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Toronto City Hall

The Toronto City Hall, or New City Hall, is the seat of the municipal government of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and one of the city's most distinctive landmarks. Designed by Viljo Revell and engineered by Hannskarl Bandel, the building opened in 1965. The building is located adjacent to Nathan Phillips Square, a public square at the northwest intersection of Bay Street and Queen Street, that was designed and officially opened alongside Toronto City Hall.

Toronto City Hall
Exterior of Toronto City Hall from the southeast, 2017
Location within Toronto
General information
Architectural styleModernist
LocationToronto, Ontario
Address100 Queen Street West
Coordinates43°39′12″N 079°23′02″W / 43.65333°N 79.38389°W / 43.65333; -79.38389Coordinates: 43°39′12″N 079°23′02″W / 43.65333°N 79.38389°W / 43.65333; -79.38389
Construction startedNovember 7, 1961[1]
InauguratedSeptember 13, 1965[1]
Cost$31 million[1]
($261 million in 2021 dollars[2])
OwnerCity of Toronto government
Height73.76 m (242.0 ft)
Technical details
Floor count20/27
Design and construction
Architect(s)Viljo Revell
Structural engineerHannskarl Bandel
Awards and prizesOntario Association of Architects 25 Year Award (1998)
Renovating team
Architect(s)Bruce Kuwabara
Designated1991

Toronto City Hall replaced the neighbouring Old City Hall, which was occupied by the municipal government since 1899 and continues to house municipal offices and courts.[3] The building also served as the seat for the Metropolitan Toronto regional government from 1965 to 1992.

History

City leaders had been looking to build a more modern city hall to house its growing municipal government since at least 1943, when a report to city council recommended a new city hall and square in the block bounded by Queen Street West, Bay Street, and Chestnut Street. The recommendation was rejected by the electorate in a referendum on New Year's Day in 1947. However, in October 1952, a panel of citizens appointed by city council made the same recommendation. In 1954, leaders selected a partnership of three of Toronto's largest architectural firms: Marani and Morris, Mathers and Haldenby, and Shore and Moffat, to create a design. Presented in November 1955, their design proposed a conservative, symmetrical limestone-clad building in the Modernist style facing a landscaped square. Unlike the design that would ultimately be built, it retained the stone Beaux-Arts Registry Office on the western part of the site and also included a landscaped public space in front of it. The podium of the new city hall was to house the council chambers, and was given columns to complement the eight columns of the Registry Building, with which it was aligned across the new public space in front of it.

The scheme was panned by leading architects, including Frank Lloyd Wright (who called it a "sterilization" and "a cliché already dated") and Walter Gropius (who deemed it a "very poor pseudo-modern design unworthy of the city of Toronto"),[4] and all classes of the University of Toronto Faculty of Architecture co-authored a letter condemning the proposal and calling for an international competition. The whole $18 million proposal was scrapped when voters rejected it in a December 1955 referendum. The parti was adapted by the architects and built as the Imperial Oil Building on St. Clair Avenue West.[citation needed]

Design competition

Led by Mayor Nathan Phillips, the Toronto city council decided in 1956 to hold an international competition to choose the new design under terms created by the International Union of Architects. This caused some controversy as some felt the work should be done by a Canadian. Phillips assembled a five-person panel of judges from some of the world's greatest architecture experts with Eric Arthur serving as advisor.

By the deadline of April 18, 1958, the committee received over 500 designs from 42 countries from which it selected eight semi-finalists. In September 1958, three judges selected Viljo Revell's design, though it almost missed the short list. Eero Saarinen, as member of the panel of five judges, arrived a day and half late and chose Revell's design from the other judges' list of entrants that could summarily be rejected. He convinced two other judges on the panel that Revell's unique design should be the winner.[5] One of the two dissenting judges was William Graham Holford, who was skeptical that the design could be built within the $18 million budget set by the city. Revell received a $25,000 prize plus an estimated $1 million in fees to supervise construction. He complained that not enough credit was given to his design collaborators, Heikki Castren, Bengt Lundsten, and Seppo Valjus, and asked that all names be listed as the architects. Revell died in 1964 before the project was finished.

