modern-day posse on two-wheelers, is taking back the streets from smog-causing cars one bike lane at a time. And all through the nozzle of a spraypaint can (no worries, it’s easy-off). Part graffiti, part guerrilla theatre, URS’s unofficial bike lanes have sprung up on Bloor, Ossington, Dundas and Queen, much to the delight of sometimes bewildered passersby. The city says it’s too broke to build bike lanes. The Urban Repair Squad will fix it, no charge.

Best activist campaign
STREETS ARE FOR PEOPLE’S LIBERATE A TREE
With sledgehammers and crowbars in hand, Streets Are for People make like a band of merry eco-warriors circa Rebellion of 1837, scouring the city for street trees to liberate from the suffocating slabs of concrete that prevent rainwater from getting to their roots. These tiny acts of guerrilla streetscaping are giving our otherwise neglected street trees a chance to survive — hey, the city’s not watering them!

Best city councillor
ADAM VAUGHAN
We were a little ambivalent about Vaughan at first — like what was he thinking when he mused on gated alleyways anyway? But this eloquent iconoclast has turned out to be a superb defender of the public realm. Fearless and unrepentantly independent, he’s one of the few to publically question police spending. And no one’s a better warrior against anti-taxer idiocy. Some may call the primacy he places on his ward parochial, but we’re big fans of the way the councillor is leveraging community consultations against bad development. Who else are we going to trust the future of Kensington to?

 

Best bridge
BAILEY BRIDGE, OLD FINCH AVENUE
Constructed by the 2nd Field Engineer Regiment of the Canadian Military Engineers after Hurricane Hazel washed out most bridges in Scarborough in 1954, this Bailey bridge spanning Rouge Creek kept the burb going. It’s one of only two Bailey bridges still in use in Toronto (the other crosses the Lakeshore). Legend has it that singing Happy Birthday there will rouse the spirit of a young girl who was murdered on the bridge on her birthday.

Best tourist attraction
GRAFFITI ALLEY NORTH OF QUEEN FROM GLADSTONE TO DOVERCOURT
The laneway north of Queen from Gladstone to Lisgar was a bleak place to get mugged a decade ago. Today, if you get accosted on your way home from the Price Chopper, at least you’ll be in the most impressive graffiti-lined alley in town. Artists beautified the laneway in June, and for several years prior. Much of the work was part of Style in Progress’s ReSurface event, which attracted more than 50 artists to work on walls, garages, fences and doorways along the whole stretch. The best part is this off-Queen outdoor gallery is free, cameras are certainly allowed and you won’t hear some slick snob snorting “But is it art?!”

Best memorial
Lakeshore Asylum Cemetery Project
www.psychiatricsurvivorarchives.com

Here, in a sparsely-treed greenspace off the Gardiner at Evans and Horner in Etobicoke, 1,511 former patients of the Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital, were buried and forgotten between 1890 and 1974. A revitalization project, the brainchild of Ed Janiszewski, a former employee of the hospital, has transformed this former meadow of 3-foot-tall grass, overgrown shrubs and fallen trees into a place where friends and family can remember.

Best new building
99 Scollard
This year’s Urban Design Award co-winner in the low-scale category, this stunning Drew Mandel Design creation offers a fine example of how a risky development form — infill housing — can be simple, elegant and moving. A contemporary structure that announces itself subtly within the streetscape.

Best-kept secret
CNE grounds www.explace.on.ca
For the 50 weeks of the year it’s ignored, the old fairgrounds are still packed with some of the most interesting architecture the city has to offer. Modern marvels like the Queen Elizabeth Building and Better Living Centre — the Food Building is pretty funky, too — sit coolly amid early-20th-century charmers like the Press and Horticulture buildings. The grounds also lay claim to some of the most important events in our history. It’s where the Americans landed during the War of 1812, where Scadding Cabin, one of the oldest buildings in the city (built in 1794), stands and where our first wind turbine was erected.

Best historical landmark
Gibraltar Point Lighthouse
The oldest landmark in the city that’s still in its original place (no one knows for sure when it was erected, 1808, is the best guess), this symbol of early seafaring days put old York on the map and used the first rudiments of green power — a cable tied to a drum and dropped down the shaft of the lighthouse revolved the light that guided trading vessels. The 25-metre-high structure is essentially the same as it was 200 years ago — it was raised by 3 metres in 1832 — except for the iron balcony, which replaced a wood one in 1878.

Best new development
West Don Lands
Twenty-three acres of parklands, transit within a five-minute walk of all residences, 1,200 units of affordable housing, pedestrian and cycling connections to the downtown core — West Don Lands is simply the most ambitious development plan in the city’s history. It’s also promising to transform the lower Don River into a usable waterway anchored by marshes of the kind that used to breathe life into the river before the industrial age laid it to waste. The first in a long line of waterfront proposals, West Don Lands will set the tone for all other development to follow along the lakefront.

