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2015 Parapan American Games has major role to play in Paralympic Movement

The 2015 Pan and Parapan American Games will play a major role in propelling the Paralympic Movement, "not just here in the Americas, but the whole world," said the President of the Americas Paralympic Committee (APC) Octavio Londoño on a visit to Toronto. 
 
"As a country Canada has a major role to play hosting a number of major Parasport events starting with August's IPC Swimming World Championships in Montreal. As a city Toronto has the biggest role to play between now and Rio 2016," Londoño is quoted as saying in an article written by Emily Goddard reporting on his presentation in Toronto.
 
He continues, "If together we can deliver the biggest and best Parapan American Games in terms of sport, participation, accessibility, inclusion, crowds and media coverage, then we can head into Rio 2016 with significant momentum."
 
Goddard writes that Londoño expressed delight over Toronto's enthusiasm to "deliver the best Games ever," saying the city has a real opportunity to build on the success of London 2012 "when it welcomes some 1,500 athletes from 28 National Paralympic Committees to compete in the 15 sports of the Parapan Games." The games act as qualifiers for the Olympics in Rio in 2016, featuring South America's first Paralympic Games. Toronto will play a vital role in building momentum for Paralympic games in the years and months leading up to Rio. 
 
The 2015 games are set to get underway in Toronto on August 7, 2015.
 
Read the full report here
Original source: Inside the Games

The maple leaf overwhelms the rainbow flag at London's Pride fest

Just as this year's Toronto Pride celebrations were fading from local headlines, the city made a splash in the United Kingdom during London's Pride festival.
 
Last Saturday, London hosted the third-ever WorldPride, an event that happens every few years, aiming to deliver a lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans parade and festival of international scope and appeal. Though the streets of central London were packed with excited attendees, colourful characters and intrigued onlookers, a series of organizational snafus led to the entertainment program being dramatically reduced—and the parade turned into a march without motorized vehicles—just days before the event.
 
Meanwhile, delegates from Pride Toronto, Ontario Tourism and Tourism Toronto, promoting Toronto's own upcoming WorldPride celebrations in 2014, swept in to fill some of the gaps. When the official media area in Trafalgar Square didn't happen, London Pride organizers directed international reporters to Toronto's media lounge in a hotel just outside the square. In fact, that's where some London organizers went themselves for a break.
 
More dramatically, Canadians dominated the entire final hour of London's Pride programming, with Proud FM host Mike Chalut taking over as MC to welcome '80s star Corey Hart and Toronto booster and high-energy headliner Deborah Cox to the stage. By day's end, there was a buzz that Toronto's WorldPride organizational abilities would decidedly exceed London's.
 
"According to [Toronto] organizers, they have been planning it for the past four years," reported Gay Star News.
 
Caryl Dolinko of InterPride, the international association of Pride organizers that sanctions WorldPride, told the Toronto Star that Toronto's is "going to be the biggest and probably one of the best WorldPrides we'll ever have… Toronto will do it right."
 
Read the full stories here and here
Original sources: Gay Star News & Toronto Star
 


Waterfront 'treats' hidden among industrial areas

Progress reinvigorating Toronto's waterfront hasn't been fast, but Susan Griffith, a writer for the UK's Independent newspaper, seems impressed by what's taking shape.
 
"Over the past 20 years, the city fathers have been imaginatively transforming the concrete piers, abandoned silos and crumbling warehouses of the industrial waterfront into welcoming public spaces."
 
Offering a tour starting at the Toronto Music Garden, Griffith suggests heading east.
 
"Within 10 or 15 minutes the sign for the unlovely Redpath Sugar Refinery will come into view, hiding an unexpected urban treat. This is the third summer that a load of sand has transformed a carpark into Canada's Sugar Beach, featuring 150 white slatted Muskoka chairs under pink umbrellas, where Torontonians come to picnic and sunbathe. Swimming is not permitted but you can cool off in the fountains that shoot out of the pavement."
 
Read the full story here
Original source: The Independent
 


Partnerships & collaboration infuse Canary District development

The Daily Commercial News gives the details of the design plans for the new Canary District on the waterfront.
 
"'Unlike many athletes' village projects which are purpose-built to house competitors during major athletic events and then converted to other uses following the games, this project is advancing the building of a community that was already planned and under development,' said Meg Davis, Waterfront Toronto's vice-president of development."

