Sunday, December 24, 2023

Kevon Wilson, 26, of Toronto dies from gunshot wound near Steeles Ave and Weston Rd


Around 1:50 a.m. on Saturday, officers responded to another shooting in North York.
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One man was found suffering from a gunshot wound near Steeles Ave. and Weston Rd.

Police said he was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.

He was later identified as Kevon Wilson, 26, of Toronto.

A second victim of the North York shooting, a 21-year-old man, was located at a hospital suffering from a serious injury but he is expected to survive.

There was no suspect description immediately available in the double shooting.

The two man killed in separate shootings become the city’s 70th and 71st murder victims of the year.

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Adam Palermo, 45, of Keswick, was shot to death near Danforth and Woodbine Aves. on Saturday, Dec. 23, 2023


Christmas weekend began with a bang as gunshots rang out leaving two men dead and another injured in two separate shootings in the city.

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Toronto Police say gunfire first erupted in the area of Danforth Ave. and Woodbine Ave. around 11:40 p.m. on Friday.

A man was found suffering from a gunshot wound.

“There was an altercation with a group of males,” Const. Laurie McCann said in a statement released Saturday. “The victim was subsequently shot.”

The victim was rushed to hospital where he was pronounced dead.

He has since been identified as Adam Palermo, 45, of Keswick.

No suspect description was immediately released.

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Luis Miguel Eucebio Severino is wanted after Roberto Lowndes gunned down earlier this month in North York


A 29-year-old Toronto man is wanted on a nationwide warrant for first-degree murder after a Kleinburg man was shot dead in North York earlier this month.

Toronto Police responded to a call on Dec. 9 at 6:29 a.m. for a shooting in the Wilson-Oakland Aves. area.

The victim, Roberto Lowndes, 36, was found unresponsive with gunshot wounds on a road. He was taken to a hospital, where he later died.

Police said in a news release on Thursday night that Luis Miguel Eucebio Severino, 29, is wanted for first-degree murder.

He is described as being 5-foot-11 and 174 pounds with a muscular build, black hair, black facial hair and brown eyes.

Anyone with information is asked to call the police at 416-808-7400 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477).

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Rigoberto Ulin Lopez, 35, of Toronto charged with second-degree murder of Juan Carlos Gomez-Salgado, 46 North York


Charges have been updated to second-degree murder after a 46-year-old Mexican man was slain earlier this month in North York.

Toronto Police were called to a stabbing in the area of Bayview Ave.-Hwy. 401 around 4:30 a.m. on Dec. 2.

It’s alleged there was an altercation inside a residence and a man was stabbed.

Police said the attacker fled the residence before officers arrived and the victim was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries.

A suspect assailant returned to the residence and was arrested by police.

The victim was identified as Juan Carlos Gomez Salgado.

Rigoberto Ulin Lopez, 35, of Toronto, was originally charged with assault, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon.

In a news release issued Thursday, police said the victim succumbed to his injuries on Dec. 11.

Lopez is now charged with second-degree murder and assault.

It’s the 69th homicide in the city this year.

Anyone with information is asked to call police at 416-808-7400 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

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Toronto's Yonge-Dundas Square chair resigns over renaming of landmark: Report



Henry Dundas’ name is being erased from a Toronto landmark. Now a name associated with the controversial debate is reportedly removing himself from his position.

Less than a week after Toronto city council voted to rename Yonge-Dundas Square, Mike Fenton, chair of the Yonge-Dundas Square Board of Management, informed the head of council’s civic appointments committee of his resignation via a letter, the Toronto Star reported Wednesday night.

In the letter, Fenton said he supports the city’s efforts to find a new name for Yonge-Dundas Square, the Star report said, but council’s decision to rename it “Sankofa Square” lacked the proper timeframe in which to debate the issue.

Council’s decision on Dec. 14 came just two days after an advisory committee picked the new name.

