Discovery District


The Discovery District is one of the commercial districts in Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It has a high concentration of hospitals and research institutions, particularly those related to biotechnology. The district is roughly bounded by Bloor Street on the north, Bay Street on the east, Dundas Street on the south, and Spadina Avenue on the west.

Characteristics

The area includes the main campus of the University of Toronto, as well as university affiliated leading health-care facilities such as the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto General Hospital, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute and the MaRS Discovery District. These buildings are concentrated along the section of University Avenue between Dundas and College Streets. An extension of the Discovery District is located at the southwest block of Kensington Market at the intersection of Dundas and Bathurst Streets, where the Krembil Research Institute of the Toronto Western Hospital is located.
is one of several research institutes located in the Discovery District.
This area was subdivided from three main 'park lot' estates: Macaulay Estate, Elmsley Estate and the Powell Estate
A short stretch of Gerrard Street West from Bay Street to LaPlante Avenue was referred to as Gerrard Village, a Bohemian Greenwich Village like area from the late 19th century to the early 1970s.
This area is referred to by Statistics Canada as census tract 5350035.00. According to the 2011 National Household Survey, 80% of the population surveyed reported an income of over $50 000 annually. This is almost 30% higher than the average provincial income. For the total 2011 population within the discovery district 395 people made between $30 000 ad $39 000 annually, 410 made between $40 000 and $49 000, and 2250 made over $50 000. The accuracy of these figures is questionable due to the National Household Survey being optional, and therefore wealthier people could possibly be over represented. But considering the location in the heart of downtown Toronto and the rapid expansion of condominium build ups, people would have to make more money to live here.
Statistics Canada. National Household Survey 2011

History

The original plans for the Town of York divided the City along Lot Street with a street grid creating small urban 'town lots' to the south and large rectangular 'park lots' to the north. The 'park lots' along Lot St were given to many of York's most prominent families who had professions and sometimes even a separate house in the Town and generally did not farm; therefore they often did not clear their lots of the natural forest. As each 'park lot' extended in a rectangle from Lot Street to what would become Bloor, most of the estate houses were built on the north side of Lot Street opposite the Town. Four 'park lots' comprised the area north of Queen just across from the heart of Toronto between Yonge Street and just west of College Avenue. Three of the families occupying these lots built large estate homes all fairly far north of Lot St :
was completed in 1834, and presently houses the Law Society of Ontario.
The situation of these lots just north of the town meant that this land was in high demand as the city outgrew its original boundaries south of Lot. As most Toronto streets started at Lot, the 'park lots' commanded impressive views into the town and many of the buildings that were built as the 'park lots' were subdivided by their owner, were impressive institutions such as Osgoode Hall still standing, built at the top of York Street by 1832 just two years before the Town of York became a City with the name Toronto. By the time Toronto became a city in 1834, the area south of Lot St from the Garrison Creek to the Don River had all been subdivided and the four 'park lots' north of Lot St were subdivided by their owners with the eastern lot becoming the first residential district north of Queen, the western lot becoming the 'University Park', gated parkland intended to become Toronto's University and the area between on the north side of Lot St attracting various institutions and businesses.

Development

The area just north of Lot St became something of an institutional area with buildings such as the House of Industry, the Armoury and the Eaton's Company store to the south and the University of Toronto in the 'University Park' to the north which was gated at Queen St & College Ave and was largely forested.
By about 1900 there still remained a large residential district called 'The Ward' which became Toronto's first Chinatown but also attracted many attempts to have it demolished as it was economically depressed. At this time some of Toronto's oldest and most important institutions south of Queen were replaced with larger buildings north of Queen St such as Old City Hall at the top of Bay Street and the Ontario Parliament Building; Queen's Park on the University grounds at the top of College Avenue.
Part of 'The Ward' had been demolished for the building of New City Hall and in the years after the first world war, several plans were made to more closely link the institutional area north of Queen with the older town to the south. Two plans in particular substantially changed this area although both ultimately collapsed with the Great Depression. University Avenue was extended south of Queen street although the street itself, formerly a large quiet street leading to Queen's Park and the 'University Park' was only slowly turned into the bustling Boulevard of towers and hospitals it is today, none of the Art Deco towers originally planned for the street were ever built. The second plan called for a new 'Federal Avenue' in the middle of the old town's grid starting from the new Union Station north to a proposed Government complex on the north side of Queen. Many buildings in 'The Ward' were purchased by the government before the plan fell through. In the 1960s with the City of Toronto annexing the last independent municipalities, 'The Ward' was demolished and a new City Hall was built on the north side of Queen Street between what became Old City Hall and Osgoode Hall.