In February, 2026 a friend who lives in the Junction emailed me to report that demolition had begun at the site of the former ...
Over the past year, I have written multiple times about how misinformation and selective framing continue shaping Toronto’s transportation debates. In previous Spacing op-eds including Pedaling ...
The waterfront as an east-west canvas for events and animation in Toronto will show its potential like never before during the upcoming FIFA World Cup. Not just the main stadium at Exhibition Place ...
This spring, at Bloomberg CityLab in Madrid, social prescribing reached the agenda of the world’s largest cities summit for ...
This article is co-authored with Muskan Fatima. E-bikes are good for our cities. They offer reliable transportation for ...
A city’s arts form an ecosystem. It’s easy to focus on the big features – the trees, as it were – but the true health of the system lies in the understory, in the buzz of life at the ground level, in ...
“While it is quite possible that Quebec would do no better on its own than as a province of Canada, there is little reason to suppose that it would ...
The tiny house at 175 de la Montagne is quite probably the oldest house in Griffintown. In fact, it is so old that it was once part of a neighbourhood ...
In well under a year, which is like the blink of an eye in City of Toronto time, a plan to pedestrianize that portion of Church Street bisecting The Village went from being the subject of a master’s ...
View of Burrard Street from Pender Street in May, 1979. Item # CVA 780-45. In 1979, a former premier and a local hockey star passed away. It was also the ...
(e)merging Art/Music/Poetry: The Vancouver Artpunk Archive of Doreen Grey November 23, 2012 to January 18, 2013 Opening Reception: Thursday, November 22 ...
Time and the City Map Collage courtesy of Yellow Future City. The city was there before you were born. It will be there after you die. And it is always changing, adapting, absorbing, and transforming, ...