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Gooderham and Worts Distillery, circa 1800s. Image: City of Toronto Archives


Gooherham and Worts main building, containing Mill, Mashing and Fermenting departments, Toronto, November 1918. Image: City of Toronto Archives


Malt House, Distillery District, 2017. Image by Herman Custodio


Aerial view of Distillery District, Toronto, 2016. Image: Vik Pahwa


  • The Distillery District

    Mill Street to the North, Cherry Street to the East, the Union Station Rail Corridor to the South, and Parliament Street to the West

    In 2001, a team led by John Berman, Jamie Goad, David Jackson, and Mathew Rosenblatt, purchased the five hectare parcel, with the intention of transforming it into a vibrant, industrious area of arts and culture, while respecting the industrial built heritage.

    Cityscape Developments had, at one time, some 200 open permits covering their work. Working with heritage experts, modernizing elements installed from the 1950s onward were stripped away, exposing old brick and plaster. Vintage lumber was salvaged and transformed into new walls and furnishings for tenants. The adaptive reuse of over 350,000 square feet of heritage space within the district won the project accolades and several prizes, including Heritage Toronto’s 2015 Special Achievement Award.


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