"To ensure aesthetic diversity across the Canary District, teams from four architecture firms—architectsAlliance, KPMB, Daoust Lestage Inc. and MacLellan Jaunkalns Miller Architects—were commissioned to design 'unique, contemporary buildings' reflective of their trademark architectural styles, Dundee Kilmer Developments said."
 
"The integrated design team was tasked to work within Waterfront Toronto's precinct and block plan built over years of consultation between key stakeholders such as the City of Toronto, local community groups, Infrastructure Ontario, and TO2015 "while still injecting their own unique creative flourishes to build a truly livable and sustainable neighbourhood."
 
Read the full story here
Original source: Daily Commercial News

Pickering backs plans for Rouge Valley National Park

Plans to create a national park in the Rouge Valley are picking up steam.
 
On April 10, Pickering council voted to endorse a statement of intent from Parks Canada that confirms the commitment of all parties involved.
 
"A staff report noted that the creation of the park will require the transfer of lands from various governments and public agencies within and adjacent to the Rouge Valley, including Pickering. Once transferred, those lands will no longer be subject to taxes or payments in lieu of taxes."
 
"Planning discussions to identify the boundaries of the park are expected to begin this year under the direction of Parks Canada. No budget numbers for the park have been announced as yet."
 
The creation of a national park was announced during the June 2011 throne speech.
 
Read the full story here
 
Original Source: DurhamRegion.com
 

Bay Adelaide Centre, TIFF Bell Lightbox, Vaughan City Hall among architecture award winners

As you might expect, GTA projects dominated the 2012 Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) Awards.

Six of the top 15 projects are located in the GTA and represent some of the region's most high-profile projects and firms. Design Excellence winners include the Bay Adelaide Centre's west tower (WZMH Architects), Lawren Harris House (Drew Mandel Architects), SPLIT House (superkül Inc.), TIFF Bell Lightbox (Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects), Terrence Donnelly Health Sciences Complex (Kongats Architects) and Vaughan City Hall (Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects).
 
The Ryerson Recreation and Athletics Centre (Lett/Smith Architects) won the Landmark Award.
 
Read the complete list of winners here
 
Original Source: Canadian Architect

Spadina design offices play the part of glam law firm on NBC

The Seattle Pi features Toronto design and architectural consulting company Stantec, after the company's downtown studio was selected as the primary site for the new NBC legal drama, The Firm. The Stantec building, located at Spadina Avenue and Wellington, was designed by the company's own architects, interior designers and engineers and was selected for The Firm because of its open-concept design, integration of heritage architecture and innovative use of natural light. 
 
"Based on the best-selling novel by world-renowned author John Grisham, The Firm stars Josh Lucas as attorney Mitchell McDeere. Stantec’s award-winning studio stands in for the law firm of the title, Kinross & Clark. The Firm airs on NBC and Global Television."
 
"'Kinross & Clark is not your typical law firm. So the production team valued the unique design elements of Stantec's studio space that make it an ideal work environment for our team,' says Stephen Phillips, Stantec's practice leader for architecture."
 
"Formerly the McGregor sock factory, the Stantec Toronto studio is located in the historic Garment District at the corner of Spadina Avenue and Wellington Street West. The site is listed as a heritage property within the city core. Originally constructed in 1905, the timber post and beam building offered the perfect opportunity to reclaim, transform and recycle a piece of the city's industrial history. The project is LEED CI Gold certified, underscoring Stantec's commitment to sustainable practice."
 
read full story here
original source Seattle Pi
 

Toronto's waterfront called one of world's biggest urban shoreline revitalization efforts

The Wall Street Journal spotlights the Toronto Waterfront redevelopment in a tripartite feature that includes not only an in-depth article on the effort,  but also a slideshow of the many redevelopment projects underway and a video interview with Waterfront Toronto CEO John Campbell.

Declaring the redevelopment of Toronto's shoreline, "one of the world's biggest waterfront revitalization efforts" the Wall Street Journal looks both at projects still in progress (e.g. the West Donlands) and those projects that have been successfully integrated into the fabric of the city (e.g. the Simcoe Wavedeck).

see full feature here (subscription required)
original source Wall Street Journal 

8 TO startups nab $20 million in investments

Tech Vibes reports on the more than $20 million recently invested in eight promising Toronto startups.

