Beverley Street
Beverley Street is a minor road and major bike route located in the central area of Toronto, Ontario. The street was put in place in the 1870s, with large and coveted lots alongside.[1][2] It is of general consensus among locals that the road acts as the division between the Grange and Baldwin Village neighborhoods on the east side of the street and Toronto's main Chinatown on the west side, respectively.[3] It is designated bicycle route #35 in Toronto's cycle network.
Length | 1 km (0.62 mi) |
---|---|
Location | Queen Street West – College Street (continues north as St. George St.) |
Beverley Street is a two-lane road serving both directions with additional bicycle lanes along the curb side of the fully paved roadway. Due to these exclusive "bike lanes," the road acts as the principle north–south cyclist route for the western side of Toronto's downtown area. Beginning at Queen Street West and terminating at College Street, the road continues northbound turning into St. George Street, which runs through the main campus of The University of Toronto. The street is approximately one kilometre in length. Points of interest along the street include: the Grange Park, the Art Gallery of Ontario, Italian Consulate General, George Brown House, and Polish Combatants of WW2 Hall.
In popular culture
- Charlotte Gray published a 1997 non-fiction book, Mrs. King: The Life and Times of Isabel Mackenzie King, that partially discusses life in and around Beverly Street.[2]
- Blue Rodeo included a song on Beverley Street in its 2005 Are You Ready album.
References
- Lundell, Liz (1997). The estates of Old Toronto. Boston Mills Press. p. 30. ISBN 9781550462197 – via Google Books.
Beverley Street was laid out with large and highly fashionable lots in the 1870s.
- Gray, Charlotte (1977). Mrs. King: The Life and Times of Isabel Mackenzie King. Penguin Books. p. 100. ISBN 9780140253672 – via Google Books.
More important, Beverley Street was filled with the kind of wellto - do people that both John and Isabel yearned to mix with. It offered an intellectual cachet. Beverley Street was home to professors and lawyers who judged each other by their publications rather than their purses.
- Wise, Leonard (2017). Charles Pachter: Canada's Artist. Dundurn Press. ISBN 9781459738768 – via Google Books.
'But with the elegant new AGO and redesigned Grange Park on the Beverley Street border, and the bustle and cacophony of Spadina Avenue a block west with high-rise condos sprouting up and down the Avenue, Chinatown is beginning to transmogrify.'