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Grange Park
Grange Park is a small downtown neighbourhood bounded to the west by Spadina Avenue, College Street on the north, University Avenue to the east and on the south by Queen Street West. It is within the Kensington–Chinatown official City of Toronto district; its name is derived from the Grange Park public park south of the Art Gallery of Ontario.
The Grange Park neighbourhood has become synonymous with Toronto’s Chinatown district. Grange Park’s street signs, telephone booths – and even the local police station – all have signage in Chinese as well as English. Grange Park is also home to a large number of artists – which makes sense considering The Art Gallery of Ontario, Ontario Crafts Council and Ontario College of Art are all located in Grange Park.
Grange Park’s narrow tree-lined streets are full of ornate Victorian row houses, most built in the 1870s through to the 1890s. These houses feature all the Victorian trimmings. You will find many homes rented out to students of the Ontario College of Art & Design, located on McCaul Street, as well as the University of Toronto to the north.

Grange Park Real Estate Map
Condo buyers should check out Village-by-the-Grange. Built in 1980, this is one of Toronto’s first mixed use developments. It features condos, retail and offices, all in the same complex. This city landmark is currently being revitalized by the Grangetown development which will incorporate urban townhouses into the Village-by-the-Grange.
South of Village-by-the-Grange is the Beaver Hall Artist’s Co-op. Beaver Hall has 24 apartments and a large communal studio space. It was designed to provide local artists with affordable live and work space.
In the western section of Grange Park, the businesses of Chinatown extend east from Spadina along Dundas to nearly Beverly, while the streets remain residential.
The homes on the east side of McCaul Street were demolished and the Village by the Grange residential and commercial complex was built. It was built in 1980, and was a rare example in Toronto of a low rise apartment complex; there are mixed commercial uses being built after several decades of high rise apartment building construction in the downtown core.

The Art Gallery of Ontario and OCAD
There is a commercial enclave that has developed around Baldwin Avenue, between Beverley and McCaul Street. It has been named “Baldwin Village”; it is a converted residences housing, restaurants, art stores and curios. The residences of the north side of Dundas Street have all been converted into art galleries.
Grange Park was Toronto’s first elite neighbourhood. It is named after Grange House, built in 1817, by D’Arcy Boulton Jr., a member of one of early Toronto’s wealthiest and most prominent families. Grange House is now part of the Art Gallery of Ontario and the mansions on Beverley Street are the sole reminders of this neighbourhood’s period of affluence.
In the late 1800s, Grange Park’s upper class gentry headed for the newer more fashionable suburbs in Parkdale, Rosedale and the Annex. By the early 1900s, Grange Park’s large estates had been transformed into rows of modest workers’ houses that became home to many new Canadians.
Jewish immigrants were followed by Eastern Europeans and most recently the Chinese; who migrated to Grange Park after Toronto’s first Chinatown at Dundas and Elizabeth Street was razed in the 1960′s, to make room for the new City Hall.
Grange Park is great neighbourhood in Toronto, and it holds some of the greatest art galleries in Ontario. Anyone living in this neighbourhood should be proud to be surrounded by such history.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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Would you buy this building for seven bucks?
Dave LeBlanc – Globe and Mail
There is a glow around architect Paul Oberst when he talks about Kensington Market Lofts.
The 64-year-old transplanted Kentuckian seems a rather positive fellow to begin with, but when he casts his mind back, the enthusiasm is palpable: “I think the building’s quite good, but I thought the story was really, really good.”
It’s a triple-scoop of a good story, actually, from little things such as what was retained in the three heritage structures, the bigger story of the complex’s history as various educational institutions and, finally, to how a neighbourhood came together in the 1990s to see their vision realized.
Standing in dappled shade of the building’s private courtyard, he points to where a sizable chunk of the glazed-terracotta-clad 1952 building was removed to allow for this amenities space. Set back into the new facade are generous balconies with zigzagging curtain walls, and below these are little square windows into the parking garage made from reclaimed glass block. “So you walk into the parking deck and there’s natural light in there,” he says, pleased.
