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The tragic history of how Toronto demolished one of its most beautiful buildings

It's been decades since Toronto lost one of its best examples of Streamline Moderne architecture — the William H. Wright Building — and most of the people who frequent the bustling Financial District in the modern era remain blissfully unaware of the area's impressive but ultimately lost architectural history. The long-gone six-storey office building on the corner of York and King Streets was designed by the firm Mathers and Haldenby and built between 1937 and 1938.The site of the structure was previously home to a list of local establishments, including the Imperial Hotel, a tailor, a restaurant, a hardware shop, and a barber shop. The site of the future William H. Wright Building in 1936. Photo: Toronto Public Library Archives. Situated at 140 King St. W., the building was named after the founder of The Globe and Mail, William Henry Wright, and served as the newspaper's headquarters for over three decades. Photo: Toro...


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