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	<title>6PlaceToronto</title>
	<link>https://6placetoronto.org</link>
	<description>6PlaceToronto</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 15:58:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>1/6</title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/1-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 14:47:35 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>1/6Portlands/Monument ︎
Portlands/The Hearn

Photo: stockaerialphotos
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	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>2/6 </title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/2-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 14:50:55 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>2/6
Water/Data&#38;nbsp;︎

R.C.Harris Water Treatment Plant/Sidewalk LabsPhoto: Timothy Neesam


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	<item>
		<title>3/6 </title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/3-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 14:52:49 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>3/6Work/Inventory ︎
South Etobicoke/Islington, Jutland, Kipling AvenuesPhoto: google maps


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		<title>4/6 </title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/4-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 15:53:50 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>4/6Creek/Fort/Burial ︎
Garrison Creek/Christie Pits/Fort YorkPhoto: Mike Falkner</description>
		
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		<title>5/6  </title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/5-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 15:55:21 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>5/6Islands/Bubbles&#38;nbsp;︎

Ontario Place/Park
Photo: Dieter Janssen</description>
		
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		<title>6/6   </title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/6-6</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 15:58:24 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>6/6Landfill/Publics&#38;nbsp;︎
Tommy Thompson Park/Leslie Street SpitPhoto: Wikimedia commons


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		<title>1/6 Portlands / Monument</title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/1-6-Portlands-Monument</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Nov 2018 22:11:11 +0000</pubDate>

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		<description>1/6
Portlands/Monument

	



















The Port Lands occupy a 1,000-acre, 100-year
old shipping and industrial landfill over the former Don River delta and
marshlands, to the Southeast of old Toronto. Formed throughout the 20th
Century in different periods of industrial and infrastructural development, these
engineered lands frame Toronto’s Inner and Outer Harbours, a significant, part-accessible
length of the Metropolitan coastline and an artificial headland extending into
the Toronto Islands. They are publicly-owned and –regulated, subject to major
speculation, investment and redevelopment plans.
The Port Lands
form a block as wide as Manhattan and as long as the Champs Elysées, roughly the same size as central Venice.&#38;nbsp; Formed and reformed by changing frameworks of
land-management and –ownership, they are a patchwork and aggregate of
post-urban structures, landscapes and ecologies:&#38;nbsp; industrial buildings and 
channels, post-industrial remains, reclaimed wetlands, beaches and public spaces, fenced port, shipping, logistics and studio lots, roads, railway lines, paths and bridges, and multiple contaminated strata
of land, water and sediment, held in place by the gridiron plan and at
least half a million cubic metres of concrete. Their networks are transport
lines and zones spaced at an infrastructural scale; and major waste, water and
power lines running at a regional scale. 
These networks are punctuated by a series of nodes: industrial landmarks built at
a monumental scale.







The landmarks of
the Port Lands are fragmented and inaccessible. 
They give, due to the flat landfill and their seclusion, few
vantage points toward each other or toward Downtown Toronto. They are hard to visualize or imagine as situated
urban objects, and yet they are very
much there: &#38;nbsp;iconic, broadcast into the public
consciousness as tremendous buildings and cavernous interiors via a series of
films, stories and festivals. They are
post-urban, mediated, infrastructural behemoths halfway between decommission
and catastrophe, monuments for the screen but not (yet) for the city.



























The Hearn
Generating Power Station is the Port Lands’ major landmark. Its scale, contamination and state of
disrepair –like many Crises that lead to expropriations of the Commons– played
a role in its recent change of ownership. Sold by a public utility company to a
film studio, inaccessible
due to liability, the Hearn is as wide as the Great Pyramid of Giza, as
long as St. Peter’s Square and as massive as the Acropolis Hill.



























The Port Lands
are a landform blocking flows and erasing histories, a coastline rebuilt over layers of
sedimented pollution and turned into infrastructure. The Hearn is a dislocated icon, an
island on the island. The building broadcasts scenes and stories of the
infrastructural and virtual sublime against the optimized future city visions, the fluid zones and indeterminate coastal landscapes of Lake Ontario. Both are gates (or launch pads) to a new urban Archipelago of the Great Lakes.







