christiesplits
Senior Member
Regarding an East York thread, there is also a "Leaside" thread, which as recently as the 1990s was part of the borough of East York. Also, "East Danforth" - another thread - borders on the old East York boundaries.
One loosely defined corridor that bridges the East York/Danforth, borough/old city borders is "Danforth Village," which is often used in local real estate ads. Although definitions are all over the place, it broadly refers to the area of Pape to Woodbine, Mortimer to Danforth. However, recently a new BIA was established between Main Street and Victoria Park that calls itself the "Danforth Village BIA," so that identity could be a thing of the past.
As a side note, I grew up in East York around Mortimer and Donlands and I get the sense that many people in that area, although they live within the old East York boundaries, refer to themselves as residents of "The Danforth" before "East York." It certainly helps that most of the homes between Milverton and Mortimer are not your typical EY post-war bungalow; they flow into the same street grid as the "Old City of Toronto" homes and are roughly the same age.
I imagine there is a similar phenomenon among residents of Corso Italia, between St. Clair West and Rogers Road, who refer to themselves as residents of St. Clair West or Corso Italia rather than "York."
One loosely defined corridor that bridges the East York/Danforth, borough/old city borders is "Danforth Village," which is often used in local real estate ads. Although definitions are all over the place, it broadly refers to the area of Pape to Woodbine, Mortimer to Danforth. However, recently a new BIA was established between Main Street and Victoria Park that calls itself the "Danforth Village BIA," so that identity could be a thing of the past.
As a side note, I grew up in East York around Mortimer and Donlands and I get the sense that many people in that area, although they live within the old East York boundaries, refer to themselves as residents of "The Danforth" before "East York." It certainly helps that most of the homes between Milverton and Mortimer are not your typical EY post-war bungalow; they flow into the same street grid as the "Old City of Toronto" homes and are roughly the same age.
I imagine there is a similar phenomenon among residents of Corso Italia, between St. Clair West and Rogers Road, who refer to themselves as residents of St. Clair West or Corso Italia rather than "York."
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