St. Lawrence Market North is a public market in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It hosts a variety of markets, including a farmers' market, an antique market and Christmas trees daily from mid-Nov. to Dec. 24. The site has been a farmer's market since 1803. Several buildings have been built for the Market North, the most recent in 1968. The new Market North structure is now under construction. The St. Lawrence Market combines the North building, the St. Lawrence Hall and the St. Lawrence Market South building.
History
A market has operated at King St. and Jarvis St. since the area was designated the "Market Block" by Upper Canada Lieutenant-Governor Peter Hunter in 1803. The first permanent farmers' market building was built on the south side of King Street at Jarvis Street shortly after. It was enclosed in 1820 and replaced by a brick structure in 1831. This new building extended from King to Front and housed an assembly hall on the upper level. City Council met in this assembly hall from 1834 to 1845. It was damaged in the 1849 great fire along with much of the adjacent area (but not the City Hall.) A remnant of the 1831 building, a stone drainage tunnel, was discovered in the 2015–17 archaeological excavations.[3]
A new building was built in 1851 abutting the new St. Lawrence Hall on King Street but with its main entrance facing Front Street. This building lasted until 1904 when it was demolished by order of the Market Commission and replaced by a building designed to match the recently completed South building. A canopy ran over Front Street connecting the north and south markets until it was removed in 1954.
A new one-storey north market building was built in 1968 and was in operation until 2015, when the market moved to a temporary facility at 125 The Esplanade.
The Farmers' Market, the largest in Toronto, is held on Saturdays starting at 5 am. The Sunday Antique Market operated weekly for 31 years until 2022 when the owner relocated it to Small Arms Munitions Building (Arsenal Lands) at Lakeshore Park in Mississauga, Ontario in protest of the city's decision to close Market Street to vehicular traffic.[4] A Sunday Variety Market and New Antique Market have replaced it.[5][6] There is also an outdoor Christmas trees and holiday green market offered daily from mid-November to December 24.[7]
In the early 2000s, the City of Toronto did a review of the Market's operations and determined that the North building would have to be replaced. The City held an architectural competition [10] for a new building to be used for the same purposes as the old one. On June 7, 2010, then-Mayor David Miller announced the winners of the design competition for a building to replace the existing North Market. The winning design was by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners in a joint venture with Adamson Associates.[8]Richard Rogers of the Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners architectural firm is also responsible for Paris' Centre Georges Pompidou (also known as the Pompidou Centre). The proposed new building was four stories tall and would feature an arcade and will be a complex of three buildings.[11] The new building includes office space which will be used for municipal courts and a 250-space parking garage underground.[12] The project schedule first envisioned a completion in 2018.[12]
The 1968 building was slated to be demolished late 2010, but City Council balked at the escalating cost of the project.[13] This led to changes to the design to reduce the cost. The updated design is for a five-story building with a central atrium, connected to St. Lawrence Hall. The ground floor is 4,000 square metres (43,000 sq ft) and the building will also have 4,000 square metres (43,000 sq ft) of office space and 3,000 square metres (32,000 sq ft) of space for courts.[14] In 2013, City Council approved an overall project budget of CA$91.5 million.[12] After the temporary site was built in 2015, the 1968 North building was closed.
The City commissioned archaeological studies on the site, to determine if there was anything archaeologically significant present on the site, which was first developed in 1804. Artifacts were found by excavating part of the foundation in 2015, including sewer brickworks, foundations and cellars. The finds meant that a further in-depth study was required. This study was done after the demolition of the 1968 building, which occurred in 2016.[15] The team led by Peter Popkin, senior archaeologist with Golder Associates, found various artefacts, including knives, ceramics and butchers’ hooks.[16] An exhibit on the archaeological dig was presented at the Market Gallery in the south building.[16]
An award of the contract to build the building was finally made in 2018, but rescinded later in the year when the recommended contractor failed to meet the requirements of the tender.[17] On May 15, 2019, City Council approved the awarding of a contract for construction to Buttcon Limited / The Atlas Corporation Joint Venture. Construction restarted on July 9, 2019. The market was expected to be completed in summer 2023 but later revised to fall 2024.[18] In July 2024, it was reported that the City was behind on a $9.5 million payment for design changes made by a city manager in 2008.[19]
Temporary site
During the construction of the new building, the Saturday and Sunday North Market vendors are selling from a location (Green P parking lot) one block south on the Esplanade.[2] The vendors vacated the North building in June 2015 to allow for demolition and re-development of a new market structure. The temporary market is located in a single storey pre-fabricated fabric structure on the parking lot south of the South Market Building at 125 The Esplanade[20] opened on July 11, 2015.[21] The temporary site will be used pending the completion of the permanent structure on Front Street.[22]
Market Lane Park is located on the west side of the North Market Building and St. Lawrence Hall. With the closure of (formerly West Market as well as Market Square as Market Street ran on southside - now known as The Esplanade) Market Street between King and Front Streets, under City of Toronto By-laws 291-67[23] and 40-70,[24] the area was converted to pedestrian use only. Additional landscaping features like water fountain (south end at Front Street), rows of trees, flower beds and sculpture (at north end on King Street) have been added. Market Square condominium buildings were constructed along the westerly boundary in the early 1980s.[25]
The park will remain after the demolition and after the new structure is built.
Sketch of 1831 building circa 1888
1851 building, as it looked circa 1890
View of interior of 1850 St. Lawrence Market building as it appeared in 1891.
View of St. Lawrence Market North building and Market Lane Park from north.