Remaking Downtown Toronto: Politics, Development, and Public Space on Yonge Street, 1950-1980

dc.contributor.advisorMartel, Marcel
dc.creatorRoss, Daniel Gallagher
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-27T13:41:03Z
dc.date.available2017-07-27T13:41:03Z
dc.date.copyright2017-03-02
dc.date.issued2017-07-27
dc.date.updated2017-07-27T13:41:03Z
dc.degree.disciplineHistory
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.namePhD - Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description.abstractThis study explores the history of Torontos iconic downtown Yonge Street and the people who contested its future, spanning a period from the 1950s through to 1980 when the street was seldom out of the news. Through detailed analysis of a range of primary sources, it explores how the uses and public meanings of this densely-built commercial strip changed over time, in interaction with the city transforming around it. What emerges is a street that, despite fears for its future, remained at the heart of urban life in Toronto, creating economic value as a retail centre; pushing the boundaries of taste and the law as a mass-entertainment destination; and drawing crowds as a meeting place, pedestrian corridor, and public space. Variously understood as an historic urban landscape and an embarrassing relic, a transportation route and a people place, a bastion of Main Street values and a haven for big-city crime and sleaze, from the 1950s through the 1970s Yonge was at the centre of efforts to improve or reinvent the central city in ways that would keep pace with, or even lead, urban change. This thesis traces the history of three interventionsa pedestrian mall, a clean-up campaign aimed at the sex industry, and a major redevelopment schemetheir successes and failures, and the larger debates they triggered. The result is a narrative that ranges widely in theme: planning, automobility, and youth culture; vice, moral regulation, and citizen activism; capitalism, corporate power, and urban renewal. Engaging with the North American and international historiographies of these topics, it places the politics of downtown in Toronto in larger historical context. It offers an account of urban transformation that emphasizes complexity in the interaction between ideas, structures of power, and the often idiosyncratic decisions of a range of downtown actors. An increasingly interventionist local state, dynamic capital investment in retail and real estate, and diverse citizen mobilizations all contributed to transforming Yonge Street, helping to create the modern, globalized downtown shopping street and public space we know today.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/33549
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
dc.subjectUrban planning
dc.subject.keywordsUrban history
dc.subject.keywordsDowntown
dc.subject.keywordsPostwar Canada
dc.subject.keywordsLand development
dc.subject.keywordsCitizen activism
dc.subject.keywordsEnvironmentalism
dc.subject.keywordsMunicipal governance
dc.subject.keywordsLocal politics
dc.subject.keywordsVice
dc.subject.keywordsSexual entertainment
dc.subject.keywordsPedestrianization
dc.subject.keywordsUrban planning
dc.subject.keywordsShopping
dc.subject.keywordsMain Street
dc.subject.keywordsYonge Street
dc.subject.keywordsToronto
dc.subject.keywordsSmall businesses
dc.subject.keywordsCorporation
dc.subject.keywordsPublic space
dc.subject.keywordsUrban transformation
dc.subject.keywordsDecentralization
dc.subject.keywordsCapitalism
dc.subject.keywordsUrbanism
dc.subject.keywordsMunicipal reform
dc.subject.keywordsConservatism
dc.subject.keywordsSex work
dc.subject.keywordsMoral regulation
dc.subject.keywordsReal estate
dc.titleRemaking Downtown Toronto: Politics, Development, and Public Space on Yonge Street, 1950-1980
dc.typeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation

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