“While I support the selection of a new name for YDS — the lack of a consistent, public review to evaluate this decision has been disjointed and lacking good governance,” wrote Fenton, according to the Star.

Last week’s motion received majority support and was part of renaming efforts throughout the city of names connected to slavery and alleged racism.

City council also last week asked that the TTC enter into a deal with Toronto Metropolitan University — formerly Ryerson — to rename Dundas Station as “TMU Station.”

Also included in the motion was a directive that the Toronto Public Library Board rename the Jane-Dundas library branch in 2024 and that the TTC rename Dundas West Station by 2025.

A change.org petition to stop the renaming of all things related to Dundas had attracted nearly 5,000 signatures as of Wednesday night.

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Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Toronto city councillor James Pasternak asks Toronto Public Library to cancel visit by Norman Finkelstein


A Toronto city councillor is calling on the Toronto Public Library (TPL) to cancel a visit Tuesday by an invited guest speaker who has long courted controversy over his views on Israel, which are once again in the spotlight as he speaks on the conflict with Hamas. 

On Monday evening, James Pasternak, who represents York Centre, sent out a release “strongly urging” the TPL to “not provide public space paid for by taxpayer dollars” for an event which will feature Norman Finkelstein, an American author and political scientist whose views have been sharply critical of Israel for over 20 years.

Finkelstein is scheduled to appear on Tuesday Dec. 5 alongside Christian Parenti, an investigative journalist and economics professor, in a discussion moderated by former broadcast journalist Jeanne McGuire. The event called “I’ll Burn that Bridge when I Get to It” — a title taken from one of Finkelstein's books — is meant to discuss academic freedom, and the institutional repercussions both men have faced for their work. The event is sold out.

“Inviting Finkelstein to a pseudo conference at Toronto Reference Library discussing freedom on university campuses, is particularly hurtful in this period of extreme antisemitism,” writes Pasternak, who accused the author of spreading disinformation and conspiracy theories about Jews and the Holocaust.
The Toronto Public Library held a board meeting on Monday evening, and while Finkelstein wasn’t named, there was an early question from the board to library staff about how guest speakers are found and vetted. Previous controversial figures that had spoken at the library were discussed, but no action was taken and the event was scheduled to go ahead as planned.

Asked for comment by CP24.com, TPL said the event was planned months ago by its cultural and special events programming unit and the library's regular process was followed.

Born to Jewish Holocaust survivors, as a political scientist Finkelstein's research has focused on the politics of the Holocaust and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In 2000, he wrote "The Holocaust Industry," a book which raised his profile and cemented his reputation as a sharp critic of Israel. This has continued through several interviews and speaking engagements recently, giving his thoughts on the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict.

Critics have pointed to a post on his Substack from Oct. 7, which likened Hamas’s attacks as being similar to the Jewish resistance in Warsaw during the Second World War: “If we honor the Jews who revolted in the Warsaw Ghetto — then moral consistency commands that we honor the heroic resistance in Gaza. I, for one, will never begrudge — on the contrary, it warms every fiber of my soul — the scenes of Gaza’s smiling children as their arrogant Jewish supremacist oppressors have, finally, been humbled.”

The author's "views toward Holocaust survivors and justification of depraved terrorist attacks of Oct. 7 are not welcome in Toronto and should not be welcomed to our public spaces,” said Pasternak in his release.
On Nov. 30, B'nai Brith Canada also released a statement urging the TPL to cancel the event.

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Toronto Real Estate: Investors Own 50% of Toronto Condo's

Toronto's Housing Market now up to 50% owned by investors (when looking at recently built condo buildings specifically)

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Toronto Developers are going Bankrupt fast, Toronto Real Estate

Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding initiated when a person or business is unable to repay outstanding debts or obligations. It offers a fresh start for people who can no longer afford to pay their bills. If a business has a secured loan with a creditor and defaults on payment, the creditor may have the right to appoint a receiver to recover their money. The business then goes into receivership when a receiver gains possession of the business's assets and liquidates them to recoup money owed to the secured creditor.

