Spruce Court Apartments 1913 (with later additions)

Photo by Alan L Brown - Posted June, 2014

Photo by Alan L Brown - Posted June, 2014

Photo Source - City of Toronto Archives, Series 838, Item 285
In front of the apartments on Spruce Street, between Sackville and Sumach Streets, across from Nasmith Avenue, can be found this 2013 Heritage Toronto plaque. Here's what it says:
Plaque coordinates: 43.664259 -79.362834 |
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Spruce Court is one of the earliest examples of publicly supported rental housing in Canada. It was the first project constructed for the Toronto Housing Company, and organization that included social reformers, business leaders, and City of Toronto representatives. Originally inspired by the Garden City movement and motivated by an affordable housing crisis, the company commissioned the architecture firm of Eden Smith and Sons to design this complex, as well as Riverdale Courts (later Bain Apartments Co-operative). The original 32 cottage flats - arranged around the grass courtyard - and six townhouses were designed in the English Cottage style with street level entrances and arched brick porches. In 1925, the architectural firm of Mathers and Haldenby designed an additional 40 flats on Sumach Street with steep shingled roofs and half-timbered gables. Changes in ownership and growing concerns about the condition of the complex led residents to form the Spruce Court Co-operative in 1978, and they acquired the property the following year.
Related websites
Eden Smith
Spruce Court Housing Co-op and Bain Apartments Co-op
Affordable Housing That Works
Spruce Court: 100 Years
Garden City Movement
Mathers and Haldenby
Related Toronto plaques
Riverdale Courts 1913
Eden Smith House
More Eden Smith
Beaches Branch, Toronto Public Library 1916
Church of St. John the Evangelist (The Garrison Church)
Church of St. Simon-the-Apostle
Eden Smith House
Riverdale Courts 1913
Saint Thomas's Anglican Church
St. Hilda's College
The Studio Building
Wychwood Park
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