	Host/Curator:Petros Babasikas



	
Talk


by&#38;nbsp;Nicolas de MonchauxProfessor of Architecture and Urban Design, Director of the Berkeley Center for
New Media, UC Berkeley
Rebel Plans: Apple, Star Wars, and Architecture at Bay.
&#60;img width="700" height="690" width_o="700" height_o="690" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5edc87842872a27cc313115f6bed3057e317063ad68593d23a8d67e9d1d39581/lecture_image_b.jpg" data-mid="29086393" border="0" data-scale="57" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/700/i/5edc87842872a27cc313115f6bed3057e317063ad68593d23a8d67e9d1d39581/lecture_image_b.jpg" /&#62;
The San Francisco Bay Area, home to only seven million of the United States’ 325 million inhabitants, is generally consigned to the footnotes of architectural history. But if one takes only a slightly broader definition of ‘architecture’ — one that acknowledges the many ways in which design and technology have profoundly transformed our landscapes and cities in the last few decades — a different view emerges. Central in this expanded field are two cultural monoliths at architecture’s periphery — Apple Computer, as embodied in its enormous new headquarters, and George Lucas’ imagined universe of Star Wars, embodied in the massive architecture of the Death Star. The two structures, it turns out, share an essential history not only with each other, but also the professional disciplines of architecture and city planning. Engaging this history and its prospects for design today, we can gain a new insight on the ethics, outcomes, and outlines of an emerging, technologically mediated interaction with space and city happening worldwide.at The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design1 Spadina Crescent, TorontoRoom 200 (Mediatheque)


	Fri, Nov 30/18 5pm- 6:30pm




Workshop

at The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design1 Spadina Crescent, TorontoRoom 230 
with: 



















Petros Babasikas, Roberto Damiani, Nicholas de Monchaux, Justine Holzman, Heba Mostafa, Ala Roushan, Charles Stankievech, Mark Sterling.











Sun, Dec 2/18
1pm - 3pm






	Walk
at Toronto’s Port Lands

What are the –present and possible– public spaces of
the Port Lands?&#38;nbsp; How do these public
spaces relate to the industrial landmarks and to the commons, networks and dynamic
landscapes of water?&#38;nbsp; How do plans and
infrastructures of processing/optimization measure against these landscapes of
indeterminacy and resilience? What are the local erasures and memory losses required
for the growth of monuments? What is the history of landfill and is it possible
for a new city to be built on it from scratch? Can film production generate a
new urban architecture? Is drawing the first act of reconnaissance, a blueprint
for breaking into the inaccessible buildings, for visualizing the
invisible?&#38;nbsp; What media document the scale
of the terraform, the region, the infrastructure and the walk?

	Jun 2019More info soon

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		<title>2/6 Water / Data</title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/2-6-Water-Data</link>

		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Nov 2018 17:36:15 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>6PlaceToronto</dc:creator>

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		<description>2/6
Water/Data

	Modern cities are spaces of desire,
projection and futurity. One way that cities express inclination and
aspiration, to themselves and to the world, is through real, planned,
projected and imagined infrastructure projects.
Toronto’s R.C. Harris Water
Treatment Plant, completed in 1941, is the city’s palatial ode to shared, public
provision 










— it is an over-specified, immoderately adorned expression of the potential of public works and the collective systems that constitute urban life.&#38;nbsp;Sidewalk Toronto is Google subsidiary Alphabet Inc.’s proposed 12-acre development of “smart” infrastructure, urban innovation and improved, sustainable and connected living.


These two sites are productively disjunctive — revealing comparable if opposing motivations in the contemporary history of a city that feels as if it is always becoming, always reaching toward a future it missed somewhere along the way. R.C. Harris and Sidewalk are two infra-structurally connected undertakings only Toronto could produce and/or project, two sites that bookend visions of a modern city that, through technology, attempts to support, nurture and create the social, economic and ecological needs of its denizens.











