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Humber Valley Village

Humber Valley Village is a neighbourhood located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is within the former suburb of Etobicoke and includes some of the most expensive real estate in the metropolitan west end. The boundaries are from Dundas Street on the south to Islington Avenue to the west, Eglinton Avenue to the north, and the Humber River in the east. The neighbourhood is in the political riding of Etobicoke Centre.

Humber Valley Village
Neighbourhood
Coordinates: 43°40′18″N 79°30′52″W / 43.67167°N 79.51444°W / 43.67167; -79.51444
Country Canada
Province Ontario
CityToronto
Established1850 Etobicoke Township
Changed municipality1998 Toronto from City of Etobicoke
Government
 • MPYvan Baker (Etobicoke Centre)
 • MPPKinga Surma (Etobicoke Centre)
 • CouncillorStephen Holyday (Ward 2)

Character

This neighbourhood can be further broken down into smaller communities. The triangular quadrant north of Dundas from Islington to Royal York, but south of Reigate is known as Chestnut Hills. The area surrounding Edenbridge, on the west side of Royal York is known as Lincoln Woods. The northern corner of Islington and Eglinton is sometimes referred to as The Greens of St. George's. Sometimes streets in the neighbourhood become their own little community as well, for example people tend to connect to names like Valecrest, North Dr, Wimbleton, all of which are streets in this neighbourhood.

This neighbourhood is the wealthiest part of Etobicoke, and considered at par with the exclusive neighbourhoods that developed along Avenue Rd, and Yonge St, between Bloor and Highway 401. This wealth is evident in the schools. Catchment areas for schools such as Lambton-Kingsway, Humber Valley Village, Our Lady of Sorrows Elementary School, Etobicoke Collegiate Institute, and Richview Collegiate Institute are very defined. In some cases, those who do not live in the boundaries must apply with a lottery system to gain acceptance. There is also an independent elementary school, Kingsway College School, in the area, located on Dundas St.

Residents of Humber Valley Village self-organize and fundraise through the Humber Valley Village Residents' Association (HVVRA),[1] which has a history of launching development challenges to the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB). Most notably, HVVRA ran a sustained public relations, legal and lobbying effort that resulted in a number of planning concessions by First Capital Realty (FCR) regarding a proposal for Humbertown Plaza.[2]

History

Although laid-out in farm lots by 1805, most of the lots were purchased by some of Etobicoke's early land owners who lived elsewhere in the township leaving this part of the Humber Valley little developed with no homes along what became Royal York Road from Dundas north to Eglinton.[3] The Iroquois shoreline, remnant of the ancient Lake Iroquois, which forms an escarpment along Dundas in Etobicoke, turns far to the north in this area, cut away by the Humber River creating the Humber Valley.

 
Robert Home Smith's estate at Edenbridge and Edenbrook, 1930

The western extension of St. Clair Avenue (now called Rathburn in Etobicoke) ran through the centre of the area and it was near this point the local developer Robert Home Smith built his home 'Edenbridge' (named after a village in southern England) overlooking the Humber Valley, at the turn of the century, after purchasing much of the surrounding land. To the west of Royal York another early resident, Frederick James, in 1908 developed his 'Red Gables' estate as a large landscaped park which, as the 'James Garden' landscaped park, remains today.[4] While Robert Home Smith developed land in The Kingsway neighbourhood to the south, the new 'Edenbridge' area was resurveyed and subdivided for development by Smith's company more slowly as the 'Humber Valley Surveys'; construction starting in the mid 1930s and continuing after Smith's death in 1935, until the 1960s.[5] This 30-year span produced many different styles of home as fashions changed, leading to a very different style of development than originally envisioned by Robert Home Smith. The designs include: Georgian, Colonial, Tudor, English Cottage, Cape Cod, ranch bungalows, split-level, contemporary and modernist [1] 2008-10-07 at the Wayback Machine.