Construction

 
A Heritage Toronto plaque commemorating the Toronto's first Chinatown. Most of the area was expropriated in the 1950s to make way for Toronto's new city hall.

Construction began in 1961, and the building was completed four years later. The time capsule for City Hall was placed in a large ceremony on November 7, 1962 and Governor General Georges Vanier officially opened the new structure September 13, 1965.[6]

The area of Toronto City Hall and the civic square was formerly the location of Toronto's first Chinatown, which was expropriated and bulldozed during the mid-1950s in preparation for a new civic building.[7] The location of City Hall itself was also the site of the 1917 Land Registry Office. It was designed in the Roman Classical style and was itself intended as part of a prior urban renewal plan for the area. It was demolished in 1964.[8]

The south side of Queen Street opposite City Hall was considered a 'commercial slum' and in August 1964, Toronto City Council voted to expropriate the south side for development appropriate to the new civic square.[9] The businesses on that side of the street included two burlesque theatres, pawn shops and a cinema. The south side was vacant at the time of the City Hall opening but was eventually occupied by a new hotel, connected by a bridge over Queen Street to the square.

To the west of the new City Hall, the University Avenue Armouries at University Avenue just north of Osgoode Hall was bought from the Government of Canada for CA$2 million to make way for a new court building, also as part of the new civic square project.[10]

Opening and post-completion changes

 
Official opening of City Hall in 1965.

The building was officially opened to the public on September 13, 1965, by Georges Vanier, the governor general of Canada. The opening ceremony was attended by 14,000 dignitaries, including Lester B. Pearson, the prime minister of Canada, and John Robarts, the premier of Ontario.[11]

In 1990, Hester How Daycare Centre was opened in the building, and named after a Toronto teacher Hester How, who helped turn around delinquent boys in the second half of the 19th Century.[citation needed]

City Hall was designated as a property of historical and architectural significance under the Ontario Heritage Act in 1991.[citation needed]

Minor upgrades by Toronto architect Bruce Kuwabara to connect the two towers and upgrade council chambers from 1997 to 1998.[citation needed] A green roof was added late 2009 and opened to over 10,000 visitors on Doors Open Toronto weekend in May 2010. The site now contains largest publicly accessible green roof in the city.[12][13]

Design and features

 
The building complex is made up a rectangular base and two curved towers. The outer surface of the towers is clad with concrete, while the inner surface includes concrete and glass.

Exterior

While the building's base is rectangular, its two towers are curved in cross-section and rise to differing heights. The east tower is 27 storeys (99.5 metres (326 ft)) tall and the west tower is 20 storeys (79.4 metres (260 ft)). Between the towers is the saucer-like council chamber, and the overall arrangement is somewhat like two hands cradling the chamber. The outer surfaces of the curve are covered with concrete bearing a rib pattern that provides strength and prevents collapse of the fabric as a result of the expansion of the exterior surfaces, and the tearing apart of the fabric as a result of differences in air pressure on the two sides of each wing-like tower during the high winds characteristic of the Great Lakes. The north, west, and east elevations are more abstract and sculptural in contrast with the extensive glazing of south elevation facing the square; each presents a view of concave panels of concrete textured with split-faced strips of Botticino marble. To the east of the square is Old City Hall which currently serves as a courthouse.

From the air, the building is seen as a giant unblinking eye, thus the building's original nickname of "The Eye of Government". When finished, the building generated widespread controversy among many who felt that it was "too futuristic" for the city.[14] In Arthur's 1964 book, Toronto, No Mean City, he praised the new City Hall, writing: "Taller buildings will be built before the end of the century here and elsewhere in North America, but there will be no comparable or no more renowned city hall."[15]

Interior

Building interior
 
Lobby in the complex's east tower
 
Councillor's office reception on the second level of the building.
 