	Host/Curator:Jamie Allen

Walkshop
Palaces of Infrastruture: From Water to Data
at the R.C.
Harris Water Treatment Plant

&#60;img width="600" height="480" width_o="600" height_o="480" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a6a9918164b60f1b5f196888780c0226a513327d448ddc0cccb6285d5bc7e897/unnamed_600.jpg" data-mid="36247137" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/600/i/a6a9918164b60f1b5f196888780c0226a513327d448ddc0cccb6285d5bc7e897/unnamed_600.jpg" /&#62;




















Sunday's proceedings will include walking, talking, guided tours and
discussions at both the R.C. Harris Water Treatment Plant and the Sidewalk Labs
/ 307 Corporate Office.&#38;nbsp;
Artists and designers Jacinte Armstrong, Sage Sidley and Daniel Rotsztain we be helping trace the experience of the Sunday walkshop, creating interventions and materialisations for further discussion and exhibition.

Walkshop Schedule:10:45am-12:00pm: R.C. Harris Water Treatment
Plant12:30pm: Lunch2:00-3:00pm: Sidewalk Labs / 307 




















3:30-5:00pm:&#38;nbsp; an open Discussion
at Daniels Faculty of Architecture,
Landscape &#38;amp; Design.

1 Spadina Cresecent, Toronto, Room 230.
with Beth Coleman, Shannon Mattern, Biance Wylie and Jamie Allen.
The Walks/ Site visits are a public event with limited attendance.&#38;nbsp; The concluding discussion will be open to the public.









Sun, Mar 3/1910:45am- 5pm





TalkMonday Night Seminar at the McLuhan Centre
A Pedestrian View of Sidewalk Toronto
with

Beth ColemanAssociate Professor of Experimental Digital Media; Director, City as Platform Lab, University of Waterloo.

Shannon MatternProfessor of Anthropology at the New School for Social Research and School of Media Studies.Bianca Wylie
Open Government Advocate, Dgen Network; Senior Fellow Centre for International Governance Innovation.

at the Mcluhan Centre39 Queen's Park Cres E, Toronto

Mon, Mar 4/196pm - 8pm


	
	















	
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		<title>3/6 Work/Inventory</title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/3-6-Work-Inventory</link>

		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Nov 2018 19:05:52 +0000</pubDate>

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		<description>3/6
Work/Inventory


	
“A
look at a patch or field of 1960’s small scale industrial buildings in west
Toronto in which the uses&#38;nbsp; they accommodate are undergoing a second or
even third wave of reinvention.”&#60;img width="460" height="460" width_o="460" height_o="460" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/09b6c926a3ec252eeaa60a45dc0ce2f273cab582a121c777c087b0c5afbabf19/Picture4_460px.png" data-mid="35355200" border="0" data-scale="42" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/460/i/09b6c926a3ec252eeaa60a45dc0ce2f273cab582a121c777c087b0c5afbabf19/Picture4_460px.png" /&#62;&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#60;img width="459" height="459" width_o="459" height_o="459" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/63ac9296eca8ba49f205e1be9336caece7e4221cf20e224127e0a3953dec88fe/Picture5_460px.png" data-mid="35355201" border="0" data-scale="42" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/459/i/63ac9296eca8ba49f205e1be9336caece7e4221cf20e224127e0a3953dec88fe/Picture5_460px.png" /&#62;

Work and workplaces are changing. Some of
these changes are being studied in search of new policy, planning and design directions.
Others are just happening. 
Our discussions and walk will focus on an
area where the latter is the case -&#38;nbsp; an
area of South Etobicoke roughly bounded by: Islington Avenue on the east;
Jutland Avenue to the south; Kipling Avenue to the west; and the Canadian
Pacific Galt Subdivision rail corridor to the north. This area is an “employment area” in
official terms – developed originally as an incremental conversion of agricultural
lands starting in the in the mid 1950s – mostly small scaled single storey
buildings on served by an arterial road system laid out along with the
expressway network in the early 1960’s. 


At the area’s north west corner is the “6
points” intersection- a complex intersection conceived at the time as a “fly
over” or “cloverleaf” which is no undergoing a “reurbanization” to create an at
grade intersection and a new “civic centre”. Just to the west of this
intersection in the western terminus of the TTC’s Line 1 Bloor Danforth subway
line. To the west are a collection of large scale industrial heavier industrial
building sites that are in a process of conversion to new uses some for film
studios. To the east and south the area abuts contemporaneous low scale
residential neighbourhoods. 



















The area itself is evolving from its
original light industrial and manufacturing uses to a more complex mix of automotive,
food, office, making and working activities – more or less unexamined by
official planning efforts – while for the most part maintaining the form of the
first generation of building. 











