This is what Liberty Village looked like before the condos
For all the development that's shapedLiberty Villageover the last 15 years or so, the area's industrial past retains something of a ghostly presence.
Once home to the mightyInglis factory— a key player in the local war movements of the previous century and a major manufacturer of theBren light machine gun— the area is marked by a pseudo-suburban housing development that just doesn't seem integrated with the rest of the area.
With the exception of the old chapel from the formerCentral Prison, this section of the neighbourhood was completely razed in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
But, interestingly, it was only because of the healthy tension between new and old to the west that such a development was even considered in the first place.
The former industrial warehouses found on streets like Hanna, Atlantic, Jefferson, Fraser, andMowatplayed host to an IT boom that paved the way for the renewal of the area and the condo-based developments that continue to this day.
By the mid 2000s, the neighbourhood started to undergo huge changes. Most of the Inglis buildings were demolished, following the destruction of the Massey Ferguson site on King West a few years earlier.
A small group of heritage enthusiasts tried to save the industrial character of the eastern end of Liberty Village, but they didn't stand much of a chance given the value of the property in question and the incentives developers had to build residential properties.
What remains now is a thoroughly mixed neighbourhood that lacks the historical identity of something like the Distillery District, but has nevertheless escaped the complete destruction of industrial heritage experiencedalong the King West corridor.
Behold, what Liberty Village looked like before the condos.
Toronto Archives of the Inglis Warehouse rooftopping, 1990s.
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