The semi-circular City Council chambers
 
The lobby situated below the City Council chambers

The building also includes observation decks. The East Tower Observation on the 27th floor is closed to the public, although access to the observation deck, and other areas in the building complex, have been provided during the annual Doors Open Toronto event.[16] Access to the floor is via two sets of stairs as elevators end at 25th floor.[citation needed]

The building also includes a branch of the Toronto Public Library, although it has been reduced in size since its opening.[17]

Council Chambers

The City Council chambers is a semi-circular room located on the second floor supported on a single massive column below. On the main level of the chambers are the seats for the 25 members of Council, arranged in a semi-circle.

In front of the councillors is the podium and seat for the Speaker of Toronto City Council (or Deputy Speaker when Speaker is not present). Flanking the Speaker are two long tables for Commissioners (i.e., department heads); City Manager, Deputy City Manager, City Solicitor and Chief Financial Officer are seated to the right and City Staff on the left. In front of the Speaker is the horseshoe shaped desk for the City Clerk and Clerk staff. The mayor, is seated amongst councillors in the first row to the Speaker's right. A removable podium is located to the right of the Speaker for guest speakers. The room is covered by a shallow dome resting on 23 pairs of v-shaped supports that rise from the base. The space behind the supports is filled with glass.[18]

Behind the councillors is the public seating gallery which accommodates 250 in tiered rows. Adjacent to City Council chambers are two committee rooms, as well as the offices of the mayor and city councillors. Two sets of elevators provide access to the floors below (ground floor and to the parking garage below).

Public square

 
Nathan Phillips Square is a large public square in front of Toronto City Hall.

The design for the public space in front of the new city hall, Nathan Phillips Square, was part of the competition. The square's reflecting pool and concrete arches, fountain, and overhead walkways were thus also part of Revell's submission. It has since seen several monuments, sculptures, and other works of public art added, and was renovated, but it continues to complement the city hall with its original Modernist design elements.

The public square is one of the main hosts of different festivals and events in Toronto. New Year's celebrations are held there every year which include fireworks and musical performances. The annual Cavalcade of Lights Festival decorates the square from the end of November until the end of December.[citation needed]

In popular culture

Even as early as 1969, the building appeared as a futuristic alien building in a Star Trek comic; it was later seen in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Contagion" (Season 2, episode 11, March 20, 1989) as one of the possible destinations of an alien portal.[19] The 2010 film Red featured Toronto City Hall and various other city locations.[20]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c . City of Toronto. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved August 15, 2011.
  2. ^ 1688 to 1923: Geloso, Vincent, A Price Index for Canada, 1688 to 1850 (December 6, 2016). Afterwards, Canadian inflation numbers based on Statistics Canada tables 18-10-0005-01 (formerly CANSIM 326-0021) "Consumer Price Index, annual average, not seasonally adjusted". Statistics Canada. Retrieved April 17, 2021. and table 18-10-0004-13 "Consumer Price Index by product group, monthly, percentage change, not seasonally adjusted, Canada, provinces, Whitehorse, Yellowknife and Iqaluit". Statistics Canada. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  3. ^ Ian Chodikoff "Days of Future Passed." The Canadian Architect. Vol. 50. Iss.8 (2005):26-27. Print. City of Toronto Archives. Toronto's New City Hall. n.p., n.d. Web. September 17, 2010.
  4. ^ Osbaldeston 2008, p. 91.
  5. ^ Osbaldeston 2008, p. 94.
  6. ^ Filey, Mike (2004). Sketches 8: The Way We Were. Toronto: Dundurn Press. p. 135. ISBN 978-1459712584.
  7. ^ Yee, Paul (October 19, 2005). Chinatown: An illustrated history of the Chinese Communities of Victoria, Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Halifax. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company Limited. ISBN 978-1550288421.
  8. ^ "Toronto's old Registry Office Building". Historic Toronto. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  9. ^ "10 years to renew Queen - Manthorpe". Toronto Star. August 14, 1964. p. 31.
  10. ^ "Armories Sale Definite". Toronto Star. August 6, 1960. p. 9.
  11. ^ "A Step Forward in Time: Official Opening". www.toronto.ca. City of Toronto. 2022. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  12. ^ "Toronto City Hall Podium Sprouts a Green Rooftop Park". Inhabitat. Retrieved June 27, 2013.
  13. ^ Rochon, Lisa. "An oasis at the top of City Hall". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved June 27, 2013.
  14. ^ Nagy, Chris (September 13, 2015). "New City Hall Celebrates 50 Years as Centre of Toronto's Expression". Toronto Time Machine. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Arthur 2017, p. 229.
  16. ^ Shah, Maryam (February 1, 2016). "Kelly wants City Hall observation deck opened to public". Toronto Sun. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  17. ^ "City Hall". Toronto Public Library. Toronto Public Library. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
  18. ^ "Toronto City Hall tour - Council Chamber". City of Toronto. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  19. ^ Bunch, Adam (October 1, 2013). "Star Trek and Toronto City Hall". Spacing Toronto. Spacing. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  20. ^ Fleisher, David (January 27, 2011). "Reel Toronto: Red". Torontoist. Retrieved January 15, 2012.

