Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Guild Park and Gardens [1] is a public park in the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The park was formerly the site of an artist colony and is notable for its collection of relics saved from the demolition of buildings primarily in downtown Toronto arranged akin to ancient ruins .
Guildwood Village Flag in Guild Park with former Toronto Mayor John Tory, Councillor Paul Ainslie and Friends of Guild Park President John Mason. Photo by Guildwoodian. The Guildwood Village Flag [6] was designed by Marsha Leverock Westergaard and was adopted by the Guildwood Village Community Association (GVCA) on June 12, 2018. The Guildwood ...
The building was acquired by the Guild Inn in 1934. As part of the 1978 sale of the Guild Inn property, the land around the cabin came under the administration of the Toronto Region Conservation Authority. In 1980, the then Borough of Scarborough designated the cabin as the Osterhout Cabin, and granted it protected heritage status. [6]
The Guild Inn, or simply The Guild was a historic hotel in the Guildwood neighbourhood of Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario and was once an artists colony.The surrounding Guild Park and Gardens is notable for a sculpture garden consisting of the rescued facades and ruins of various demolished downtown Toronto buildings such as bank buildings, the old Toronto Star building and the Granite Club.
Guild Park and Gardens is a park located along the Scarborough Bluffs. It is home to a collection of relics saved from demolished buildings in Toronto. It is home to a collection of relics saved from demolished buildings in Toronto.
Grange Park (Toronto) Grasett Park; Guild Park and Gardens; Gwendolyn MacEwen Park; H. Harbour Square Park; Harbourfront, Toronto; Healey Willan Park; High Park; HTO ...
Bank of Toronto 1913 1965 King and Bay (some stonework re-assembled at Guild Park) Land Registry Office [9] 1915 1964 Queen St W at Bay St, now Toronto City Hall Savarin Tavern 1919 1980 330 Bay Street (facade initially retained, later demolished) Maple Leaf Stadium: 1926 1967 Bathurst St at Fleet St National Building 1926 2009
The William H. Wright Building was a six-storey office building located at 140 King Street West in Toronto, Ontario, at the corner of King and York streets.Designed by the firm Mathers and Haldenby and built between 1937 and 1938, it was one of Toronto's best examples of streamline moderne architecture.