Editor's Picks + Features

96981468_a0f0402afb

My Toronto Video Contest Voting Page

Example description of page.

4843752478_f5b5e2cc1b_b

A 72 Year Crossing at Yonge and Bloor

"A 72 Year Crossing at Yonge and Bloor" Comparative...

4837950162_c923bb1d6e

STREET SCENE: Linux Cafe

Street Scene will appear each week showcasing the...

IMG_0702

Farm Friday: Evergreen Brick Works

Name: Evergreen Brick Works Farmers' Market Location:...

4662198802_8615cf0d2d_b

SPACING VOTES WEEKLY: Coach Ford, Smitherman walks & a heated TV debate

EDITOR’S NOTE: Spacing Votes — our dedicated 2010...

spacing-radio-votes-smither

SPACING RADIO: Smitherman talks walking, while walking

LISTEN TO THIS SPACING RADIO PODCAST George Smitherman...

congestion_referendum

IDEAS FOR TORONTO: Infrastructure referendums

The Toronto City Summit Alliance held a roundtable...

4790754465_e783015c3d_z

Bike parking takes over car parking spaces

Toronto bike riders can celebrate a "first" today:...

4706528245_ef676de151_b

Cities for People — New Toronto design intervention

This is part of a series of posts by students in...

3677103134_da0a274434_z

LORINC: Greenwashing by any other name

I normally have a lot of time for the Toronto Environmental...

4814694220_7da9ea9331

World Wide Wednesday: Maps, Trains, Trikes and Three Million on the A40

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around...

Water in Toronto: HTO book launch TODAY at Fort York

For the past three years Coach House Books has produced the uTOpia series: a collection of essays, articles and photos all about Toronto. Quite a few Spacing contributors have pieces in the volumes and though, as a contributor,  I'm certainly biased in this assessment, they have become quite a collection of discussion documents on the Toronto that is and the Toronto that could be. I say "discussion" because many of the essays have either started or continued city debates on issues like gentrification, the suburbs, stripmalls, pavement, greenspace and so on. What I have liked about the series is the voices often come from the ground -- from the people involved -- rather than from above.

This year Coach House has turned the focus of their old printing press towards water. Not just the lake -- though it's important -- but the water that surrounds us everyday, hidden or in plain view. My own contribution to the book is an essay on two of Toronto's buried reservoirs that masquerade as city parks, and I discovered there's much to talk about in what seems like, at first glance, boring old infrastructure. While the story of water in Toronto may not have the dramatic Hollywood life and death narrative arc of, say, Chinatown or William Mulholland, it is not without heroic moments and characters. Like this city itself, the story of water here is deep and might take you by surprise when underestimated.

Come out to Fort York on Sunday afternoon for the launch party. There will be a fun discussion and a guided tour of Garrison Creek & the Fort. If you haven't been to the Fort in a while, you'll be surprised at how much the area has changed.

WHEN: Sunday, November 9, 2 p.m. — 6 p.m.
WHERE: The Blue Barracks, Fort York National Historic Site
HOW MUCH: $5 (or free with purchase of book)
AND: Refreshments available

Book Launch for HTO: Toronto's Water from Lake Iroquois to Lost Rivers to Low-flow Toilets, edited by Wayne Reeves and Christina Palassio

Drained by a half-dozen major watersheds, cut by a network of deep ravines and fronting on a Great Lake, and home to a massive water supply, wastewater and flood control works, Toronto is a city dominated by water. How will that relationship with water change in the coming decades? In HTO: Toronto's Water from Lake Iroquois to Lost Rivers to Low-flow Toilets (Coach House Books), 34 contributors examine the ever-changing interplay between nature and culture, and call into question the city's past, present and future engagement with water.

To celebrate the publication of HTO, This Is Not A Reading Series, Coach House Books and Fort York launch the book in style at historic Fort York's Blue Barracks. Doors open at 2 p.m. Then at 2:30 p.m., Spacing's Matt Blackett moderates a panel discussion on the future of Toronto's water, featuring HTO contributors Jennifer Bonnell, Kim Storey, John Lorinc, Gary Miedema, Shawn Micallef and Helen Mills. 


Following the panel, guests can either join contributor David Robertson on a guided walking tour of the Fort in relation to Garrison Creek and the original lakeshore, or stay and discuss Toronto's water more informally over a few refreshments in the Blue Barracks.

 

Comments

Neither the author nor Spacing necessarily agree with the comments posted below. Spacing reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. See our Comment Policy.

 
Post a comment
Water in Toronto: HTO book launch TODAY at Fort York
By