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Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Marys

S

spmarshall

Guest
I am going through the backlog of relatively recent pictures I have. (I was not feeling well enough to go to Doors Open today)

I visted several small Ontario towns recently by car, and have this collection to share:

I stopped in Woodstock first. A really pretty large town worth exploring. I posted a photo tour last year. I stopped this time to check out Blandford Square Mall, located on Highway 2 near the 401, the proposed Toyota plant site.

Blandford1.jpg


The all-too-common faded letters for Wal-Mart in an old Woolco. It left over two years ago for a power centre on Highway 59/Norwich Ave. closer to the centre of town. The A&P is now a Liquidation World, and the only other tenants are a government office, a cafe and a discount rug store.

Blandford2.jpg


Surprisingly, there are people who want to save this mall. Woodstock's downtown is one of the more vibrant - that and Sprawlmart killed Blandford Square's chances. The owner is also holding out while Oxford County is offering to buy it for $2 million to entice Toyota.

Then along Beachville Road (quite an interesting drive) to Ingersoll:


Ingersoll1.jpg


Ingersoll2.jpg


The decaying old CN station and the VIA hut built to replace it to serve the two daily round trips that serve it (two other trips do not stop here). There is no ticket agent in the small station.

Downtown Ingersoll:

Ingersoll3.jpg


Ingersoll4.jpg


Ingersoll5.jpg


Then up old Highway 19 to St. Marys.

The first stop here was St. Marys Junction, where the original Grand Trunk line from Toronto and Kitchener to Sarnia via Forest split with the newer spur to London. The orignal line to the west is gone and the station redundant.

Thomas Edison worked here as a GTR overnight station attendant (in charge of clearing trains through the station area by telegraph) where he invented a device that would send the regular telegraph signals required to prove that the attendant was alert, while Edison slept. While Edison was sleeping, a collision nearly took place, and he had to flee back to the US to avoid criminal charges.

StMarys1.jpg


The station on the old "spur" sees three VIA trains a day.

StMarys3.jpg


And across from the station, an old wooden water tower.

StMarys2.jpg


Looking downtown from the station:

StMarys4.jpg


Town Hall:

StMarys11.jpg


Carnegie Library (expanded to the rear):

StMarys12.jpg


StMarys8.jpg


StMarys5.jpg


The large gothic stone building is the Opera House:

StMarys9.jpg


StMarys6.jpg


And a maintained mill race:

StMarys7.jpg


Then a drive further north to the former CFB Clinton, now known as Vanastra. This used to be a RCAF radar base to support other former RCAF air bases in Centralia, Hagersville and elsewhere. It is now partially abandoned, with small businesses taking over some of the military warehouses and depots, and some of the military housing occupied as rentals and coops. It's worth the detour from Highway 4 or 8.

Vanastra1.jpg


Vanastra2.jpg


And going back, you pass through Seaforth, a beautiful town (posted rentely on Trillum Photography) and Stratford. A great day road trip idea.
 
Re: Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Ma

What's the stone which the Town Hall's made of:

StMarys11.jpg


(and many of the other buildings)?

great tour!
 
Re: Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Ma

St. Marys (and a lot of Ontario stone) is made with limestone - Kingston is known as the Limestone City, St Marys as the Stonetown. St Marys Cement is one of the country's biggest cement produces and has a huge plant just south of the town, as limestone is used for making cement.
 
Re: Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Ma

I'd like to know the logic behind building Blandford Square where it is in the first place--way too far out of town, almost like they expected some big Woodstock population explosion in the 70s or something. Given all of that, no wonder it's a redundant white elephant--is there any more surreal mall in Ontario?
 
Re: Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Ma

The mall still has Woodstock Transit service, but yeah Wal-Mart relocated to a site closer to the town - not a common practice. The mall is far out. I would think that Morningside Mall, which will close soon has to be as surreal on the inside.

Anyway, here's an update on the Toyota proposal:

Toyota eyes 2nd Ontario plant
$600 million Woodstock plant to build 150,000 cars a year
1,000 jobs to be created directly, several thousand indirectly

TONY VAN ALPHEN
BUSINESS REPORTER

Surging Toyota Motor Corp. has decided to build a second assembly plant in Ontario, a Tokyo newspaper reported today.

Newspaper daily Nihon Keizai Shimbun said in a report that management of the Japanese-based auto giant has selected a site near Woodstock for construction of the plant that will cost more than $600 million and produce up to 150,000 subcompact cars annually.

The report confirms information from industry sources in Canada who have said since early this year that Toyota was leaning heavily toward a site south of its existing complex in nearby Cambridge.

Toyota's board meets in Tokyo later this month where it will make a final decision on where to build its next North American plant, according to several media reports.

The company already has six assembly operations in North America.

Toyota, which could surpass General Motors Corp. as the world's biggest auto maker later this decade, wants to start building cars at the new operation in 2008.

It hired real estate brokers several months ago to search for possible sites and the County of Oxford is currently trying to assemble a 400-hectare parcel at the corner of County Roads 2 and 4 just west of Highway 401, about 50 kilometres southwest of Cambridge.

The site is close to major railways and highways and numerous parts suppliers, which already feed the complex in Cambridge.

In the last few weeks, a mall owner on the proposed site has balked at sale offers from Oxford County. That has raised some concerns by local councillors, but industry officials are optimistic a deal can be reached.

In its report, the Tokyo daily said Toyota had considered the United States for the plant but selected Canada because of lower labour and benefit costs.

The plant would likely create more than 1,000 jobs directly and several thousand more in parts manufacturing and services.

The federal and provincial governments have been negotiating assistance packages with Toyota.

Ottawa has already confirmed a multi-million dollar package. Joe Cordiano, Ontario's minister of economic development and trade, was in Japan recently to discuss investments here.

Toyota opened its first Canadian assembly plant in Canada in 1989.

It has expanded significantly and now produces about 250,000 Corolla sedans, Matrix cross-over vehicles and luxury Lexus RX 330 sport utility models annually.

The Canadian Auto Workers union are currently trying to organize the plant.
 
Re: Midwestern Ontario Tour: Blandford Sq, Ingersoll, St. Ma

Don't mean to sound like some sort of army recruiter but spm, would you be interested in contributing to Trillium Photography? Do you still do road trips?

Trillium Photography
 

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