Ever noticed that photographs of Toronto from the 1970s tend to have a brown hue? Part of this has to do with faded film negatives, but it's more than that. Thanks to the greater supply of old warehouse buildings and years upon years of burning coal as fuel, the city really was more brown back then. Throw in the curious preponderance of beige cars, and you have a distinct aesthetic that seems as distant as it is captivating.
Back in the 1950s, Toronto looked more orderly and less vibrant. The rise of neon signage took care of that with the cluttered beauty of the 1960s, which continued through the start of the 1970s with the addition of a bit of sleaze. The cars were big, the signs were big, and Toronto's appetite for growth was big. Many of the stained brick warehouses of the previous era started to come down to make way for the modern city that was about to come.
By the time the '90s rolled around, the city had been completely transformed, and brown was mercifully a less popular colour for cars. In the span of about 15 years, the peculiar look of the city captured in 1970s photos was gone. Glass and steel buildings towered over that which was built with the brick and stone.
I don't think you'd call the Toronto of the 1970s a particularly beautiful place. Our historic buildings really do look much nicer now that they've been cleaned up. Nevertheless, there is something almost painterly about these photos, a quality that captures a city on the brink of massive change but still tethered to its weathered past. The effect is fascinating.
Behold, the brown-tinged grittiness of Toronto streets in the 1970s.
Yonge and College
Yonge and Gerrard
College looking towards Yonge
Aerial view of same area
219 Church Street
Queen Street West and old Eaton's Complex
Same area post-demolition
Looking north on Yonge from College
Yonge Street just north of Cumberland
St. Clair West at Oakwood
Church and Dundas streets
King Street just west of Spadina
The Yonge Street Strip at dusk
Daytime in the same area
More of Yonge Street's eclectic hodgepodge
The old TTC trolley buses
Dundas West near Roncesvalles
St. Clair West nearing Yonge Street
St. Clair West and Vaughan Road (note the movie theatre)
McCaul looking north to College
Junction of King and Queen streets looking west
by Derek Flack via blogTO
No comments:
Post a Comment