The funding for the startups—which range from ad companies to medical suppliers—is the result of a successful partnership between the Government of Ontario and a handful of private investors. The Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario committed about $5 million, with the remaining $15 million coming from venture capital groups. 
 
full list of companies here
original source Tech Vibes

The Atlantic explores what Toronto's Spacing magazine is doing right

The Atlantic interviews Matthew Blackett, the co-founder, publisher and creative director of Toronto city-focused publication, Spacing. Devoted to "understudying the urban landscape," Spacing has been growing steadily—both in circulation and in influence—for over 10 year.
 
"Founded in 2003, Spacing was originally a print magazine published three times a year and focused on public space issues in Toronto, but has since expanded into a series of blogs covering cities like Montreal, Ottawa, and Vancouver. The print edition is moving into a quarterly publication schedule, with every other issue covering urbanism at a national level. Spacing's latest national issue is out now. Matthew Blackett, the magazine's co-founder, publisher and creative director, talked with The Atlantic Cities about Spacing and its role in the changing conversation about Canadian cities."
 
read full interview here
original source Atlantic Cites 
 

Choir! Choir! Choir! belts it out and puts a stranger in your ear

Toronto Life writes on Choir! Choir! Choir!,  the collaborative choir project held every Tuesday night at the College Street bar No One Writes To The Colonel.  At every Choir! Choir! Choir! night, project founders Daveed Goldman and Nobu Adilman divide participants  into three groups (highs, mediums and lows) and lead them in a one and half hour singalong. Launched three years ago, Choir! Choir! Choir! has become a Toronto institution with as many as 100 eager participants joining in.
 
"Over a few hours of trial and error, their unique arrangements become full-fledged, clappable, even beautiful songs. It all started three years ago, when Adilman organized a singing birthday gift for a friend. Now the group is landing gigs, like opening the Reel Asian Film Festival, which means anyone can indulge their Glee-like fantasy of performing before hundreds. The material—George Michael, TLC, Fleetwood Mac—has an ironic tinge, but there’s no hipster posturing in a crowd that includes moms, students, the hip and the not so hip. The experience is a sort of extended version of that moment when the star holds out the mic and the crowd finishes the chorus. Choir! is all the things Toronto thinks it is—democratic, inclusive, creative—without any of the self-consciousness. It’s a chance to break the urban isolation, turn off the devices and hear a stranger in your ear."
 
read full story here
original source Toronto Life

'Culture of caring' pervasive in Toronto's hospitals

An Inside Toronto special looks at the "culture of caring" and innovation that permeates Toronto hospitals, healthcare centres and medical research facilities. From the Scarborough Hospital's new tasty food options, to Humber River Regional Hospital's digital transformation, Toronto's healthcare centres are on the forefront of patient care and medical innovation. 
 
"Not only does this culture of advancement and innovation attract brilliant minds in the health care field, it establishes Toronto as forward-thinking and a global leader."
 
"And the giving travels in both directions. There are fundraisers and walks throughout the year, which raise much-needed funds for one form of research or another. Citizens give back when they are proud of the work being done by those in the medical field. In particular when it is happening in their city.
 
The great strides being made in healthcare by institutions across the city are the kinds of things Torontonians should be proud of—especially when everything coming from various levels of government is all doom and gloom. In particular, hospitals are under fire for CEO salaries, the province is talking of delisting some services from OHIP (Ontario Health Insurance Plan) and the federal government wants to transfer healthcare funding to the provinces."
 
"At this time, everyone should know about the eye surgery being done at Toronto East General Hospital, which takes amniotic membrane from donated placentas to repair and reconstruct damaged eyes; the stem cell research at the McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine that helps find treatments for conditions like heart disease and spinal cord injury; the work into children's health at the Hospital for Sick Children; and the coronary artery clinical trials underway at North York's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre."
 
read full story here
original source Inside Toronto 
 


Queen West's Type Books scores viral hit with playful video of books gone wild

Toronto bookstore Type Books is getting international attention after the shop's stop-motion film The Joy of Books went viral on YouTube. The short film—in which books seemingly come to life at night—had nearly 1.9-million hits within one week of being posted. 
 
