Toronto’s St. Lawrence Market celebrates grand opening, but the redevelopment has its flaws | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Alex Bozikovic
Publication Date: May 9, 2025 - 18:17

Toronto’s St. Lawrence Market celebrates grand opening, but the redevelopment has its flaws

May 9, 2025
On a recent Saturday, business was good at the St. Lawrence Market North Building: merchants showed an array of jade plants, spring blooms, arugula and luscious orange peppers. A time traveller from 1803, when the first market opened on this site, would have understood exactly what was happening. But the building would have surprised them. Sunlight poured down through a central skylight, cutting through an atrium between two wings of provincial courtrooms, their steel beams painted a sunny orange. Tall windows showed the Georgian masonry of St. Lawrence Hall to the north, and to the south, the great Victorian shed of the South Market building. With the new $128-million North Market, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour Partnership (RSHP) and Adamson Associates, a Toronto landmark has come back to life.


Unpublished Newswire

 
Show # 16 Lester B. Pearson Catholic High School In the Heights Director: Sarah Davidson Rasha Alli, Critic Sir Wilfrid Laurier Secondary School A story of dreams, identity, and the bonds of community: Lester B. Pearson Catholic High School’s In The Heights delivered a moving and heartfelt production, filled with emotionally charged scenes and powerful […]
May 12, 2025 - 08:00 | Lois Kirkup | Ottawa Citizen
Ontario hospitals spent more than $9-billion on nurses and other staff from for-profit agencies in a 10-year period, a new study concludes.The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives study, released Monday, examined financial statements for 134 Ontario hospital corporations as well as data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
May 12, 2025 - 07:04 | Allison Jones | The Globe and Mail
I remember the line. It ran diagonal to the grain of the library’s hardwood floor. It escapes me whether the line was black paint or black electrical tape back in the ’80s and ’90s, but it’s tape today—scuffed and trodden upon, as though it were just some line to be stepped on that didn’t matter very much. Which it is. Or was, anyway. Donald Trump, the forty-seventh president of the United States of America, has called the border between Canada and the United States “an artificially drawn line.” In this, he is aligned with my eight-year-old self standing inside the Haskell Free...
May 12, 2025 - 06:30 | Jordan Heath-Rawlings | Walrus