Best free hangout
401 RICHMOND West
The former Macdonald Manufacturing warehouse is Toronto’s template for good downtown workspaces. Crediting Jane Jacobs’s writings, the current owners reinterpreted the old lithography company to house a vibrant mix of galleries, non-profits, designers, healers and dancers. You don’t even need to walk into a studio to check out something cool — just wander the halls. Once you’re done, pull out your packed lunch and head to the 6,500-square-foot rooftop patio, admire the biowalls and green roof gardens and critique the city’s flawed urban spaces. Bonus: free wireless thanks to Wireless Toronto.

Best public space
Toronto Sculpture Garden
Considering how many Toronto public spaces are masquerading as vacant lots, it’s refreshing to see a perennially successful destination. The Toronto Sculpture Garden has been an incubator for expressive public art since 1981 thanks to a deal between the city and philanthropist Louis L. Odette. Those keen enough to see the tiny parkette across from St. James Cathedral on King are rewarded with contemporary installations like Ludwika Ogorzelec’s Mist: From The Space Crystallization Cycle, a plastic web creeping across the park through the summer, or the current exhibit, Kelly Jazvac’s Upgrade, a kind of DIY Porsche.

Best green activist:

Keith Stewart, climate change campaign manager, World Wildlife Fund, www.wwf.ca
If you like clean air and polar bears, you want this man in your corner. His planet-saving bio goes on for miles, but a quick peek tells you the affable ecohead helped found the Low-Income Energy Network, penned the influential Smog Report Cards while at the Toronto Environmental Alliance and is now fighting dirty power and bringing street cred to the WWF. And he does it all with a sense of humour and purpose that does the cause proud.

Best social enterprise
Centre for Social Innovation
215 Spadina, 416-979-3939
Enter the incubator’s 18,000 square feet in the Robertson Building on Spadina and you’ll find a bustling community of 85 NGOs, artists and conscious businesses who share meeting rooms, phones, kitchen facilities and more — all with the aim of lowering costs and fostering community innovation. Interestingly, the centre was co-founded by the building’s landlord, Urbanspace Property Group, the conscious peeps behind 401 Richmond and the Gladstone.

Best community project
Toronto Environmental Alliance’s Secrecy is Toxic Map
www.secrecyistoxic.ca

TEA has called on residents to snap pics and write stories about toxic concerns in their ‘hoods to create an innovative online map of T.O. Now, if only the city and the province would adopt community right-to-know laws, we should be able to fill that map out nicely.

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16 comments

  1. It’s my first time on the site, and it’s because I read it in NOW. To follow this, I might just have to read a paper issue of Spacing.

    Great blog, keep it up 🙂

  2. Congrats!

    My vote for best councillor would have gone to my own, Adam Giambrone, but the narrowing of Lansdowne is really dogging him.

    I admire Adam Vaughan’s positions on a lot of things, but I still think he is Toronto’s Giuliani when it comes to nightlife.

  3. Kevin, as a fan of the nightlife, your defense of the undefensible is undermining the defense of the nightlife.

  4. First they came for the raves
    and I did not speak out
    because I was not a raver.

    Then they came for the clubs
    and I did not speak out
    because I was not a clubber…

  5. Kevin: I am not sure where you live – but I am a couple of blocks north. We are often awakened at 2, 3 and 4 in the morning on weekends from entertainment district “xxxxxxgans” – coming up through a laneway which is a private laneway. We can hear the gunshots. I have even been challenged by 905’ers who think they should be able to park behind my house – on private land – my own, at that.

    Those of us who live in this are fully in support of the Councillor’s position on the nightclubs. You’ve got to consider our “right” to safety.

    I don’t know how you can possibly compare this who “they came for …” – that’s real stretch.

  6. Sorry to totally derail this post by making a fairly off-topic remark, but just to respond to what you said, ceta:

    Firstly, I live in what is turning into another entertainment district: the Drake is in my front yard, along with the Social, Lot 16, the Beaconsfield and the Gladstone. Every night there are hundreds of people on the street making noise and litter until 4 AM, but I never complain because I love that there are places to dance.

    The loudest voices against Clubland are often indie rockers (not saying you are). Well, if the lessons learned by other cities are any indication, they too will lose their venues and spaces unless we *all* oppose efforts to over-enforce nightlife laws. In some places, any shred of legal nightlife that’s left is a miserable ordeal, confined to tiny bars with nothing but bottle service, where entering requires your ID to be scanned by a machine as you are recorded by CCTV for arbitrary police review. The first step in all this was Giuliani’s crackdown on clubs, which is mirrored by similar plans here.

    There are so many ideas to attempt before exercising the “nuclear option”, to ameliorate and improve the Entertainment District instead of destroying it. The coming crackdown is a culture war, not good government.