@VandykGroup  Vandyk Properties
@mizrahidevelopments9260  Mizrahi Developments
@TarionON  Tarion Ontario Warranty Corporation
@nikhbajaj Marathon Law
@ellisrealestategroup Ellis Devedzic, Broker

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Saturday, December 2, 2023

Toronto Illegal Parking Ticket Fees Increasing 150%


Illegal parking in Toronto will cost you two-and-a-half times more dough as of Friday.

The City of Toronto officially increases the penalty for parking or leaving a motor vehicle on municipal property without consent on December 1.

Those caught parking without a permit on City property will have to pay $75 per infraction, a 150 per cent increase from the previous $30 amount.

A parking ticket fee hike was recommended by Transportation Services in September, urging city council to increase fines to "encourage compliance in purchasing a ticket to park on municipal/private property and discourage the illegal practice of parking or leaving a vehicle on public/private property without consent."

In short, the City believes it can incentivize paid parking by increasing fines for illegal parking, stating that the new fees "better align the penalty amounts relative to parking rates."

That September recommendation to raise fees noted "many instances where motor vehicle owners will park in a municipal or private parking facility and decide that, rather than paying the posted parking rates at a parking kiosk, they would prefer taking their chances with incurring a parking violation notice or avoid a parking violation notice altogether."

"The reason why drivers risk being issued a parking violation notice is because most times the penalty amount is less than what they would be required to pay for parking," the report argued.

More than doubling the penalty is expected to not just cut down on illegal parking, but put additional money in City coffers through higher fees and incentivized paid parking.

The move comes after a report found over 200,000 tickets issued in 2021 and 2022 combined for illegally parking on municipal lots, and almost 700,000 tickets issued for illegally parking in paid lots during the same period.

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Toronto Maple Leaf and Toronto Raptors Beer Prices

If you were hoping for a cheap drink somewhere in the city, it doesn't appear that you'll find one at a Toronto Maple Leafs or Toronto Raptors game this season.

With both teams now seeing their season in full swing, the prices for beer and liquor at Scotiabank Arena have gone up slightly since last season. In most cases, the price of a standard drink has increased between 50 and 75 cents for a given size at a Leafs or Raptors game.

The cheapest drink you can find is a tall can of either Coors Light, Miller Lite, or Molson Canadian, setting you back $13 per can. That's a $10.10 markup from the LCBO, where a can of any of those three will cost you $2.90 a pop.

Interestingly, the arena converted its draught cup sizes from 20 oz and 28 oz to 625 ml and 725 ml, registering at about 21 and 24 oz, respectively.

Leafs beer prices, 2023-24


 


20 oz (2022)

28 oz (2022)

Tall Can (2022)

625 ml (2023)

725 ml

(2023)

Tall Can

(2023)

