Waterfront tour, Harbour Commission Building, May 11, 2019. Image by Ali Mosleh
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Original JPG File | 3600 × 2403 pixels (8.65 MP) 30.5 cm × 20.3 cm @ 300 PPI |
5.8 MB | Restricted |
Low resolution print | 2000 × 1335 pixels (2.67 MP) 16.9 cm × 11.3 cm @ 300 PPI |
936 KB | Restricted |
Screen | 1199 × 800 pixels (0.96 MP) 10.2 cm × 6.8 cm @ 300 PPI |
382 KB | Restricted |
Resource ID
7684
Access
Open
Credit Line
Image by Ali Mosleh
Date of Creation
11 May 2019
Program Category
Tours
Rights
Ali Mosleh
Caption
Waterfront tour, Harbour Commission Building, May 11, 2019. Image by Ali Mosleh
Description
Tour participants learn about the Toronto Harbour Commission building. Since it was built in 1917, for 100 years, the commission, and its successor the Toronto Port Authority/PortsToronto, operated out of 60 Harbour Street. The building was sold by PortsToronto in 2017.
Established following a city referendum in 1911, the Toronto Harbour Commission was placed in charge of the waterfront. Over the next two decades it extended the city south into the lake through lakefilling that created Queen's Quay, the Portlands and Bathurst Quay. Later the commission created land near Hanlan's Point that became the Island airport.
As a result of all this work, originally built on the end of a pier, surveying the harbour, the Harbour Commission building is now landlocked.