Later development

The neighbourhood was planned as a wealthy suburb like 'the Kingsway' to the south, which it has largely remained despite the later development of many apartments immediately to the west along an extended 'the Kingsway', north of Dundas to the west of Edenbridge, during Etobicoke's rapid urbanisation in the 1960s. The extension of St. Clair Avenue (Rathburn in Etobicoke) was redeveloped, in a similar style to the area in the west, as Anglesey; a winding street lined with apartments. Because Robert Home Smith had planned the, then slowly growing, area as a purely residential development, there are few institutions here. Rapid growth in Edenbridge and the higher density (north) Kingsway area to the west, necessitated the establishment of the Humber Valley Village public school, built in 1951, soon followed by the Humbertown Shopping Centre at Royal York and Dundas at the heart of 'Humber Valley Village'. The 1950s also saw the redevelopment of the Royal York and Dundas intersection as a highway style interchange, thought to be necessitated by urbanisation but now much criticised, which divided this neighbourhood from the older neighbourhoods to the south. Still mostly an exclusive and leafy neighbourhood, some recent high-density development is taking place along the short commercial stretch of Royal York in the south of the community across from the Humbertown Shopping Centre, such as the 'James Club' condominium, named after James Gardens.[6]

Parks

 
Located in the neighbourhood, James Garden is a botanical garden managed by Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation Division.

The defining element of this community would be the parks system. Not only are there five golf courses within one kilometre of every side of the borders, but huge networks of green space surround the Humber River. This connects to the Martin Goodman Trail, which follows Lake Ontario. Lambton Woods Park is located south of the city-owned Scarlet Woods Golf Course (c. 1974)[7] along the western banks of the Humber.[8] James Gardens is a botanical garden located north of Lambton Woods Park, and is managed by Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation Division. Built around Fred James home, the botanical garden was acquired by Metro Toronto in 1955[9]

Other smaller parks include:

  • Edenbrook Park
  • Cobble Hills Parkette
  • Valecrest Park
  • Hartfield Court Parkette
  • Humber Valley Park
  • Wimbleton Road North Parkette
  • Chestnut Hills Park
  • Humbertown Park
  • Eden Valley Park
  • Allanhurst Park
  • Scarlett Heights Park

Schools

The Toronto District School Board, the city's public school board, operates one elementary school in the neighbourhood, Humber Valley Village Junior Middle School. Located on Hartfield Road, west of Royal York Road, north of Dundas Street, the property lies within the valley of the Humber River. It was established in 1951. In addition to public schools, the neighbourhood is also home to a music school and number of private schools, Kingsley Primary School,[10] Kingsway College School, and Leonardo da Vinci Academy. Leonardo da Vinci Academy is based at the former location for Buttonwood Hills Public School, and leases the property from Toronto Lands.

Sports

The Humber Valley Sharks is a hockey team from the Humber Valley Hockey Association. The Humber Valley Hockey Association[11] - was formed in 1953 by Mr. Stafford Smythe (whose father Conn Smythe was one of hockey's elder statesmen and former President of the Toronto Maple Leafs), Etobicoke Sports Hall of Famer and well known sportscaster Mr. Jack Stafford Jr.[12] and Mr. Ray Picard. One of the league's most notable Alumni, former Member of Parliament and Hockey Hall of Famer Ken Dryden played for one of the league's first two teams at 7 years of age.[13]

Institutions

Churches

 
St. Giles Kingsway Presbyterian Church is a church located in Humber Valley Village.
  • Humber Valley United Church;[16] built in 1953 with congregation established in 1952
  • St Giles Kingsway Presbyterian Church;[17] established 1960 from the merger of St Giles and Kingsway congregations; current building opened in 1962[18]
  • St. George's on-the-Hill Anglican Church;[19] established 1844 and consecrated by Bishop John Strachan.

