Scarborough Civic Centre

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Scarborough Civic Centre
File:Scarborough Civic Centre.jpg
General information
Location Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Address 150 Borough Drive
Current tenants City of Toronto
Inaugurated 1973
Owner City of Toronto
Technical details
Floor count 5 (east wing)
4 (west wing)
Design and construction
Architect Raymond Moriyama

The Scarborough Civic Centre, located in Toronto, Ontario, was designed by architect Raymond Moriyama for the then Borough of Scarborough. It was officially opened by then mayor Albert Campbell and Queen Elizabeth II in 1973. The building served as the municipal office and office for the Scarborough Board of Education. From 1983 to 1997 it was City Hall for the then City of Scarborough.

Structure and surroundings

The building is unique for the juxtaposition of two triangular shaped, multiple split level towers, which surround an open central area in the interior. Outside the Civic Centre on the north side is Albert Campbell Square, named after Albert Campbell, Scarborough's first mayor, with a waterfall and reflecting pool, used as a skating rink in winter.

Sculptures are found on the southwest side of the building. The Hand of God, dedicated to Albert Campbell, depicts a man held up by a hand and is mounted on a mast; it is located south across Borough Drive.[1] Frank Faubert Forest, a wooded area south of the Civic Centre is named for Scarborough's last mayor, Frank Faubert.

Currently, construction is ongoing for a public library.[2]

Post amalgamation

In 1998 when the City of Scarborough was amalgamated into the city of Toronto, the Civic Centre became the municipal office site for Toronto's eastern district. It is currently home to the Scarborough Community Council. The five-storey east tower holds municipal offices, while the four-storey west tower now holds offices of the Toronto District School Board. The Scarborough Board of Education held its last official meeting at the site in November 1997, chaired by Mrs. Gaye Dale.

Former Scarborough town buildings

There are two other former civic buildings in Scarborough include:

  • Scarborough Municipal Building - Civic Road near Eglinton Avenue East and Birchmount Road - later by Metro East Detention Centre (Toronto East Detention Centre) as an office complex, which has since been demolished and now site of parking lot
  • Mammoth Hall (1879) - a wooden structure destroyed by fire in 1988

See also

Notes

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  2. http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/renovations/scarborough-centre-branch.jsp

External links

Preceded by
Scarborough Municipal Building - Eglinton Avenue near Birchmount Road
Scarborough City Hall
1973–1997
Succeeded by
Toronto City Hall

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