Toronto's Historical Plaques
at torontoplaques.com
Learn a little of Toronto's history as told through its plaques
Norman B. Gash House (Spadina Station Entrance) 1899
Photo by Alan L Brown - Posted June, 2011
Photo by contributor Wayne Adam - Posted October, 2011
On the east side of Spadina Road, across the street from Kendal Avenue, is this Spadina Station subway entrance. A 2010 Heritage Toronto plaque, attached to the wall, has this to say:
Plaque coordinates: 43.67035 -79.40516 |
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Designed by architect Robert Ogilvie for barrister Norman B. Gash, this house was built when Spadina Road was a quiet and narrower residential street. The house remained a single-family residence through the 1950s, after Spadina Road was widened into four lanes. It and other buildings along Spadina Road were then threatened with demolition to make way for a sunken expressway and a subway line. Though the expressway plans were cancelled in 1971, Metropolitan Toronto acquired this house the following year to replace it with a new subway station. Local residents and the Toronto Historical Board argued successfully for the preservation of the house to maintain the residential character of the area. Adam Associates Architects redesigned the interior and rear of the house as the northeast entrance to the Spadina Station on the new subway line, which opened in January 1978.
Related websites
Spadina Road
Toronto Subway
Toronto Historical Board
Related Toronto plaque
Spadina Expressway
More
Government Buildings
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