Transportation

The Toronto Transit Commission operates buses along the main arteries of the neighbourhood. These include

  • 73 Royal York - Royal York Road
  • 37 Islington and 337 Islington Blue Night - Islington Avenue
  • 40 Junction-Dundas West - Dundas Street West
  • 32 Eglinton West and 332 Eglinton West Night - Eglinton Avenue West
  • 48 Rathburn - Anglesey Boulevard

These bus routes connects to Islington, Kipling, Royal York, Dundas West, Eglinton West, and Eglinton subway stations.

References

  1. ^ "HVVRA". Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  2. ^ "First Capital Plans A Makeover For Humbertown". Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  3. ^ Atlas of the County of York, Etobicoke Township. Miles & Co., 1878
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-06. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2003-10-09. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  6. ^ "James Club". www.jamesclub.ca. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  7. ^ "Scarlett Woods Golf Course". OntarioGolf.com. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-11-13. Retrieved 2017-06-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-06-14. Retrieved 2017-06-21.
  10. ^ "Kingsley School - Private Primary School - Toronto Etobicoke". Kingsley School - Private Primary School - Toronto Etobicoke. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  11. ^ "Humber Valley Hockey Association". hvha.org. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  12. ^ "Etobicoke Sports Hall Of Fame". etobicokesports.ca. 16 July 2003. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  13. ^ "Humber Valley Hockey Association". hvha.org. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Home - Humbertown". Humbertown. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  15. ^ "Heritage Toronto Moment: Royal York Golf Club - Urban Toronto". urbantoronto.ca. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  16. ^ "hvuc". hvuc. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-10-04. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  18. ^ "ST. GILES KINGSWAY CHURCH HISTORY" (PDF). squarespace.com. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
  19. ^ "St.Georges on the Hill". Retrieved 8 May 2018.

