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Canadian Urbanism Uncovered

Documenting the collapsed Dundas Street buildings

Photographer Peter MacCallum captured images of the four matching storefronts at 606-614 Dundas West in their prime, and after they had deteriorated.

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Commercial Block, 606-614 Dundas Street West, 1992

Commercial Block, 606-614 Dundas Street West, 1992

For the most part, the buildings on the north side of Dundas Street West between Spadina and Bathurst are an architectural hodgepodge. The one exception to the general heterogeneity was, until recently, the block of four matching storefronts at 606-614 Dundas West, between Augusta and Denison. In 1992, I photographed this quaint commercial row in black and white. In 2023, noticing how much it had deteriorated, I returned to document it in colour.

Commercial Block, 606-614 Dundas Street West, 2023
Commercial Block, 606-614 Dundas Street West, 2023

A widely reported calamity befell these modest buildings last Friday, August 16. Fortunately, no one was injured in the partial collapse of the facade of the Levol Convenience Food Mart, which also affected its neighbours, Lotus Hair Salon and Super Star Salon.

Sandwich board, Lotus Hair Salon, 614 Dundas Street West, 2020
Sandwich board, Lotus Hair Salon, 614 Dundas Street West, 2020

Emergency managers had no choice but to undertake a controlled demolition of the upper floors of the three affected buildings, leaving only the single facade at the east end precariously intact. Three businesses will now have to relocate, and their second floor tenants have lost their homes.

In architectural terms, the city has also lost something of value. These buildings date from 1872, when Dundas Street West was still called St. Patrick Street and Augusta Avenue was Grosvenor Street. While they remained in good condition, they exemplified what many commercial streetscapes in Toronto looked like when Canada was a new country.

All photographs copyright Peter MacCallum

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One comment

  1. Check out the City of Toronto satellite imagery at https://map.toronto.ca/torontomaps/ and compare the photo from 2020 vs 2021. Looks like the back roof was replaced with a plastic drop sheet. I’m no architectural forensic scientist but postponing structural repairs not only makes for bigger costs down the road, not to mention the poor neighbours.