  7. You’re couching this in the wrong way Kevin. It’s not a culture war, Adam V isn’t a fascist. In fact on his CityTV program the other night his guest was Circa’s lawyer, and they discussed clubland. So it’s not as black and white as you make it out to be. And when you do make it b & w, you’ve sided, in the “culture war”, with homophobia and violence.

    I support your defense of clubbing, and raves and electronic music culture, but you need to make your argument nuanced and/or specific — when you make it all or nothing, then you loose me, because there’s some horrific stuff going on in clubland that is not good by any definition. But also some good stuff (Circa is likely an example of the good — the club owners who care, to a degree, about the experience). Focus on the good, and fight the bad cuz it’s bringing the whole thing down.

  8. Shawn, I’d like you to explain your criticisms of Kevin’s position in some more depth. Right now it seems like you’re just insulting him. I’d be particularly interested to know how “likes having places to dance” equals homophobia.

  9. blarg> If he indeed supported “places to dance” that would be fine, and that’s what I’m encouraging him to do. But he isn’t saying that, he’s calling attempts to tame clubland as a culture war.

    The rampant homophobia in clubland has been experienced personally and by friends (take a walk on a weekend evening around the area and you can be guaranteed to hear “hey faggot” or etc — once a busload of loaded fratboytypes(TM) yelled in unison “I”m going to kill you faggott” at people on the sidewalk as it drove down Richmond, followed by a couple beer bottles being lobbed out of it towards bystanders). It’s often directed indiscriminately at whoever is around. My comment is also based on lots of anecdotal stories from others hearing and/or receiving these kinds of comments/threats, and most recently, some of the reviews I read of Circa’s opening, when discussing the gay nights there, all said, in effect, this has been a no-go zone for gay people for a while now. This stuff happens everywhere in the city certainly, but the frequency and intensity of it in clubland has not, in my experience, been matched elsewhere.

    Kevin knows what I was getting at, I’m sure he’s overheard it or had it directed at him, so there was no insult.

  10. No offense taken.

    As the founder of my high school’s Gay-Straight Alliance, I am particularly sensitive to these issues, which is why I’m saying the first thing we should be doing is community outreach, not establishing a long-term moratorium on new clubs, for example. Homophobia and violence are *community* problems with *community* solutions. And yes, I have had homophobic comments directed at me all over the city.

    Clubland violence, according to the police, is on the steady decline. The number of clubs in the District *according to the KSRA* is dozens of clubs more than there actually are. This “sponge is full” mantra of Vaughan’s is hollow at best. Toronto is still the safest large city in North America. Other cities would love to have our problems.

    The solution should be to work with the clubs, not against them, and the only ideas that have been floated by our friends in City Hall sound like, “Ban, ban, ban.” If Vaughan continues to oppose CiRCA’s liquor license during its appeal this month, even though he said was “very impressed with the place,” after reluctantly agreeing to come and talk to Peter Gatien after snubbing him several times, one must wonder what his motivation is. Speaking of the area’s clubs and dance venues, he said, “hopefully they just disappear.”

    Only one resident came to testify against it, a guy who lives on Widmer behind the loading dock for Republik, Chapters, CiRCA and a restaurant. So to say he sides “with the residents” doesn’t really hold up, either. Personally I think it is a matter of taste: he doesn’t like them and thinks he can get rid of them, like Giuliani.

    When it comes to places to dance, one problem is that, if there are fewer clubs, they will *all* degrade into 19+, 905’er, top40 and hip hop holes. The more successful lowest common denominator promoters will be able to offer the Big Bop more money than they’re making with all ages punk shows, the Funhaus more money than they’re making with Darkrave, Velvet more money than they’re making with their EBM nights, and just about every venue that is available for one-off events will just start hosting a ton of crappy weeklies, and nightlife in Toronto will evaporate. Not just in Clubland, but everywhere, as promoters move into other ‘hoods in search of space.

    I outline some alternatives to the moratorium/club shutdown here: http://tinyurl.com/34jfvy

    But that is just the beginning. I would like to create a coalition dedicated to easing the problems of the area, and a Positive Space campaign would be a great place to start.

    However, the best thing I could see happening in the meantime is Adam Vaughan abandoning this fool’s errand, embracing the District as a tourist attraction and urging Tourism Toronto to promote our nightlife to the world more aggressively. We can use some of the money we should be making from tourism on hiring more street cops instead of installing CCTV, which apparently is better at capturing victims than perps.

    Here’s hoping we don’t lose one of the best things we have in this city: places to dance.

  11. In other news, my mother just voted me her favourite second born son.

  12. The internet is great, except for nuance. I don’t know if Glen (above) is being cheeky, or rude or jealous. To me it reads like envy or contempt.