M
Mackitty
Guest
Hi Irina
I am not far from you and I have kids as well.. I am going to check out your site.
I am not far from you and I have kids as well.. I am going to check out your site.
Hi Irina
I am not far from you and I have kids as well.. I am going to check out your site.
Crema Coffee Company
3079 Dundas Street West
Toronto, ON M6P 1Z9
(416) 767-3131
I saw some guys renovating the space yesterday. J.P, what's the lowdown? The concept? etc?
Is Cool Hand of a Girl still open?
I'm pretty mixed as well, like most Eastern Europeans, we have the blood running through our veins of every invading army.
From today's Star:
http://www.thestar.com/article/347875
Connecting with the Junction TheStar.com - living - Connecting with the Junction
Tagged as the city's next up-and-coming 'hood, it hums on a gritty tone
March 20, 2008
Emily Mathieu
Staff Reporter
Sergio Abegao has a love-hate relationship with his Junction neighbourhood.
The 32-year-old musician lives in a converted warehouse and studio space at 2783 Dundas St. W., a few blocks west of Dupont St.
Once one of the roughest sections of the city, the Junction was created in the mid-1800s at the intersection of Keele St. and Dundas St. W. and was called Toronto West Village. It got its new name, in part, from intersecting rail lines bringing supplies and workers into the industrial section of town.
Lousy economic times and a steady stream of rough workers led to drunken rowdiness until the town voted to go dry in 1903, a bylaw that was not repealed until a 1997 referendum.
While the Junction has been optimistically marked by condo merchants as the next up-and-coming patch of hipster real estate, it retains a genuinely gritty flavour. Gospel churches are still set up in converted storefronts that pepper the slightly ragged streets.
We start our tour in a mini-park on Dundas St. W., immediately west of Abegao's home. It is where he takes his Eskimo dog Millie out to play. Abegao and musical companion Tracey Adams-Thibaudeau rescued Millie from a patient on the lam from a treatment facility in the middle of the night at the corner of Spadina and Dupont in 2001.
Millie – who can be temperamental – returns home, but Adams-Thibaudeau, 28, the vocalist in their musical duo called Hibou (owl in French) joins us for our walk. Their music has a bluesy, airy, electronic sound well-suited to a 3 a.m. rendezvous on a summer patio for many glasses of wine and small cigars.
At the end of the month, Hibou heads out for its big break to the Ultra Music Festival in Miami, a massive two-day electronic blowout in its tenth year. See hiboumusic.com.
From Millie's favourite park, it's a quick jog across the street to West End Offset Plate Service Ltd., a tiny, non-descript print shop that produces piles of album covers overnight, and at affordable prices.
"Basically if we have something to print we go there," says Abegao. Hibou is currently working on a new and what sounds like bizarrely complicated media package and getting a quality discount is key.
Gospel music seeps from a converted storefront next door, the Holy Spirit Trinity Church of God. The holy-roller sound – along with a little shoulder shake courtesy of Adams-Thibaudeau – sets the tempo as we head west.
What are your favourite neighbourhood joints – Millie-friendly and otherwise?
For reliable, friendly food services Abegao heads to Super Submarine. "No matter what time I go in there it is always the same guy behind the counter."
The owner often treats Millie to tidbits of cold cuts .
Abegao also frequents the Zone Stop Variety, which allows Millie to step inside.
Farther west, Rope Inn offers "World famous West Indian cuisine ... if the world was the four or five blocks around here," says Abegao.
A new family has just taken over the place and has big plans, he says.
Adams-Thibaudeau points out a record shop called Pandemonium where she likes to browse.
Where do you go for drinks?
One stop is Shoxs Tap and Grill, the first bar to serve booze in the area when the ban on alcohol was lifted. The appeal of the darkened bar is its proximity to his house, but that's about it.
"The band had a meeting there and a fight broke out," he explains. "We were outside and a bar stool flew through the opened patio doors."
Adams-Thibaudeau refers to the moment as something of a rough and tumble "classic."
What are the downsides to living in the Junction?
"Most places don't stay open past 10 p.m.," says Abegao.
There are lots of promising places that open but roll over fast for lack of traffic.
Or they open then have strange hours, like a little coffee shop/art studio called Cool Hand of a Girl. It's 1 p.m. on a Sunday when we peek through the locked glass door. The place is dark most days of the week, he says.
"Working girls" have been known to cluster in and around the alcoves near Abegao's building. He is pretty relaxed about it, but admits it's not a comfortable experience.
However, a big part of the Junction's appeal for Abegao was that it enabled him to rent a space allowing him to play music at odd hours.
It's a bit far from downtown, he says. But the 24-hour transit service is a lifesaver.