Sure, it’s a little thing that he and the other designers did, but it’s thoughtful: so too was keeping the many original, wide terrazzo staircases. The stairs are wide, he reminds, because of the “hundreds of people” that studied here.
The first group arrived in the form of little children, when the William Houston Public School – a handsome three-and-a-half-storey building of rug brick and oversized windows – was built on Nassau Street in 1923–24. Surrounded by a large yard with a baseball diamond (a local resident who attended the school showed Mr. Oberst where it had been), by the Depression it was all but empty as kids were pulled out of school and put to work.
After a stint as a military training facility during the war and then as the Ontario College of Art afterward, the building became the Provincial Institute of Trades in the early 1950s, when the two terracotta buildings were built to train plumbers, gasfitters, welders and electricians.
When Mr. Oberst first moved to the city in 1970, he’d often walk past and marvel at the lightshow provided by student welders behind the glass block: “In the evening there’d be all of this sparking in the windows, it was really fun.”
George Brown College took possession of the buildings in 1968 and would train an entirely new generation of tradespeople until 1993. When the college declared the buildings surplus shortly after that, Councillor Rosario Marchese got the neighbourhood together to discuss their fate.
Mr. Oberst was at that meeting, as was another architect, Robert Barnett, who had worked on the building for George Brown. Interestingly, Mr. Barnett’s father, also an architect, had worked on the building decades before.
Despite their size, everyone wanted to see the buildings stay put, and while some ideas weren’t financially sustainable (such as an art centre), the two architects convinced the group that housing was the only real choice. The community working group then came up with a wish list – such as bringing retail back to the Baldwin Street sidewalk, having front yards on ground floor units along quieter Nassau Street and forbidding pedestrian access between the two streets via the complex – and even though they weren’t obligated to do so, officials at George Brown agreed to present the list to potential buyers.
Surprisingly, finding a buyer wasn’t easy. The provincial government, which could have purchased the complex for seven dollars, thought it was a “white elephant,” says Mr. Oberst, shaking his head at the memory: “An acre-and-a-quarter in downtown Toronto, 200,000 square feet of building and you don’t want it for seven bucks?!”
The municipal government didn’t want it either, and a deal with Artscape fell through, so the community group decided to prepare an offer; taking into account various deficiencies, they came up with a market value of $1-million.
Unfortunately, George Brown’s number was several times that amount, so the complex hit the open market. “I don’t think it was even 20 groups that came through,” remembers Mr. Oberst. Regardless, the college did get at least one offer, which was, ironically, $1-million, and it was accepted.
When that developer couldn’t close the deal, Mr. Oberst convinced a friend and colleague, architect Lloyd Alter and his then development partner Howard Cohen (who, without Mr. Alter, started Context Development before project’s end) to come take a look. They were able to buy the existing contract and secure financing from the Ontario Realty Corporation due to meeting the affordable housing threshold.
“We had AutoCAD drawings ready to go,” says Mr. Oberst, who at that point still wasn’t sure he and Mr. Barnett would get the nod as chief architects on the project. However, because of his relationship with Mr. Alter and an agreement to hire the “new, up-and-coming, hot guys on the block” Martin Kohn and John Shnier as co-designers, it happened. Good thing, since marrying three vintage buildings, carving them into lofts, adding three levels of parking and fulfilling the community wish list wasn’t easy.
Less than a year after hundreds of happy new owners moved in, the project won Honourable Mention at the City of Toronto’s 2000 Architecture & Urban Design Awards. “The community-driven development process for this project is commendable,” began the awards booklet, which hailed the design as a “skillful rehabilitation of a surplus building.”
While no mention was made of the new glow in the sky overhead, it’s still there if you look long enough.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
———————————————————————————————————————
Incoming search terms


