External links

  • Edenbridge-Humber Valley neighbourhood profile

humber, valley, village, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, avai. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Humber Valley Village is a neighbourhood located in Toronto Ontario Canada It is within the former suburb of Etobicoke and includes some of the most expensive real estate in the metropolitan west end The boundaries are from Dundas Street on the south to Islington Avenue to the west Eglinton Avenue to the north and the Humber River in the east The neighbourhood is in the political riding of Etobicoke Centre Humber Valley VillageNeighbourhoodCoordinates 43 40 18 N 79 30 52 W 43 67167 N 79 51444 W 43 67167 79 51444Country CanadaProvince OntarioCityTorontoEstablished1850 Etobicoke TownshipChanged municipality1998 Toronto from City of EtobicokeGovernment MPYvan Baker Etobicoke Centre MPPKinga Surma Etobicoke Centre CouncillorStephen Holyday Ward 2 Contents 1 Character 2 History 2 1 Later development 3 Parks 4 Schools 5 Sports 6 Institutions 6 1 Churches 7 Transportation 8 References 9 External linksCharacter EditThis neighbourhood can be further broken down into smaller communities The triangular quadrant north of Dundas from Islington to Royal York but south of Reigate is known as Chestnut Hills The area surrounding Edenbridge on the west side of Royal York is known as Lincoln Woods The northern corner of Islington and Eglinton is sometimes referred to as The Greens of St George s Sometimes streets in the neighbourhood become their own little community as well for example people tend to connect to names like Valecrest North Dr Wimbleton all of which are streets in this neighbourhood This neighbourhood is the wealthiest part of Etobicoke and considered at par with the exclusive neighbourhoods that developed along Avenue Rd and Yonge St between Bloor and Highway 401 This wealth is evident in the schools Catchment areas for schools such as Lambton Kingsway Humber Valley Village Our Lady of Sorrows Elementary School Etobicoke Collegiate Institute and Richview Collegiate Institute are very defined In some cases those who do not live in the boundaries must apply with a lottery system to gain acceptance There is also an independent elementary school Kingsway College School in the area located on Dundas St Residents of Humber Valley Village self organize and fundraise through the Humber Valley Village Residents Association HVVRA 1 which has a history of launching development challenges to the Ontario Municipal Board OMB Most notably HVVRA ran a sustained public relations legal and lobbying effort that resulted in a number of planning concessions by First Capital Realty FCR regarding a proposal for Humbertown Plaza 2 History EditAlthough laid out in farm lots by 1805 most of the lots were purchased by some of Etobicoke s early land owners who lived elsewhere in the township leaving this part of the Humber Valley little developed with no homes along what became Royal York Road from Dundas north to Eglinton 3 The Iroquois shoreline remnant of the ancient Lake Iroquois which forms an escarpment along Dundas in Etobicoke turns far to the north in this area cut away by the Humber River creating the Humber Valley Robert Home Smith s estate at Edenbridge and Edenbrook 1930The western extension of St Clair Avenue now called Rathburn in Etobicoke ran through the centre of the area and it was near this point the local developer Robert Home Smith built his home Edenbridge named after a village in southern England overlooking the Humber Valley at the turn of the century after purchasing much of the surrounding land To the west of Royal York another early resident Frederick James in 1908 developed his Red Gables estate as a large landscaped park which as the James Garden landscaped park remains today 4 While Robert Home Smith developed land in The Kingsway neighbourhood to the south the new Edenbridge area was resurveyed and subdivided for development by Smith s company more slowly as the Humber Valley Surveys construction starting in the mid 1930s and continuing after Smith s death in 1935 until the 1960s 5 This 30 year span produced many different styles of home as fashions changed leading to a very different style of development than originally envisioned by Robert Home Smith The designs include Georgian Colonial Tudor English Cottage Cape Cod ranch bungalows split level contemporary and modernist 1 Archived 2008 10 07 at the Wayback Machine Later development Edit The neighbourhood was planned as a wealthy suburb like the Kingsway to the south which it has largely remained despite the later development of many apartments immediately to the west along an extended the Kingsway north of Dundas to the west of Edenbridge during Etobicoke s rapid urbanisation in the 1960s The extension of St Clair Avenue Rathburn in Etobicoke was redeveloped in a similar style to the area in the west as Anglesey a winding street lined with apartments Because Robert Home Smith had planned the then slowly growing area as a purely residential development there are few institutions here Rapid growth in Edenbridge and the higher density north Kingsway area to the west necessitated the establishment of the Humber Valley Village public school built in 1951 soon followed by the Humbertown Shopping Centre at Royal York and Dundas at the heart of Humber Valley Village The 1950s also saw the redevelopment of the Royal York and Dundas intersection as a highway style interchange thought to be necessitated by urbanisation but now much