Monday, June 10, 2019

Shawn Micallel Star Columnist Gets it right about the new MEC store.







The disappearance of surface parking lots in Toronto is a great thing. The scourge of the city for half a century after being devoured by the automobile and its auxiliary needs, Toronto has been luckier than most cities in North America in correcting these historic mistakes as most downtown lots have been filled back in with more city.


One of the most recent to disappear was at Queen W. and Soho Sts. Unfortunately it’s been filled in by a new mistake.


Indeed, MEC makes a big deal about their social and environmental responsibility and their commitment to “green buildings” and “lightening their impact.” Yet there are few bigger impacts than abandoning an already built, perfectly fine building that will soon be torn down, and constructing a new one a couple blocks away. Walmart does this, MEC shouldn’t, as land use planning and adaptive reuse of existing buildings are integral to sound environmentalism.


Full story here at this link,  

https://www.thestar.com/opinion/star-columnists/2019/05/24/new-mec-store-in-downtown-toronto-is-an-environmental-architectural-and-heritage-shame.html 

Saturday, June 8, 2019

Quicksand at Vine Ave and Keele st.

this 1912 report is not he last time quick sand was shown to be a problem at Vine Ave and Keele St. during construction of Henizmen Place the Keele St at Vine Ave, open up due to subsiding sand.



Friday, June 7, 2019

Yonge St 300 block east side continuing work to provide sidewalk protection and overhead offices for condo





Tomorrow 11am Red Embers opening, Allen gardens.




Red Embers will transform Allan Gardens in downtown Toronto. For the first time in the city's history, monumental art by Indigenous womxn artists will be displayed for free to the public. The banners have been created in Toronto and across Canada by commissioned artists and will float from 13 tall charred-black gates throughout the park. Two of the banners will face the Victorian-era glass Palm House, while the others will straddle the major pathways of the park, allowing visitors to admire them from all directions and walk below them. The local eastern cedar, hand-peeled structures will measure about 18 feet high with vertical posts that cross at the top. Red Embers opens to the public with a smudging ceremony, drumming and guest speakers on June 8, 2019, 11 AM. All are welcome! Red Embers honours the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, and the strength of community resilience



https://www.redembers.ca/

Artist info below,


Thursday, June 6, 2019

Truck platooning needs to legally adopted in Canada.

Truck platooning where one driver driving  a truck controls other trucks, typically in a resource extraction usage such as forestry can provide greater safety in a dangerous environment. 


Truck platooning is an emerging vehicle
technology in which trucks are linked by
a computer system that maintains the
desired distance between trucks, as well
as controls acceleration and braking,
reacting faster than a driver typically can.


Platooning uses a dedicated short-range
radio communications protocol
approved for communications at high-
speeds, as well as a CPS system, and radar
technology. 



This technology is only in the testing phase in Canada, while legal in several U.S. states, including Tennessee and Georgia. 


Sarnia Ontario, American Railcar Industries,, is purchased by Greenbrier




REPAIRS
Covered Hoppers
Pressure Differential Hoppers
Tanks


CAPABILITIES
AAR Wrecks
Tank Qualification Nitrogen Padding Interior Cleaning Exterior Paint Interior Lining Hi-Bake Lining


SPECIALTIES
Program Work Nace Level 3 Kosher Certified


SHOP CAPACITY
240 cars


DELIVERING LINE
CN


RR SWITCHES PER WEEK

Greenbrier USA has purchased all ofAmerican railcar

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Toronto Transit Bricks At the Junction Framers Market this Saturday.

Toronto Transit Bricks was founded by Trevor Parkins-Sciberras, a local historian and transit enthusiast from the West Toronto Junction. For the past 3 years, he has been promoting Toronto’s public transit history, touring the city with his display of Lego buses and streetcars, and will be sharing their transit themed lego creations this Saturday! Come chat with Trevor and check out his Toronto Transit history posters and Lego streetcar postcards for sale.

Test of new twitter feed pls ignore

June 8, 2019 11am Red Embers will transform Allan Gardens, honours the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls





Above completed work rendering, and diagram.



Red Embers will transform Allan Gardens in downtown Toronto. For the first time in the city's history, monumental art by Indigenous womxn artists will be displayed for free to the public. The banners have been created in Toronto and across Canada by commissioned artists and will float from 13 tall charred-black gates throughout the park. Two of the banners will face the Victorian-era glass Palm House, while the others will straddle the major pathways of the park, allowing visitors to admire them from all directions and walk below them. The local eastern cedar, hand-peeled structures will measure about 18 feet high with vertical posts that cross at the top. Red Embers opens to the public with a smudging ceremony, drumming and guest speakers on June 8, 2019, 11 AM. All are welcome!

Below construction photos one June 3rd 2019,





Red Embers honours the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, and the strength of community resilience. All the banners and gates will remain in the park from June until the annual October 4, 2019 Sisters in Spirit Vigil. Red Embers has been designed by the team of Indigenous designers Larissa Roque, Tiffany Creyke, and Citylab's Lisa Rochon.


The team won a Public Space Incubator competition grant in 2018, awarded by Park People. Commissioned featured artists include Kristen Auger, Annie Beach, Hillary Brighthill, Hannah Claus, Sarah Biscarra Dilley, Rosalie Favell, Adrienne Greyeyes, Lido Pimienta, Louise Solomon, Rolande Souliere, Eladia Smoke, and Janelle Wawia. Artists, including Catherine Tammaro and Lindsey Lickers, will work directly with our Charitable Partner, the Native Women's Resource Centre of Toronto, to create two banners with volunteers. ​ ​ ​ Framing the red banners in black is a metaphor of the wood holding its structural integrity against flames. The number of installations follows the cycle of the 13 Grandmother Moons within the Lunar System. The Grandmother Moon is the leader of feminine life. For a woman who has experienced domestic violence or sexual assault, it is the Grandmother Moon that provides healing and a rebalancing of energy. The banners will move in the wind in order to carry the spirit that is fundamental to Red Embers. This movement follows the protocols of ceremony.



The design team is grateful for the guidance of Elder Jacque (Jacqueline) Lavalley throughout the design process. Like regalia, some of the banners will be designed with ribbons or tin jingle cones. The jingle skirt is danced during ceremony as a form of healing for the wearer’s community. Healing comes through the sound of the jingles, and the wearer’s footwork steps. The ribbon skirt empowers the wearer as a reminder of their resilience against cultural genocide. Other Red Ember's artists may experiment with new forms of expression using spray paint, fluorescent ribbons or roadkill bones. In this way, Red Embers challenges the conventional view of one homogenous Indigenous aesthetic. Red Embers is presented as a celebration of the power of art and design, which promises to be experienced by thousands at Allan Gardens. The banners will raise the profile of the Indigenous creative sector while demonstrating non-hierarchical partnerships between Indigenous design principles in the built-environment led by Indigenous womxn with stakeholders at the City of Toronto, Allan Gardens, and with Friends of Allan Gardens. "Women are Warriors; you hear our hearts beating across Turtle Island and WE ARE STILL HERE. "

Each and every day multiple hours I miss Matt and Nate

 He’s really does not answer my questions about Matt and Nate, No way, they know the truth