IN THE MATTER OF THE ONTARIO
HERITAGE ACT
R.S.O. 1990, CHAPTER O.18 AND
CITY OF TORONTO, PROVINCE OF ONTARIO
604 BAY STREET
(INCLUDING ENTRANCE ADDRESS AT
610 BAY STREET)
NOTICE OF INTENTION TO DESIGNATE
THE PROPERTY
TAKE NOTICE that Council for the
City of Toronto intends to designate the property, including the lands, buildings
and structures thereon known municipally as 604 Bay Street (including entrance
address at 610 Bay Street) under Part IV, Section 29 of the Ontario Heritage
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.O.18, as amended, as a property of cultural heritage value
or interest.
Reasons for Designation
Description
The property at 604 Bay Street (including
entrance address at 610 Bay Street), formerly the Gray Coach Terminal, is
located on the southwest corner of Bay Street and Edward Street in downtown
Toronto. Constructed in 1931, the property comprises a two-storey structure
that served as the main terminal building with a one-and-a-half-storey covered
bus yard extending from its west elevation. The bus yard, which originally had
only four bus bays, was extended in 1949 and again in 1959 to span the full
length of the property's frontage along Edward Street. The terminal building
was expanded into the area behind the two easternmost bus bays in 1989. Both
portions of the property are clad in limestone with building features that
reflect Art Deco detailing.
Statement of Cultural Heritage Value
Design and Physical Value
The property at 604 Bay Street has design and
physical value as an early example of a modern motor coach terminal, among the
first of its type to be designed and constructed for this purpose in Canada.
Completed in 1931, the terminal building and bus bays are clad in Queenston
limestone and feature the use of the Stripped Classical variant of Art Deco, an
architectural and artistic movement that was influenced by the technological
innovations of the early-twentieth century, including developments in transportation.
The property displays artistic merit through the
spatial arrangement of the terminal building and bus yard, which provided for
safe and efficient movement of both passenger and vehicular traffic within the
site. Although there have been alterations to the terminal building and the bus
yard since the original date of construction, the main components of the
spatial arrangement, including the central entrance hall and the relationship
between the terminal building and the bus platforms remain legible.
Historical and Associative Value
Historically, the property is associated with
the Toronto Transportation Commission (forerunner to today's Toronto Transit
Commission (TTC)) and the development of Toronto's transportation services and
networks. The property was developed by the TTC for their subsidiary Gray Coach
Lines to provide interurban bus service between Toronto and other urban centres
in Canada and the northern United States. In the early 1930s at the time of the
construction of the new terminal, the TTC (with Gray Coach Lines) was one of
Canada's largest operators of motor coaches. The property recalls the era when
motor coaches were introduced as a new means of mass transportation on the
highways that were being built across North America.
The property reflects the architectural career
of Charles Brammall Dolphin, who is recognized by the Ontario Association of
Architects for his significant contribution to the province's architectural
heritage, and particularly celebrated for his original interpretations of the
Art Deco style, including the Consumers’ Gas Showroom (1930) at 2532 Yonge
Street, and the Postal Delivery Building (1939-40) at 40 Bay Street. Both
buildings feature Canadian-inspired motifs incorporated into their decorative
elements. The Gray Coach Terminal features cast aluminum panels on the east and
north facades of the main terminal building, which are also characteristic of
his work.
Contextual Value
Contextually, the Gray Coach Terminal is
functionally and historically linked to the McKnight Building on the adjacent
property to the south, where the Gray Coach Lines waiting room and offices were
located prior to the construction of the new terminal building and bus yard.
The property is also functionally and historically linked to the institutions,
retail, and entertainment venues in the surrounding area of downtown Toronto,
to which the coach terminal acted as a gateway for interurban travel.
Situated on the west side of Bay Street, north
of Dundas Street West, the subject property served as the arrival and departure
point of many residents and visitors of Toronto for ninety years, functioning
as a point of reference and landmark within the downtown core.
Heritage Attributes
Design and Physical Value
Attributes that contribute to 604 Bay Street
being an early example of a modern motor coach terminal that displays artistic
merit through its spatial arrangement:
·
The placement,
setback, and orientation of the structure on the southwest corner of Bay Street
and Edward Street
· The scale, form,
and massing of the main terminal building with its rectangular plan, two-storey
height, and flat roof
· The hipped roof
with skylight and steel framing on the roof of the main terminal building
· The use of the
Stripped Classical variant of Art Deco, including:
·
Symmetrical
arrangement of the east and north façade of the main terminal building
·
The double-height
archway, centrally placed on the east elevation and accentuated by an arched
roofline above, and the recessed plane of the main entrance doors and window
within
·
The pilasters on the
Bay Street and Edward Street elevations of the main terminal building and bus
yard that extend above the roofline
·
Stylized classical
motifs, including the keystone above the main entrance and low-relief dentil
course below the parapet
·
Cast aluminum
spandrels between the first and second storey windows with restrained
ornamentation
·
The flat headed
window openings on the north and east elevations that span the full width of
each bay, and the half-width windows on the outside bays of the north elevation
·
The five-over-three
mullion pattern of the windows on the on the north and east elevations, which
align with the design on the aluminum spandrel panels
·
Queenston limestone
exterior cladding on the exposed faces of the main terminal building and bus
yard
· The four original,
one-and-a-half storey tall bus bays on the north elevation (Edward Street)
· The main terminal
building's interior layout, including:
·
The centrally
located, 3-bay wide, double-height entrance hall delimited by columns
·
The coved ceiling and
integrated laylight framing above the entrance hall
·
The bifurcated
staircase leading up to the mezzanine level on the west end of the entrance
hall
·
The mezzanine level
that encircles and visually overlooks the entrance hall
Historical and Associative Value
Attributes that contribute to 604 Bay Street
being directly associated with the TTC and the theme of Toronto's
transportation services and networks, and reflecting the work of Charles
Dolphin:
· The regular rhythm
of the additional bus bays to the west of the original four bays, which
maintain the same design expression and height of the roofline across the
extent of the bus yard
· The aluminum sign
on the east elevation above the main entrance and the sign at the base of the
pilaster to the north of the entrance, identifying "Grey Coach Lines"
· The leaded glass
window with the Gray Coach Lines crest at the top of the mezzanine landing
· The use of the Art
Deco style, and in particular the use of cast aluminum panels at the second
floor and aluminum detailing
Contextual Value
Attributes that contribute to 604 Bay being a
landmark:
· The placement,
setback, and orientation of the structure on the southwest corner of Bay Street
and Edward Street
· The grand,
double-height archway and arched parapet indicating the building's main
entrance
· The main terminal
building's 3-bay wide, double-height entrance hall with coved ceiling, which
served as a gateway for departing and arriving passengers
Notice of Objection to the Notice of Intention to Designate
Notice of an objection to the Notice of
Intention to Designate the Property may be served on the City Clerk, Attention:
Registrar Secretariat, City Clerk's Office, Toronto City Hall, 2nd Floor West,
100 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2N2.; Email: RegistrarCCO@toronto.ca within thirty (30) days of March 31 2025, which is April 30, 2025. The
notice of objection to the Notice of Intention to Designate the Property must
set out the reason(s) for the objection and all relevant facts.
Getting Additional Information:
Further information in respect of the Notice of
Intention to Designate the Property is available from the City of Toronto at:
https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.CC28.12.
Dated at the City of Toronto on March 31, 2025.
John D. Elvidge
City Clerk