The area is characterized by the presence
of a small scale, almost residential scale street grid with buildings set back
from the streets with a mixture of parking and landscaping. Paved parking,
loading and maneuvering spaces make up the majority of the non-street-facing
surfaces of the area. Many of these flow together across individual property
lines creating a more or less continuous asphalt field. 
Our walk amongst the workplaces will be the
first steps in an examination of the evolution of this area and an exploration
of the rich potentials that such areas represent for the future of the City and
for work.








	
Host/Curator:&#38;nbsp;Mark Sterling



Talk


















by
Jesse LeCavalier
Associate Professor, the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design

and

















Shawn Micallef



















Writer, Toronto

A Walk
Amongst the Workplaces



&#60;img width="472" height="248" width_o="472" height_o="248" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ee94ee427566f382c61103d73203f8e116aac2eb2995fede3355710325e6bd18/Picture2.png" data-mid="35166911" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/472/i/ee94ee427566f382c61103d73203f8e116aac2eb2995fede3355710325e6bd18/Picture2.png" /&#62;




















A conversation between Shawn Micallef and Jesse
LeCavalier on life and change in employment areas – moderated by Mark Sterling.
at The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design1 Spadina Crescent, TorontoRoom 200 (Mediatheque)Fri, Mar 29/196:30pm - 8pm

Walkin&#38;nbsp;Toronto’s South Etobicoke.

A walk with Shawn and Jesse through an evolving
employment area in South Etobicoke and a discussion on-site –
moderated by Mark Sterling. 
&#60;img width="640" height="480" width_o="640" height_o="480" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/77b94441a5e77726e27f4cb0dafe5234a569d42827b8addd0e8558e438c521b9/IMG_5040.jpeg" data-mid="38564734" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/640/i/77b94441a5e77726e27f4cb0dafe5234a569d42827b8addd0e8558e438c521b9/IMG_5040.jpeg" /&#62;




















Itinerary

The Etobicoke visit will
start at the South Lot entrance to Kipling Station on TTC Subway Line 2 at 10
AM Saturday 30 March 2019. Please try to be there by 9:50 AM so that we can
organize the transport.



The visit will include
walking and car/small bus transport between several locations in the light
industrial area generally to the south and east of Kipling Station. There will
be visits to at least two of the evolving uses which the existing industrial
buildings in the area accommodate – a community centre and a cooperative work
space. 



At the end of the
itinerary the group will assemble for a brief discussion of the visit and next
steps for ongoing research on the area. Transport back to Kipling Station is
included in the visit.



The Route for the visit
can be found at: https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=15jJosdgsGGQgmYzWEuz_ts1D1WPT46SH&#38;amp;usp=sharing&#38;nbsp; 








Sat, Mar 30/1910am - 2pm










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		<title>4/6 Creek/Fort/Burial</title>
				
		<link>https://6placetoronto.org/4-6-Creek-Fort-Burial</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2019 03:19:51 +0000</pubDate>

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		<description>4/6
Creek/Fort/Burial

	











































































































































Buried Toronto

&#60;img width="1632" height="1224" width_o="1632" height_o="1224" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/681dea66d60cb51aef79fc434eddd4487bbbf3841221a9683395a9327fb36f2f/IMG_6720.JPG" data-mid="40602966" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/681dea66d60cb51aef79fc434eddd4487bbbf3841221a9683395a9327fb36f2f/IMG_6720.JPG" /&#62;

How
do cities achieve closure through acts of burial and commemoration?
By
reflecting on buried and submerged layers of urban Toronto we aim to better
understand how cities remain tethered to what lies beneath. We will explore how
memorialization both uncovers and unravels the layered city through a walk
along the now buried Garrison Creek, its proximate commemorative burial grounds
of 18th c. victims of outbreaks as well as sites of the infamous
Fever Sheds where they were treated. Named after the Fort York garrison near
which it flowed, Garrison Creek served first as a pristine water and food
source but by the end of the eighteenth century its contamination led to its
burial and conversion into a sewer. Implicated in its burial were the ravaging
effects of cholera and typhus outbreaks on the city’s inhabitants, exacerbated
by poor infrastructure and the arrival of immigrants subjected to horrific and
unhygienic transatlantic passage.
Our sites are intimately linked not only
through their shared memorialization but their evocations of contagion and
public health. By examining the memorialization of these burial modalities, the
creek and the epidemic victims, we reconstitute a narrative for the cataclysmic
impact of historical infrastructural failure. Nullified as a source of
contagion by its burial, Garrison Creek is a reminder of how burial may act as
a form of healing and restitution when burial is conceived as cleansing,
hygienic and the only way for a city to move forward. Most of all, the burial
of Garrison Creek and the victims of its contamination tells a nuanced history
of a quintessential city of immigrants and stands as a testament to its
inhabitants valiant response in the face of tragedy.









