Here's the Press Release from the West Don Lands Committee etc.
For Immediate Release
January 15, 2021
Province flouts Emergency Declaration to start covert demolition of significant heritage site.
Thursday morning, the day of the Provincial Emergency Declaration took effect, provincial contractors quietly moved into a heritage site on the West Don Lands to start demolition.
The site is the Dominion Wheels and Foundry building on Eastern Avenue. A municipally listed heritage site since 2004, its work was significant enough that the Smithsonian in Washington carries one of it catalogues in its collection. In 2012, the Province used the monumental production hall to welcome the Prince of Wales to the PanAm Para/PanAm Athletes’ Village.
In October 2020 the site was subject of a widely criticized Ministerial Zoning Order which will permit up to a 40-storey residential tower on the site. This came out of the blue with zero consultation with City, community or heritage experts.
Today, the Province has once again used secrecy and cover of a provincial emergency to take the insult to another level – demolition without consultation, disclosure of a disposition plan, consideration of adaptive reuse or even a courtesy call to the City and community leaders.
Heavy equipment has been moved into the site. Workers from Quantum Murray, a demolition and decommissioning firm, say they have been retained to complete demolition of the site by March 2021.
As in October, the community is left scrambling to get information from province. Ministry officials have not responded to requests for information. No information has been provided about the rationale for demolition or the justification for initiating seemingly non-essential work during the beginning of what is supposed to be a serious shutdown in the GTA.
The Dominion Wheel and Foundry buildings were part of a massive complex devoted to the manufacture of rolling stock for the growing railways during the first half of the 20thc. The remaining warehouse, foundry building, office building and machine shop are among the few surviving remnants of the rich industrial heritage of the West Don Lands – the first industrial area in Toronto’s history.
The West Don Lands, Corktown and St. Lawrence Neighbourhoods are where Toronto began and flourished. Our communities have fought to ensure that important heritage resources like the Foundry are conserved and repurposed as a connection to that history. This is our heritage and, as provincial planning policies provide, we should be involved in any decisions about its future.
Many groups and individuals have come together to form Friends of the Foundry . We are calling on Ministers Clark, MacLeod and Premier Ford to call off the plans for demolition and instead, work with the community to fashion a better and more respectful alternative.
Friends of the Foundry
Contact:
Suzanne Kavanagh, Chair St. Lawrence, Heritage Conservation District
Cindy Wilkey, Co-Chair West Don Lands Committee
suzkav123@gmail.com
wilkeycj@gmail.com