OVERVIEW: The Annex is Toronto's most heterogenous community. Its residents include successful business people, prominent artists, University of Toronto students and faculty, and people from all walks of life. This is a vibrant neighbourhood that draws its energy from the University of Toronto, as well as from the bars, restaurants and nightclubs that crowd together along Bloor Street. Many of the rooming houses and multi-unit homes in the Annex have decently been converted back to single family houses reflecting the return to prominence of this "historic Toronto neighbourhood.
HOMES: The Annex houses, built between 1880 and 1910 - are fine examples of Victorian, Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque architectural styles. Plum and pink colored Credit River sandstone, rich red brick, and terra cotta clay tiles, make up the exterior facades of many of these homes. The architectural detail is among the finest in the city, ranging from pyramidal roofs and turrets to recessed grand archways and wooden spindled porches. A second wave of Annex homes dates from 1910 to 1930. These homes are less elaborate than their predecessors, but are nonetheless fine examples of English Cottage, Georgian and Tudor style architecture.
SHOPPING: The Annex's main shopping district is on Bloor Street. This stretch of stores includes a hodgepodge of clothing boutiques, book-stores, food markets, travel agencies, restaurants, and outdoor cafes. The Mirvish Village shopping district on Markham Street, south of Bloor Street, is a quaint collection of bookstores, art galleries, antique stores, and one-of-a-kind specialty stores.
RECREATION: The Annex really comes alive at night when people from all over the city converge upon its restaurants, bars and nightclubs. Fitness enthusiasts can get in shape at either the University of Toronto's Athletic Centre, or the recently renovated Miles Nadal Jewish Community Centre at Bloor and Spadina. The Native Canadian Centre of Toronto is located in the Annex at 16 Spadina Road. This centre offers a variety of programs and services for Toronto's Native community as well as the general public. The Spadina Road Public Library at io Spadina Road, offers a wide variety of programming for neighbourhood residents.
SCHOOLS:
(P) Huron Jr., 541 Huron St., (416) 393-1570
(P) Jesse Ketchum Jr. & Sr., 61 Davenport Rd., (416) 393-1530
(P) Palmerston Jr., 734 Palmerston Ave., (416) 393-9305
(P) Central Technical School, 725 Bathurst St., (416) 393-oo6o
(C) Loretto College, 391 Brunswick Ave., (416) 393-551ior South Campus, 783 Bathurst St., (416) 393-5543
(PRI) University of Toronto School, 371 Bloor West., (416) 978-3212
(PRI) Royal St. Georges College, 12o Howland Ave., (416) 533-9481
(U) University of Toronto, St. George Campus, (416) 978-2011
TRANSPORTATION: The Annex is well served by public transit. There are subway stations both at Spadina and at Bathurst on the Bloor-Danforth line, and at Dupont Street, on the Yonge-University-Spadina line. Motorists are within minutes of Toronto's business and entertainment districts and are approximately twenty five minutes from the commuter highways.