	
Host/Curator:&#38;nbsp;Heba Mostafa




Talk



























by&#38;nbsp;Anita Bakshi




Instructor, Department of Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University.















The Hidden City: Daylighting the Past in Urban Space&#38;nbsp;
&#60;img width="1632" height="1224" width_o="1632" height_o="1224" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/571385ede9fb9eb2133fdaa913335b0428ed4373dc61c5a4e03b3bd3623f8a9c/1.11-map-in-process.jpg" data-mid="35193479" border="0" data-scale="79" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/571385ede9fb9eb2133fdaa913335b0428ed4373dc61c5a4e03b3bd3623f8a9c/1.11-map-in-process.jpg" /&#62;



















It is the political imperative of art to confront difficult aspects of
the past, in order to transform the aesthetics of the medium itself, and, more
importantly, to transform thought. &#38;nbsp;This assertion gets to the core of why
commemorative and cultural heritage sites require the development of richer
design practices. The abstract visual and design languages often used at monuments
and memorials employ conservative aesthetic approaches which have conservative
political implications.&#38;nbsp; As such, they
often do not enable confrontation or transformation.&#38;nbsp; Rather, this is an art that is more suited to
supporting and affirming existing thoughts and beliefs. In this talk, I argue
that a new poetics of commemoration can be
sought by working with non-visual aspects of design and with an understanding
of cognition and perception.&#38;nbsp; I explore
different modes of engagement with memory and the varying forms they might
take. 



Formal design elements and materials often used
at monuments and memorials - reflecting pools, waterfalls,
manicured lawns, and formal tree plantings – are contrasted with other design
strategies and processes.&#38;nbsp; Smooth, shiny,
reflective materials are fixed and unyielding, implying closure, finality, and
the so-called “healing” of trauma. 
Instead, utilizing materials that invite touch and engagement, and that
embrace visitors with smells and sounds and atmospheric enclosure, can enhance
bodily engagement with memory.&#38;nbsp; I explore
how design strategies can enhance empathic engagement, and allow for ‘seeing
through’ the body.&#38;nbsp; Rather than statue
removal and additive history, I argue for the development of hybrid design
practices and strategies that support dynamic and flexible engagements with the
past, using several examples to illuminate these possibilities.&#38;nbsp; 







at The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design1 Spadina Crescent, TorontoRoom 200 (Mediatheque)
This Talk is open to the public.&#38;nbsp; Please register for it here.Fri, Apr 26/195pm - 6.30pm


Walkat the Garrison Creek 
hosted by Richard Longley
Itinerary
Start: NW corner Christie and Bloor West (Christie Pits, Christie TTC subway)

 South from Christie Pits, across Bloor to Bickford Ravine, remains of Harbord Bridge to Art Eggleton Park, follow winding course of Garrison Creek around Montrose, Crawford streets to Camoes Square (Portuguese colonization and immigration on College
St.

South to Trinity Bellwoods Park, across Queen St to Strachan Avenue, E to Stanley Park, S to Wellington West, W back to Strachan, S to Fort York and the Bentway.

East to Bathurst, S to Ireland Park, N to City Place, Victoria Square, King St W.

 East along King to Toff Bell Kightbox at John St to see Irish Famine video and visit Fever Sheds site on the 4th flr.

 End of walk.Sat, Apr 27/1911am - 2pm

Workshop
at The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design1 Spadina Crescent, TorontoRoom 230The Walk &#38;amp; Workshop are open to the public.&#38;nbsp; Please register for them&#38;nbsp;here.

Sat, Apr 27/193pm - 5pm










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