Product Details
Doors Open Toronto: Illuminating the City's Great Spaces

Doors Open Toronto: Illuminating the City's Great Spaces
By John Sewell

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Product Description

With a Foreword by Anne Michaels

This spring, 80,000 people will take to the streets to explore exciting city spaces that are too often closed to them. They will be taking part in the Doors Open festival, a weekend-long celebration of Toronto’s civic culture and history through 100 of its finest and most important buildings.

Generously illustrated with some 200 photographs and sidebars, and accompanied by seven hand-drawn maps, Doors Open Toronto is the essential book for anyone who cares about the city they live in, for lovers of secret places, for adventurers at heart.

2.5 million people live in Toronto, but how many know the stories of their city? In this accessible, lively literary companion to the Doors Open Toronto festival -- now in its third year -- irrepressible city advocate and former mayor John Sewell takes us on a tour of the places in Toronto every citizen or visitor should explore. Step inside the old Don Jail, with its rotunda ringed with serpents and gargoyles, once home to the infamous bank-robbing Boyd Gang, until they escaped -- twice. Go to the original Don Mills to see where the lumber was sawn for the Simcoe’s 1795 country home, Castle Frank, and the paper produced for William Lyon Mackenzie’s newspaper, The Colonial Advocate. Or explore the Chapel of St. James-the-Less, with its cemetery established in response to the cholera epidemic of 1834 that killed 10% of the city’s population. Doors Open Toronto illuminates these wondrous places and nearly one hundred more, bringing life and meaning to the streets we walk down every day.

The Flatiron (Gooderham) Building, the old Don Jail, Osgoode Hall, Enoch Turner School House, One King West, Hart House, University College, St. James’ Cathedral, Gooderham & Worts Complex, George Brown House, R. C. Harris Water Filtration Plant, The Elgin and Winter Garden theatres, the Canadian Opera Company, Union Station, The Arts & Letters Club, Commerce Court North, the Design Exchange, St. Paul’s Basilica, Canada Life building, and many more…


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #666321 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-05-07
  • Released on: 2002-05-07
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 312 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.ca
Former Toronto mayor John Sewell traces his city's rich architectural heritage in Doors Open Toronto, an offbeat and rewarding illustrated guide to some of Hogtown's most significant structures that boasts more than 200 new and historical photos, plus maps. Sewell's considerable wit and deep-rooted passion for the city come through in every richly researched mini-chapter, each of which provides an historical and stylistic analysis of one building. Torontonians and tourists alike will appreciate his insight and candour--in his art, as in his life, John Sewell doesn't pull political punches. "Like many legislatures," he writes in his four-page passage on the Ontario Legislative Building, "this one is in a park-like setting disconnected from the life of the city, a characteristic some would say is deliberate and often reflected in the body's decisions."

Sewell's outspoken advocacy for neighbourhood and architectural heritage preservation has shaped his career, both in the political arena and as an urban affairs writer. In addition to weekly columns for eye Weekly, his five books include The Shape of the City: Toronto Struggles with Modern Planning. Doors Open Toronto was inspired by the annual architectural open house that brings over 100,000 visitors to participating sites during one weekend each May. (Toronto was the first North American city to adopt the popular European cultural heritage festival.) Sewell's choice of buildings does not pretend to be exhaustive; he concentrates on those that have participated in past Doors Open events. Toronto-based poet and novelist Anne Michaels (Fugitive Pieces) provides a lyrical introduction. For readers who want to know even more about the city, Sewell suggests as a companion volume Greg Gatenby's Toronto: A Literary Guide. --Deirdre Hanna

Review
“The annual weekend event that attracts thousands of locals to discover Toronto buildings is over for this year, but the excellent book it led to remains available all year.” -- Toronto Star

“John Sewell [is] arguably Toronto’s most effective radical since William Lyon Mackenzie…. Doors Open Toronto … has a lot to say about Toronto even to those who couldn’t care less about it, never mind to those who live in it…. [It] has integrity. Sewell is an honest witness to the context and importance of the buildings he chooses to focus on…. It is precisely this degree of historical sensitivity that is so lacking in the current talk concerning the course of Toronto’s future development. Doors Open Toronto…gives eloquent voice to the ideals [of a participatory civil democracy.]” -- Douglas Bell, The Globe and Mail

“The city does not tell its past, but contains it like the lines of a hand.” -- Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

“This first-rate book…is sensitive, balanced, even wry…. With thumbnail sketches that seamlessly merge each building’s historic, literary, aesthetic, and, yes, political aspects, Sewell enriches the cityscape.” -- Quill & Quire

From the Back Cover
“The annual weekend event that attracts thousands of locals to discover Toronto buildings is over for this year, but the excellent book it led to remains available all year.” -- Toronto Star

“John Sewell [is] arguably Toronto’s most effective radical since William Lyon Mackenzie…. Doors Open Toronto … has a lot to say about Toronto even to those who couldn’t care less about it, never mind to those who live in it…. [It] has integrity. Sewell is an honest witness to the context and importance of the buildings he chooses to focus on…. It is precisely this degree of historical sensitivity that is so lacking in the current talk concerning the course of Toronto’s future development. Doors Open Toronto…gives eloquent voice to the ideals [of a participatory civil democracy.]” -- Douglas Bell, The Globe and Mail

“The city does not tell its past, but contains it like the lines of a hand.” -- Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

“This first-rate book…is sensitive, balanced, even wry…. With thumbnail sketches that seamlessly merge each building’s historic, literary, aesthetic, and, yes, political aspects, Sewell enriches the cityscape.” -- Quill & Quire