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10 Unexpected Places Where Creativity Shines in Toronto

10 Unexpected Places Where Creativity Shines in Toronto

It’s no secret that Toronto is a hub of imagination, where communities of forward-thinkers from diverse backgrounds intersect to give the urban landscape a uniquely inventive character. Beyond internationally recognized events, institutions, and artists like the Toronto International Film Festival, the Ontario College of Art and Design, and The Weeknd, there are unsung locations hidden throughout this vibrant city that speak to a creative undercurrent. From avant-garde public art installations and performance groups to museums and bookstores covering niche subjects to playful reimaginings of abandoned urban spaces, Toronto’s spirit of innovation is plain to see—as long as you know where to look.

To preserve public space, an architect elevated this design school building on 85-foot tall colorful stilts designed to look like pencils.
To preserve public space, an architect elevated this design school building on 85-foot tall colorful stilts designed to look like pencils. Courtesy of Destination Toronto

YOU’RE SUSPENDED

Rosalie Sharp Centre For Design

When the planning process for a new building on Ontario College of Art & Design’s campus began, neighbors were resounding in their concerns over two things: a loss of public space and their views onto Grange Park, a 200-acre greenspace in downtown Toronto. Architect Will Alsop’s solution was to elevate the building 85 feet off the ground. Doing so not only preserved precious ground space but created an altogether new plaza at the entrance to the park, which is close by to the Art Gallery of Toronto and the equally artistic Kensington Market. And seeing as even the tallest neighboring apartment was lower than 85 feet, no one lost their parkview. This pioneering solution proved an eye-catching one too, with the pixelated black-and-white tabletop structure being supported by colorful steel columns at odd angles.

Stand inside the cavernous concrete sphere on the shores of Lake Ontario for a singular visual and auditory experience.
Stand inside the cavernous concrete sphere on the shores of Lake Ontario for a singular visual and auditory experience. Shutterstock

TIME CHECK

Sundial Folly

Not much is known about the creators of this enigmatic Sundial Folly found at the edge of Harbor Square Park along the Harbourfront just off of Queen’s Quay West—perhaps fitting for a structure that evades a straightforward purpose. While it’s called a sundial, it does little to convey the time of day. A bisected concrete sphere that sits in a pool of water overflowing into Lake Ontario, what the sphere does succeed in doing, however, is somehow simultaneously separating you from and attuning you to the surrounding park, harbor, and city. A wooden walkway allows visitors to stand suspended in the center of the sphere, with only a sliver of light and sound entering the hollow shape, reflecting and echoing against the half-graffitied walls.