Coors Light

$13.50

$17.00

$12.25

$14.25

$17.25

$13.00

Coors Original

$14.25

$17.75

$13.25

$15.00

$18.00

$14.00

Molson Canadian

$13.50

$17.00

$12.25

$14.25

$17.25

$13.00

Blue Moon

$14.25

$17.75

$13.25

$15.00

$18.00

$14.00

Hop Valley

$14.25

$17.75

$13.25

$15.00

$18.00

$14.00

Creemore Lager

$14.25

$17.75

$13.25

$15.00

$18.00

$14.00

Creemore Pilsner

N/A

N/A

$13.25

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Creemore IPA

N/A

N/A

$13.25

$15.00

$18.00

$14.00

Creemore Pale Ale

N/A

N/A

$13.25

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Arizona Hard Iced Tea

N/A

N/A

$13.50

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Sol

N/A

N/A

$13.25

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Heineken

N/A

N/A

$13.75

N/A

N/A

$14.50

Strongbow Cider

N/A

N/A

$13.75

N/A

N/A

$14.50

Vizzy

N/A

N/A

$13.50

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Rickard's Red

N/A

N/A

$13.25

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Miller Lite

N/A

N/A

$12.25

N/A

N/A

$13.00

Simply Spiked

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

$13.50

Smirnoff Ice

N/A

N/A

$13.50

N/A

N/A

$14.00

Glutenberg Blonde

N/A

N/A

$13.75

N/A

N/A

$14.50

Non-Alcoholic

N/A

N/A

$8.00

N/A

N/A

$8.00

Liquor prices
  • Premium – 1 oz, $13; 2 oz $24
  • Deluxe – 1 oz, $13.50; 2 oz $24.50
  • Ultra-Premium – 1 oz, $14; 2 oz, $26.00
  • Don Julio Blanco Tequila – 1 oz, $17.50; 2 oz, $33
  • House Wine – 6 oz, $14.50; 9 oz, $20
  • Premium Wine – 6 oz $16.50; 9 oz $23

These numbers were all pulled this month from a stand at the 300-level at Scotiabank Arena.

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Toronto Home Prices Expected toDecline Further In 2024

Given the jarring sluggishness of Toronto's real estate market in recent months, residents and realtors alike are wondering what next year will hold for the city's housing landscape.

Housing forecasts for the region have been a little all over the place and, of course, hinge on whether mortgage lending rates will fall.

But, new predictions from RE/MAX contradict others from competitors, promising lower prices for the region in the New Year, rather than the stubbornly high figures we've seen persist despite the market downturn.

In a very mixed bag of projections, the real estate company is anticipating that the cost of the typical home in the GTA will fall by about three per cent in 2024. The same can also be said of Peterborough, while property in Durham Region and Grand Bend will see even more substantial price dips of about five per cent.

For notoriously red-hot Toronto, this, along with other factors — like increasing numbers of terminated listings, incidents of power of sale and days on market — will mean more of a buyer's market at times in the coming year, which is a rarity for the region.


RE/MAX predicts lower real estate prices but more sales in the GTA next year in its latest market outlook.

"Despite various markets in Ontario favouring sellers or experiencing balanced conditions in 2023, the majority of regions are currently buyers’ markets including Niagara, Mississauga, Durham Region, Brampton, Grand Bend, North Bay, Muskoka, Haliburton and Kingston," the outlook, released Tuesday, reads.

"Looking ahead to next year, Mississauga, Brampton, Simcoe County, Muskoka and Haliburton are likely to balance out. The GTA market is also anticipated to gain balance in 2024, but is also expected to favour buyers at certain points of the year."

Particularly interesting is the fact that the Toronto area, almost always among the top two priciest places for real estate in the country, is slated to see price declines while the opposite can be said for Canada at large, with prices rising about 0.5 per cent nationally next year alongside a spike in market activity.

"Looking ahead, RE/MAX brokers and agents expects the market to be slightly more active in 2024, with national average residential sale prices likely to increase by 0.5 per cent and 61 per cent of regions surveying anticipating unit sales to increase in 2024, RE/MAX notes.

"The slower market we’ve been experiencing across the country this fall could be an early indicator of an active 2024, as reflected in the modest price increase and sales outlook for next year, and the balancing of conditions in several regions across the country."

This is thanks to the fact that nearly three-quarters of Canadians still somehow perceive home ownership to be "the best investment" of any despite our lasting housing shortage and what the firm terms "a tricky interest rate environment" that will, along with a high cost of living, continue to impact the housing market.

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Toronto Residents To Pay More For Services Like Water and Garbage

Toronto residents may soon have to shell out more money for basic City services like water and garbage collection.

The City announced on Tuesday that it has proposed temporary "moderate raises" of three per cent in the price of water and solid waste management services in the interim.

Once approved, these interim rates are planned to take effect on New Year's Day, 2024, and will remain in place until the City's 2024 rate-supported operating and capital budgets are considered by council next February.