Sources

External links

  • City of Toronto's history page
  • Historical photos: Viljo Revell, the design competition, construction, and opening
  • Open Buildings:Toronto City Hall profile
  • Contemporary photo gallery
  • A grand design: Toronto City Hall and Square competition - submissions from architects for the 1958 design competition
Preceded by Toronto City Hall
1965–
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by
67 Adelaide Street East
Seat for the Municipal Government of Metropolitan Toronto
1965–1992
Succeeded by

toronto, city, hall, city, hall, seat, municipal, government, toronto, ontario, canada, city, most, distinctive, landmarks, designed, viljo, revell, engineered, hannskarl, bandel, building, opened, 1965, building, located, adjacent, nathan, phillips, square, p. The Toronto City Hall or New City Hall is the seat of the municipal government of Toronto Ontario Canada and one of the city s most distinctive landmarks Designed by Viljo Revell and engineered by Hannskarl Bandel the building opened in 1965 The building is located adjacent to Nathan Phillips Square a public square at the northwest intersection of Bay Street and Queen Street that was designed and officially opened alongside Toronto City Hall Toronto City HallExterior of Toronto City Hall from the southeast 2017Location within TorontoGeneral informationArchitectural styleModernistLocationToronto OntarioAddress100 Queen Street WestCoordinates43 39 12 N 079 23 02 W 43 65333 N 79 38389 W 43 65333 79 38389 Coordinates 43 39 12 N 079 23 02 W 43 65333 N 79 38389 W 43 65333 79 38389Construction startedNovember 7 1961 1 InauguratedSeptember 13 1965 1 Cost 31 million 1 261 million in 2021 dollars 2 OwnerCity of Toronto governmentHeight73 76 m 242 0 ft Technical detailsFloor count20 27Design and constructionArchitect s Viljo RevellStructural engineerHannskarl BandelAwards and prizesOntario Association of Architects 25 Year Award 1998 Renovating teamArchitect s Bruce KuwabaraOntario Heritage ActDesignated1991Toronto City Hall replaced the neighbouring Old City Hall which was occupied by the municipal government since 1899 and continues to house municipal offices and courts 3 The building also served as the seat for the Metropolitan Toronto regional government from 1965 to 1992 Contents 1 History 1 1 Design competition 1 2 Construction 1 3 Opening and post completion changes 2 Design and features 2 1 Exterior 2 2 Interior 2 2 1 Council Chambers 2 3 Public square 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Sources 6 External linksHistory EditCity leaders had been looking to build a more modern city hall to house its growing municipal government since at least 1943 when a report to city council recommended a new city hall and square in the block bounded by Queen Street West Bay Street and Chestnut Street The recommendation was rejected by the electorate in a referendum on New Year s Day in 1947 However in October 1952 a panel of citizens appointed by city council made the same recommendation In 1954 leaders selected a partnership of three of Toronto s largest architectural firms Marani and Morris Mathers and Haldenby and Shore and Moffat to create a design Presented in November 1955 their design proposed a conservative symmetrical limestone clad building in the Modernist style facing a landscaped square Unlike the design that would ultimately be built it retained the stone Beaux Arts Registry Office on the western part of the site and also included a landscaped public space in front of it The podium of the new city hall was to house the council chambers and was given columns to complement the eight columns of the Registry Building with which it was aligned across the new public space in front of it The scheme was panned by leading architects including Frank Lloyd Wright who called it a sterilization and a cliche already dated and Walter Gropius who deemed it a very poor pseudo modern design unworthy of the city of Toronto 4 and all classes of the University of Toronto Faculty of Architecture co authored a letter condemning the proposal and calling for an international competition The whole 18 million proposal was scrapped when voters rejected it in a December 1955 referendum The parti was adapted