Uptown Toronto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uptown Toronto has traditionally been a name given to the area north of Downtown Toronto. As the portion of the city that could be considered to be downtown or midtown has grown, the region has pushed further north.

The first area known as Uptown was centred on Bloor Street around the University of Toronto in the nineteenth century this was the northern fringe of the city, and when the university was established it was still largely rural. The neighbourhood that grew up in this area in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century became known as Uptown. While this name is no longer used, it is preserved in some institutions, such as the Uptown Theatre.

Most areas north of Bloor have been referred to as Uptown. Today the area most often refers to the northern portion of the old city of Toronto stretching from St. Clair Avenue to Lawrence Avenue. There is no official city of Toronto definition for Uptown, but the Uptown Yonge Business Improvement area stretches from Eglinton to Lawrence.[1]. Since amalgamation in 1997 the border of Toronto stretches all the way to Steeles Avenue, but the former city of North York is not called Uptown.