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Ghost Blocks

These historic pc28¹ÙÍøapartments have been vacant since a sinkhole, fire and sewage forced out tenants. Can it be brought back to life?

The city has a plan to turn the site into hundreds of new homes by the end of the decade — if all goes smoothly.

Updated
4 min read
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A city-owned historic building at the corner of Wellington and Strachan has been sitting empty since structural concerns became too severe to house tenants.


Patricia Mueller remembers when the earth opened up and swallowed the floor.

The sinkhole at the roughly 80-unit supportive housing building in Toronto’s West Queen West area started out small, around three-by-three feet, shortly before the pandemic, Mueller said. But it was growing, despite residents still living inside. As it gnawed outwards, the floor started to give way. 

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Victoria Gibson

Victoria Gibson is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering affordable housing. Reach her via email: victoriagibson@thestar.ca.

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