by the architects and built as the Imperial Oil Building on St Clair Avenue West citation needed Design competition Edit Led by Mayor Nathan Phillips the Toronto city council decided in 1956 to hold an international competition to choose the new design under terms created by the International Union of Architects This caused some controversy as some felt the work should be done by a Canadian Phillips assembled a five person panel of judges from some of the world s greatest architecture experts with Eric Arthur serving as advisor By the deadline of April 18 1958 the committee received over 500 designs from 42 countries from which it selected eight semi finalists In September 1958 three judges selected Viljo Revell s design though it almost missed the short list Eero Saarinen as member of the panel of five judges arrived a day and half late and chose Revell s design from the other judges list of entrants that could summarily be rejected He convinced two other judges on the panel that Revell s unique design should be the winner 5 One of the two dissenting judges was William Graham Holford who was skeptical that the design could be built within the 18 million budget set by the city Revell received a 25 000 prize plus an estimated 1 million in fees to supervise construction He complained that not enough credit was given to his design collaborators Heikki Castren Bengt Lundsten and Seppo Valjus and asked that all names be listed as the architects Revell died in 1964 before the project was finished Construction Edit A Heritage Toronto plaque commemorating the Toronto s first Chinatown Most of the area was expropriated in the 1950s to make way for Toronto s new city hall Construction began in 1961 and the building was completed four years later The time capsule for City Hall was placed in a large ceremony on November 7 1962 and Governor General Georges Vanier officially opened the new structure September 13 1965 6 The area of Toronto City Hall and the civic square was formerly the location of Toronto s first Chinatown which was expropriated and bulldozed during the mid 1950s in preparation for a new civic building 7 The location of City Hall itself was also the site of the 1917 Land Registry Office It was designed in the Roman Classical style and was itself intended as part of a prior urban renewal plan for the area It was demolished in 1964 8 The south side of Queen Street opposite City Hall was considered a commercial slum and in August 1964 Toronto City Council voted to expropriate the south side for development appropriate to the new civic square 9 The businesses on that side of the street included two burlesque theatres pawn shops and a cinema The south side was vacant at the time of the City Hall opening but was eventually occupied by a new hotel connected by a bridge over Queen Street to the square To the west of the new City Hall the University Avenue Armouries at University Avenue just north of Osgoode Hall was bought from the Government of Canada for CA 2 million to make way for a new court building also as part of the new civic square project 10 Opening and post completion changes Edit Official opening of City Hall in 1965 The building was officially opened to the public on September 13 1965 by Georges Vanier the governor general of Canada The opening ceremony was attended by 14 000 dignitaries including Lester B Pearson the prime minister of Canada and John Robarts the premier of Ontario 11 In 1990 Hester How Daycare Centre was opened in the building and named after a Toronto teacher Hester How who helped turn around delinquent boys in the second half of the 19th Century citation needed City Hall was designated as a property of historical and architectural significance under the Ontario Heritage Act in 1991 citation needed Minor upgrades by Toronto architect Bruce Kuwabara to connect the two towers and upgrade council chambers from 1997 to 1998 citation needed A green roof was added late 2009 and opened to over 10 000 visitors on Doors Open Toronto weekend in May 2010 The site now contains largest publicly accessible green roof in the city 12 13 Design and features Edit The building complex is made up a rectangular base and two curved towers The outer surface of the towers is