“Bringing Back the University Ave. Armouries”
Before and After will appear each Friday showcasing mixed Then and Nows by local artist and Toronto history enthusiast Alden Cudanin.
photo from Toronto Archives, Fonds 124, id 0064
Canadian Urbanism Uncovered
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“Bringing Back the University Ave. Armouries”
Before and After will appear each Friday showcasing mixed Then and Nows by local artist and Toronto history enthusiast Alden Cudanin.
photo from Toronto Archives, Fonds 124, id 0064
4 comments
awesome. Love this!
honestly , tearing down the armouries was one of the dumbest thigs our city planners have ever done. If they were around now they could be used for a mutlitude of community related activities, like the Wychwood Barns, but in the heart of the city. My heart aches when I see old photos of that building.
I work in a building almost kitty-corner to the courthouse/former armouries. I had Alden’s mashup as the desktop image on my computer for a couple of months, and sometimes, if I looked out the window and squinted hard enough…
I love this pic! It fits in with yearnings I have had about this old building. Here’s the story: when I was a kid my grandparents had an LP of the 48th Highlanders pipe band, and the cover was a big picture of the 48th band, bagpipes and all, marching down University Avenue, past the Armouries building. So I always knew what the building looked like, but it was torn down in the early sixties I beieve, and I do not remember it, but I’ve always had it in my mind’s eye exactly like it’s shown in this pircture, and have thought about it as I go by that spot, and thought wouldn’t it be cool if it was still there. London Ontario has an old preserved building that is somewhat similar that was later incoproated into a hotel. My grandfather commanded the 48th in WWII, and was in the militia for years before that. He had many anecdotes about the Armouries.