An interim rate hike has been pitched as a means to allow Solid Waste Management Services and Toronto Water to continue operating at full service levels and plan for future investment. The City claims this measure will help avoid larger rate hikes when a final budget is approved next year.

So how much will you have to pay for these basic services in January?

Solid waste collection is priced based on the size of garbage bins, meaning some residents pay more than others for their garbage pickup.

After the three per cent increase, the annual 2024 rate for solid waste collection for a single-family household will be $295.29 for a small bin (an increase of $8.60), $358.47 for a medium bin (up by $10.44), $486.86 for a large bin ($14.18 more than 2023) and $564.71 for an extra-large bin (an increase of $16.45).

As for the water bill, the average Toronto household using 230 cubic metres of water per year would be charged an additional $30 annually under the three per cent rate hike, or eight cents per day, totalling $1,039 in 2024.

Mayor Olivia Chow said in a statement that "the suggested interim rate and user fees fee maintain affordability for Toronto residents and businesses while maintaining these essential services."

Chow also reminded the public that "resident input plays a vital role in shaping these decisions, and I encourage Toronto residents and businesses to contribute their feedback."

The City's Executive Committee will consider these interim rate hikes at its upcoming meeting on December 5, and will be voted on by City Council during its upcoming meeting planned for December 13 through 15.

Rates would go into effect on January 1, 2024, if approved, and will remain until final rates are worked out during the 2024 budget process launching on January 10.

The announcement that residents will have to pay more for basic services comes the day after Mayor Chow and Premier Ford inked a new deal that promises $7.6 billion in benefits for Toronto.

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New Condo Prices in Toronto Have Dropped By Double Digits and Developers Are Worried



It's no wonder why home sales in and around Toronto have been tanking for months, but stakeholders are growing increasingly concerned with the snowballing impacts of a lack of market activity.

Inflated interest rates, an outrageously high cost of living and a floundering economy have pushed even the usual players (read: investors) far away from the real estate game, and it looks like it may finally be causing prices to drop for some housing types.

As the Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) notes in its latest report, sales remained low through last month, with seven per cent fewer new homes sold compared to the same time last year, marking a 50 per cent drop from our hot market's 10-year average.

These figures from the association of home builders and land developers are led by a drastic drop in new condo sales, with 20 per cent fewer sold in October 2023 than in October 2022 and the bleakest sales figures in 10 years.

As the group notes, while these dwindling sales in an already troubled market may seem like good news to would-be buyers, they will inevitably lead to delays in adding much-needed housing supply to the region, which is indeed already happening.

While some builders are giving away literal gold to attract buyers, dozens of new condo complexes that were on the way this year have been deferred, with the wealthy companies funding them "unable to make an economic case for proceeding in the current market."

"The impacts of slower sales will be lower future housing starts. The sooner the market gets indications that more moderate interest rates are on the horizon, the sooner we will see more added housing supply," BILD writes.

With tens of thousands fewer units coming to market than anticipated while immigration and thus demand for everything continues to boom, prices will end up higher even if they are easing slightly in the economically unstable meantime.

And easing, they are, at least when it comes to new condos in the GTA — according to BILD's latest data, the average benchmark price for these units just dropped 10.8 per cent year-over-year in October.

But even amid this trend and such low interest from buyers, the average price for a new condo is still a shockingly high $1,023,102, which BILD says will only get worse in this inflationary environment.

"The housing affordability crisis in the GTA has been driven by the lack of housing supply in the face of perennially strong demand," it wrote last month, noting the province's goal to build 1.5 million additional homes by 2031.

To the average citizen, though, this can feel like a no-win situation where owning a home in one's home city is forever out of reach: if buyers are eager, prices get driven up, especially if those buyers are investors, as they often are in the GTA.

And on the flipside, if investors and other buyers are sidelined, wealthy developers back off from new builds, and the resulting lower supply leads to the same end.