clad with concrete while the inner surface includes concrete and glass Exterior Edit While the building s base is rectangular its two towers are curved in cross section and rise to differing heights The east tower is 27 storeys 99 5 metres 326 ft tall and the west tower is 20 storeys 79 4 metres 260 ft Between the towers is the saucer like council chamber and the overall arrangement is somewhat like two hands cradling the chamber The outer surfaces of the curve are covered with concrete bearing a rib pattern that provides strength and prevents collapse of the fabric as a result of the expansion of the exterior surfaces and the tearing apart of the fabric as a result of differences in air pressure on the two sides of each wing like tower during the high winds characteristic of the Great Lakes The north west and east elevations are more abstract and sculptural in contrast with the extensive glazing of south elevation facing the square each presents a view of concave panels of concrete textured with split faced strips of Botticino marble To the east of the square is Old City Hall which currently serves as a courthouse From the air the building is seen as a giant unblinking eye thus the building s original nickname of The Eye of Government When finished the building generated widespread controversy among many who felt that it was too futuristic for the city 14 In Arthur s 1964 book Toronto No Mean City he praised the new City Hall writing Taller buildings will be built before the end of the century here and elsewhere in North America but there will be no comparable or no more renowned city hall 15 Interior Edit Building interior Lobby in the complex s east tower Councillor s office reception on the second level of the building The semi circular City Council chambers The lobby situated below the City Council chambers The building also includes observation decks The East Tower Observation on the 27th floor is closed to the public although access to the observation deck and other areas in the building complex have been provided during the annual Doors Open Toronto event 16 Access to the floor is via two sets of stairs as elevators end at 25th floor citation needed The building also includes a branch of the Toronto Public Library although it has been reduced in size since its opening 17 Council Chambers Edit The City Council chambers is a semi circular room located on the second floor supported on a single massive column below On the main level of the chambers are the seats for the 25 members of Council arranged in a semi circle In front of the councillors is the podium and seat for the Speaker of Toronto City Council or Deputy Speaker when Speaker is not present Flanking the Speaker are two long tables for Commissioners i e department heads City Manager Deputy City Manager City Solicitor and Chief Financial Officer are seated to the right and City Staff on the left In front of the Speaker is the horseshoe shaped desk for the City Clerk and Clerk staff The mayor is seated amongst councillors in the first row to the Speaker s right A removable podium is located to the right of the Speaker for guest speakers The room is covered by a shallow dome resting on 23 pairs of v shaped supports that rise from the base The space behind the supports is filled with glass 18 Behind the councillors is the public seating gallery which accommodates 250 in tiered rows Adjacent to City Council chambers are two committee rooms as well as the offices of the mayor and city councillors Two sets of elevators provide access to the floors below ground floor and to the parking garage below Public square Edit Main article Nathan Phillips Square Nathan Phillips Square is a large public square in front of Toronto City Hall The design for the public space in front of the new city hall Nathan Phillips Square was part of the competition The square s reflecting pool and concrete arches fountain and overhead walkways were thus also part of Revell s submission It has since seen several monuments sculptures and other works of public art added and was renovated but it continues to complement the city hall with its original Modernist design elements The public square is one of the main hosts of different festivals and events in