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  • December22nd

    Canada Linseed

    Not much is written about this old Linseed Oil Mill located in the Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto. Shut down in the 60s, it’s a 3-level structure that features enormous wooden doors on slider rails, extremely tight staircases that lead all the way up to the rooftop, a defunct elevator, and graffiti – both tagging and artistic – on every inch of wall space. There is a basement – but when I photographed the location for Building Storeys 2010 on a blistery, sleet-driven day in November it was flooded and freezing cold.

    This location is in great structural shape and, with some vision, time, and effort, be converted into an amazing work/live space akin to 401 Richmond. There is a community group – Build Wabash Now! – that is rallying to reuse the building and turn it into the Wabash Community Recreation Centre. At a cost of between $13-$20 million, the concepts are bold and incorporate ideas of renovation to the building and addition of new space. It is interesting to not that the most expensive scenario involves demolition of the historical site instead of restoration.

    Whatever happens, it will be a slow process – the group presented their design ideas back in 2003. The longer the city takes to move on this project, the more the building will deteriorate from neglect and vandalism. With holes in the roof on the top floor letting in waterfalls of water whenever it rains, the great potential of saving and reusing one of the last remaining industrial buildings in the city rots slowly away, taking with it not only a piece of Toronto’s industrial history, but an underserved neighbourhood’s hopes for a stronger, healthier, more vibrant community.

  • December14th

    Lee Plaza

    Posted in: Articles, General

    Lee Plaza

    Lee Plaza, located at 2240 West Grand Boulevard in Detroit, MI, is a registered historic site by the state of Michigan and was added to the United States National Register of Historic Sites in 1981. Also known as Lee Plaza Hotel, the 15 floor orange-glazed brick Art Deco building was designed by Charles Noble in 1929. According to the Michigan State Historic Preservation Objects website “the Lee Plaza Hotel is architecturally significant as one of the finest and most elaborate apartment hotels surviving from Detroit’s 1920s heyday.”

    Originally, the building served as an upscale apartment with hotel services. At the time, it rivaled the Statler Hotel for its architectural details with exterior tiles and sculptures. The apartment changed hands several times, finally being used as a senior citizen’s home before closing in the early 90s. Throughout its use, the building never underwent any major renovations which left much of the original Art Deco sensibilities intact upon closure.

    Although vacant, it has been a hotspot for scrappers and scavengers and much of the artwork, internal wiring, fixtures, and any other materials deemed valuable have been removed for resale. One major loss would be the decorative lions ornamenting the exterior of building between the base and the apartments. It is said that these were stolen from Lee Plaza with no regard to the structural integrity of the historic building. Some of them have been found on the facades of buildings in Chicago and Detroit preservations have sought unsuccessfully to have them returned.