Luckily in the case of resale homes, the current lack of market attractiveness has meant a shift into more of a buyers' territory, where sellers are desperate and listings are plentiful: last month had 50 per cent more active listings than October 2022, per the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), but 5.8 per cent lower sales volumes.

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Investors now own more than 50% of Toronto’s new condos — and experts say they’re driving up housing prices for everyone


Investors now own more than 50% of Toronto’s new condos — and experts say they’re driving up housing prices for everyone

How a heady mix of privatization, ineffective rent control and cheap capital fuelled an investment boom that made Toronto housing unaffordable for regular families.

Jaqueline Belardi doesn’t know if she’ll ever be able to afford a home even though she earns a good salary. Belardi and her partner make a combined income of more than $180,000, but saving up enough money for a down payment feels out of reach.
“We can’t just borrow $50,000 from our parents,” she said. “That seems like the only way younger people are able to buy property these days.”
The more rent she pays, the less she’s able to save up. The couple pay $2,750 for rent in their 1970s west-end Toronto apartment building, designed in an era of government housing that prioritized spacious units. Belardi, 35, and her partner would love to buy an apartment in the building but their mortgage costs would be double what they currently pay.
“We think maybe we’ll just rent here forever, but then you’re at the whim of your landlord,” she said. “You see some landlords own 10 properties and here we are with a good income unable to buy an apartment. People deserve to buy a home if they want to.”
Experts say real estate has become a game, where investors rather than end users are the main players, buying and selling property to cash in on Toronto’s hottest commodity. In the process, they’re driving up prices and pushing out prospective homebuyers like Belardi, who just want somewhere to live.
Investors’ hold on real estate has become hard to ignore, leading the Bank of Canada and even Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to call them out for the commodification of housing.
However, insiders say both federal and provincial governments as well as the central bank share blame in creating the conditions that allowed investors to corner 20 per cent of the market in Ontario, including 80 per cent of pre-construction condo sales and 57 per cent of newly built condos in Toronto.
The result, they say, is not only a real estate market where an income of more than $200,000 is needed to even get a seat at the table and prospective homeowners burdened by ever rising rents are unable to save up for a down payment, but also a system where investors dictate what gets built — and what doesn’t — and over-leveraged multi-property owners can weaken the overall health of the market.

From co-ops to condos

The roots of Canada’s housing crisis goes back decades, experts say, stemming from the federal government shirking responsibility for building affordable housing.
From the 1950s to 1970s, Ottawa constructed tens of thousands of nonmarket homes, said Dania Majid, a lawyer with Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario (ACTO).
But the financial crisis in the 1980s and recession in the early to mid-1990s led to austerity measures and stricter budgets, Majid said, which meant cutting back on social services and housing initiatives.
Facing substantial deficits, in 1992 the government cut the federal co-operative housing program, which had led to the construction of nearly 60,000 homes, and eventually the federal government stopped building any affordable housing.
“Unlike many European countries, Canada very early on decided the private market would be the one responsible for providing housing,” said Majid.
Condos became the main housing type to get funding from the private sector. The units were small and therefore cheaper to build, and could be sold for maximum profit.

'Dead malls' in Toronto get new life as tours tap into nostalgia: 'It adds to the experience'

'Dead malls' in Toronto get new life as tours tap into nostalgia: 'It adds to the experience'

A Toronto man puts on tours of 'dead malls,' fuelled by his interest in anemoia — the concept of feeling nostalgia for something you never experienced.


 Once a month, Aryeh Bookbinder leads a school bus full of people on a tour of malls in and around the Greater Toronto Area. But the intention of these tours isn’t for the usual reason one might visit a mall — to shop.

Rather, the tourists will experience the ambient relics from another time: "Dead malls," as Bookbinder calls them, shopping centres with outdated or declining infrastructure, where there are more vacant storefronts than spaces occupied by businesses. Some of the malls that have been explored on past tours include Chinatown Centre in downtown Toronto, Woodbine Centre in Rexdale and High Point Mall in Mississauga.