Toronto New Year s celebrations are held there every year which include fireworks and musical performances The annual Cavalcade of Lights Festival decorates the square from the end of November until the end of December citation needed In popular culture EditEven as early as 1969 the building appeared as a futuristic alien building in a Star Trek comic it was later seen in the Star Trek The Next Generation episode Contagion Season 2 episode 11 March 20 1989 as one of the possible destinations of an alien portal 19 The 2010 film Red featured Toronto City Hall and various other city locations 20 See also Edit Canada portalMetro Hall East York Civic Centre Etobicoke Civic Centre North York Civic Centre Scarborough Civic Centre York Civic CentreReferences EditNotes Edit a b c Toronto City Hall tour a brief history City of Toronto Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved August 15 2011 1688 to 1923 Geloso Vincent A Price Index for Canada 1688 to 1850 December 6 2016 Afterwards Canadian inflation numbers based on Statistics Canada tables 18 10 0005 01 formerly CANSIM 326 0021 Consumer Price Index annual average not seasonally adjusted Statistics Canada Retrieved April 17 2021 and table 18 10 0004 13 Consumer Price Index by product group monthly percentage change not seasonally adjusted Canada provinces Whitehorse Yellowknife and Iqaluit Statistics Canada Retrieved April 17 2021 Ian Chodikoff Days of Future Passed The Canadian Architect Vol 50 Iss 8 2005 26 27 Print City of Toronto Archives Toronto s New City Hall n p n d Web September 17 2010 Osbaldeston 2008 p 91 Osbaldeston 2008 p 94 Filey Mike 2004 Sketches 8 The Way We Were Toronto Dundurn Press p 135 ISBN 978 1459712584 Yee Paul October 19 2005 Chinatown An illustrated history of the Chinese Communities of Victoria Vancouver Calgary Winnipeg Toronto Ottawa Montreal and Halifax Toronto James Lorimer amp Company Limited ISBN 978 1550288421 Toronto s old Registry Office Building Historic Toronto Retrieved August 13 2019 10 years to renew Queen Manthorpe Toronto Star August 14 1964 p 31 Armories Sale Definite Toronto Star August 6 1960 p 9 A Step Forward in Time Official Opening www toronto ca City of Toronto 2022 Retrieved July 12 2022 Toronto City Hall Podium Sprouts a Green Rooftop Park Inhabitat Retrieved June 27 2013 Rochon Lisa An oasis at the top of City Hall The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved June 27 2013 Nagy Chris September 13 2015 New City Hall Celebrates 50 Years as Centre of Toronto s Expression Toronto Time Machine a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Arthur 2017 p 229 Shah Maryam February 1 2016 Kelly wants City Hall observation deck opened to public Toronto Sun Retrieved September 5 2017 City Hall Toronto Public Library Toronto Public Library Retrieved June 24 2022 Toronto City Hall tour Council Chamber City of Toronto Retrieved September 5 2017 Bunch Adam October 1 2013 Star Trek and Toronto City Hall Spacing Toronto Spacing Retrieved January 27 2019 Fleisher David January 27 2011 Reel Toronto Red Torontoist Retrieved January 15 2012 Sources Edit Arthur Eric 2017 1964 Otto Stephen A ed Toronto No Mean City The Canada 150 Collection Third ed Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4875 1654 3 Osbaldeston Mark 2008 11 Toronto City Hall 1925 1955 Built to Different Plans Unbuilt Toronto A History of the City That Might Have Been Toronto Dundurn Press ISBN 9781550028355 Retrieved June 4 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toronto City Hall City of Toronto s history page Historical photos Viljo Revell the design competition construction and opening Emporis database listing Open Buildings Toronto City Hall profile Contemporary photo gallery A grand design Toronto City Hall and Square competition submissions from architects for the 1958 design competitionPreceded byOld City Hall Toronto Toronto City Hall1965 Succeeded bycurrentPreceded by67 Adelaide Street East Seat for the Municipal Government of Metropolitan Toronto1965 1992 Succeeded byMetro Hall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Toronto City Hall amp oldid 1117747164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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