criticised which divided this neighbourhood from the older neighbourhoods to the south Still mostly an exclusive and leafy neighbourhood some recent high density development is taking place along the short commercial stretch of Royal York in the south of the community across from the Humbertown Shopping Centre such as the James Club condominium named after James Gardens 6 Parks Edit Located in the neighbourhood James Garden is a botanical garden managed by Toronto Parks Forestry and Recreation Division The defining element of this community would be the parks system Not only are there five golf courses within one kilometre of every side of the borders but huge networks of green space surround the Humber River This connects to the Martin Goodman Trail which follows Lake Ontario Lambton Woods Park is located south of the city owned Scarlet Woods Golf Course c 1974 7 along the western banks of the Humber 8 James Gardens is a botanical garden located north of Lambton Woods Park and is managed by Toronto Parks Forestry and Recreation Division Built around Fred James home the botanical garden was acquired by Metro Toronto in 1955 9 Other smaller parks include Edenbrook Park Cobble Hills Parkette Valecrest Park Hartfield Court Parkette Humber Valley Park Wimbleton Road North Parkette Chestnut Hills Park Humbertown Park Eden Valley Park Allanhurst Park Scarlett Heights ParkSchools EditThe Toronto District School Board the city s public school board operates one elementary school in the neighbourhood Humber Valley Village Junior Middle School Located on Hartfield Road west of Royal York Road north of Dundas Street the property lies within the valley of the Humber River It was established in 1951 In addition to public schools the neighbourhood is also home to a music school and number of private schools Kingsley Primary School 10 Kingsway College School and Leonardo da Vinci Academy Leonardo da Vinci Academy is based at the former location for Buttonwood Hills Public School and leases the property from Toronto Lands Sports EditThe Humber Valley Sharks is a hockey team from the Humber Valley Hockey Association The Humber Valley Hockey Association 11 was formed in 1953 by Mr Stafford Smythe whose father Conn Smythe was one of hockey s elder statesmen and former President of the Toronto Maple Leafs Etobicoke Sports Hall of Famer and well known sportscaster Mr Jack Stafford Jr 12 and Mr Ray Picard One of the league s most notable Alumni former Member of Parliament and Hockey Hall of Famer Ken Dryden played for one of the league s first two teams at 7 years of age 13 Institutions EditHumbertown Shopping Centre 14 small shopping mall anchored by Loblaws and Shoppers Drug Mart St George s Golf and Country Club Stanley Thompson designed course opened in 1931 as the Royal York Golf Club 15 Lambton Mills Cemetery Jewish cemetery opened in 1909Churches Edit St Giles Kingsway Presbyterian Church is a church located in Humber Valley Village Humber Valley United Church 16 built in 1953 with congregation established in 1952 St Giles Kingsway Presbyterian Church 17 established 1960 from the merger of St Giles and Kingsway congregations current building opened in 1962 18 St George s on the Hill Anglican Church 19 established 1844 and consecrated by Bishop John Strachan Transportation EditThe Toronto Transit Commission operates buses along the main arteries of the neighbourhood These include 73 Royal York Royal York Road 37 Islington and 337 Islington Blue Night Islington Avenue 40 Junction Dundas West Dundas Street West 32 Eglinton West and 332 Eglinton West Night Eglinton Avenue West 48 Rathburn Anglesey BoulevardThese bus routes connects to Islington Kipling Royal York Dundas West Eglinton West and Eglinton subway stations References Edit HVVRA Retrieved 8 May 2021 First Capital Plans A Makeover For Humbertown Retrieved 8 May 2021 Atlas of the County of York Etobicoke Township Miles amp Co 1878 James Gardens and the Humber Valley Village in Etobicoke Ontario Archived from the original on 2010 07 06 Retrieved 2009 07 27 Toronto Neighbourhoods Archived from the original on 2003 10 09 Retrieved 2009 07 27 James Club www jamesclub ca Retrieved 22 April 2018 Scarlett Woods Golf Course OntarioGolf com Retrieved 22 April 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2017 11 13 Retrieved 2017 06 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Parks Forestry and Recreation James Gardens Archived from the original on 2017 06 14 Retrieved 2017 06 21 Kingsley School Private Primary School Toronto Etobicoke Kingsley School Private Primary School Toronto Etobicoke Retrieved 22 April 2018 Humber Valley Hockey Association hvha org Retrieved 25 October 2019 Etobicoke Sports Hall Of Fame etobicokesports ca 16 July 2003 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Humber Valley Hockey Association hvha org Retrieved 25 October 2019 Home Humbertown Humbertown Retrieved 22 April 2018 Heritage Toronto Moment Royal York Golf Club Urban Toronto urbantoronto ca Retrieved 22 April 2018 hvuc hvuc Retrieved 22 April 2018 St Giles Kingsway Presbyterian Church We Are Presbyterian Archived from the original on 2009 10 04 Retrieved 2009 07 08 ST GILES KINGSWAY CHURCH HISTORY PDF squarespace com Retrieved 2021 05 27 St Georges on the Hill Retrieved 8 May 2018 External links EditEdenbridge Humber Valley neighbourhood profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Humber Valley Village amp oldid 1169547690, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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