"Sean Ohlenkamp, creator of the vibrant and lovely stop-motion short film The Joy of Books, is one such literary soldier. His battle cry comes in his closing frame: 'There's nothing quite like a real book.'"
 
"The fantastical short film is set in Toronto bookshop Type. Books come alive after a shopkeeper leaves for the night, much like the toys in Pixar films spring to life as soon as humans leave the room. The books dance, spin on their spines, frolic and even shift spots on their shelves in a circular pattern to mimic fans doing the wave at a baseball stadium."
 
"The film is magic (aided by great Harry Potter-esque music via Grayson Matthews) and it's easy to imagine the books are so alive with characters and places and heartbreaks and great loves and wonderful adventures that they can't help but wriggle and quake in their bindings."

read full story here
check out video here
original source NY Daily News


YEAR IN REVIEW: Scoring high in everything from banking to sustainability

Whatever it felt like on the ground for Torontonians, our city's star continued to shine brightly internationally in 2011. Surveying the international media, Toronto received rave reviews.
 
That was especially the case in rankings of global cities. We were never far from the top. Name the rating system—happiness, innovationreputationeconomic powereconomic securitymuseumsentrepreneurshipsustainability, as a travel destinationliveability or well-being, Toronto usually scored high. In some areas, Toronto came out of nowhere. As the Grasshopper Group wrote in February: "Although not historically known as a nexus of entrepreneurship, Toronto has come onto the scene as a fast-moving startup city."
 
But spreadsheets weren't the only thing telling us we're doing just fine. Visiting reporters also found Toronto to have charms and attractions that can't necessarily be measured by cold, hard numbers. Our diversity and snow-free streets attracted attention, as did our vintage shops and movie locations, our life-sciences sector, the reinvented Roncesvalles village, TIFF, our 3D and game industries, our music scene, Luminato, the Distillery District (multiple times—a real travel-writer fave), our "creative force"  and, of course, the CN Tower's newest thrill, the Edgewalk.

But if we had to pick the top two things that people were talking about when they talked about Toronto on 2011, it would have to be our banks and our love of towers. Not only did we avoid a real estate and banking crisis, we decided to keep moving onward and upward—especially upward—making us the North American city with the most tower construction currently in progress.

Toronto's long-time chief planner talks about the past and future of city building

The Torontoist writes on Gary Wright's final annual conversation as Toronto's chief planner. In a talk hosted by the Canadian Urban Institute, the Cities Centre at the University of Toronto and NRU Publishing, Wright shared his almost four decades worth of wisdom on the past, present and future of city-building in Toronto. 
 
 
"Wright began working in planning in 1974, during a citizen-driven epoch of neighbourhood development. In response to the transition from surface transit to underground subway development along the Bloor-Danforth corridor, Bloor West business owners set up the city's first Business Improvement Area in 1970, and throughout the decade others would follow—an energetic, community-minded time for city planning in Toronto. The 1980s, marked by recession, would be different. Wright recalls one particular development, an office tower at the northeast corner of Queen and Yonge in the mid-1980s, as being particularly momentous. 'It's just a reminder: you look out here—and what are they talking about, like 119 cranes in downtown Toronto or something like that?—and we were absolutely delighted that there would be one crane.'"
 
"The 1990s and onward, with economic growth and the amalgamation of Toronto proper with its five adjoining boroughs, brought about dramatic changes to city planning. Suddenly, city planners were forced to cooperate with a number of different mindsets—'a much bigger city with much different interests.'"
 
"'Amalgamation helped us all learn,' Wright recalls. 'There's lessons learned from everywhere, doesn't matter whether it's in Scarborough or Etobicoke or North York. Now we find the commonality of those languages, the commonality of those structural changes that we work with all the time. So, we think differently.'"
 
"Looking forward, Wright sees citizen engagement and collaboration as essential for city building—the harnessing of social cohesion for momentum."
 
"'We live in a very interesting, complex, interactive society in which all different kinds of people and influences make us think about where we're going next,' he says, citing the necessity of fostering collaboration between developers, activists, businesses, politicians, media and philanthropists in order to foster positive, and effective, growth."
 
read full story here
original source Torontoist 
 
135 city building Articles | Page: | Show All
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