Advertisement

Toronto Life - The Wire

The comprehensive index of every blog post, magazine story and restaurant review that appears on Torontolife.com

Urban Decoder

Comments

On Berkeley Street, just north of Dundas, the façade of an old building stands propped up by huge structural beams

On Berkeley Street, just north of Dundas, the façade of an old building stands propped up by huge structural beams. What’s its story?—Erin Murray, Bloor West Village

Lord Dufferin Jr. & Sr. (est. 1876) is one of the oldest public schools in the city. In 1926, the original wood-frame building was condemned as a fire trap and replaced by a turreted brick-and-stone monolith of learning. That sturdy structure survived until 1999, when the school board figured it would be cheaper to tear it down and rebuild next door than to perform much-needed renovations. Surprisingly, given the city’s penchant for destroying all things historical, they saved a section of the old wall—the façade you see today—with plans to use it to front a new swimming pool complex. (The demolished building boasted the oldest pool in a Toronto public school.) Alas, funding woes have left the project indefinitely suspended—so to speak.

Comments

Comment on this post

Neither the author nor Toronto Life necessarily agrees with the comments posted here. Editors will not correct spelling or grammar. Toronto Life reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. Read our full policy

 

Follow Toronto Life on Twitter, Facebook and via RSS

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Most shared stories today

Advertisement