“There are areas in it that are alive but there are areas in it that are shockingly dead,” Bookbinder tells Yahoo Canada.

Bookbinder's tours are called "Liminal Assembly" and are inspired by his interest in anemoia, a concept in which people have feelings of nostalgia for something they haven't experienced directly.

“I wanted to create something that engulfed anemoia … but take it offline,” he says.

While visiting these nearly abandoned spaces can often evoke a sense of wistfulness for a different time, it also presents the questions: How long can they be sustained, and what can we expect from them in the future?

From huge mall to something else ... eventually

In the post-pandemic recovery, changes in shopping habits and the rise of e-commerce, has led to the decline in large retailers. In the last year alone, Nordstrom shuttered all its outlets in Canada. Hudson's Bay has closed several stores across the country, including in Alberta, B.C., Quebec and Ontario. Many of these stores occupied massive spaces. One such shuttered location in Toronto occupied five floors in a prime downtown location, not exactly an easy and accessible space for just any organization to take up.

The opening-up of these spaces and others is prompting developers to re-imagine how they can be used. Currently there are plans for the land in and around several malls in Toronto to be reimagined as mixed-use developments that combine residential and commercial units, with other amenities.

But these projects take years, sometimes decades, to get off the ground. It requires planning, approval and consultation with the municipal government and, depending on the proposals, might involve rezoning.

While rebuilding plans for Toronto's Yorkdale mall have yet to break ground, they've been in place since before the COVID-19 pandemic. Although the shopping centre is far from dead, it sits on a massive parking lot. Proposals suggest plans to rebuild the lots underground and make way for a neighbourhood that could house 1,500 units within the next 20 years.

Meanwhile, Cumberland Terrace is a three-floor stretch of shops in the core of Toronto, stuck in another time. Although located in ritzy Yorkville, which is considered prime real estate, the mall has been overwhelmingly vacant for close to a decade. The site is slated for redevelopment, which would turn the mall into three high rises, though the plan has yet to be approved.
A new lease ... on a mall's life

Shauna Brail is an associate professor and director at University of Toronto’s Institute for Management & Innovation. She says there’s increasing attention to the notion of adaptive reuse — which is the building of a space for one purpose, but using it for a different purpose than intended — particularly with shopping malls.

“It creates opportunities for potential uses of malls that are no longer desirable spaces,” she says.

And those uses can be out-of-the-box.

In 2022, Citi Plaza, a multi-purpose shopping plaza in London, Ont., allowed its near-empty space to be used as a giant roller rink for several nights. The sold-out events attracted 400 people, who got to cruise around the mall on roller skates or blades.

The Cineplex theatres across from Toronto’s Eaton Centre, which were once bustling with moviegoers, have since died down. They are currently being used as lecture halls by nearby Toronto Metropolitan University during the day, and to screen films at night.
Nostalgia adds to the shopping experience

A niche interest for these vacant spaces appears to be growing, since they provide a different feeling from traditional malls, not to mention a deal on rent.

Bookbinder says there’s a renaissance from younger generations to go out of their way to visit and set up shop in deserted spaces because of their unique look and feel.

In Toronto’s Chinatown Centre, a mall that has been nearly empty for decades, Dog Park Shop, a high-end consignment store, is surrounded by empty storefronts. That appears to be part of its appeal. On the store’s Instagram page, they post photos of people modelling clothes in different parts of the eerily empty mall.

“Some entrepreneurs actually want to open shops in these spaces because they have a novelty of being nostalgic, of being of a past era of architecture and aesthetics,” Bookbinder says. “It adds to the experience of shopping there.”

The next Liminal Assembly tour explores Toronto's PATH system, a long and mostly deserted stretch of underground shops in the downtown core. The sold out event takes place on Dec. 14.

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