Consequences of unckecked and illegitimate encroachment on these precious lake openings. BELOW - WHAT WE NEED!

Friday, 5 September 2014

FOURTH STREET "WINDOW" NOW MORE OPEN AND BEING WELL-USED

Earlier this year, Fourth Street residents pruned and removed more obstructing shrubbery from the lake window on their street.  This work will continue.

The mass of tall, invasive Japanese Knotweed was also cut down on the province's lakeside portion of the 51 Lake Shore Drive property.

All of this work has really opened up the view and is encouraging even more passers-by to linger at what will, hopefully, become Fourth Street Park in the future.

A park bench has now appeared in the "park" (donated by a resident?) and is being well-used as the photograph clearly shows.


Monday, 30 June 2014

CANADA DAY DOWN AT THE FOURTH STREET "LAKE WINDOW"


Some residents of Fourth Street enjoying the cool lake breezes on a hot Canada Day down at the newly liberated "lake window" at the bottom of their street.  

Local residents have been clearing some of the dense shrubbery that encroached on this public land and that, for decades, had prevented people from approaching the water and enjoying this wonderful spot. (For comparison, look at the picture on this blog's header.) There is more clearing and opening up planned for the future as the community at large engages more in the stewardship of this precious piece of our waterfront.

There is a petition in circulation that requests the City of Toronto to formally create a waterfront parkette at this location.  If you wish to sign the petition, please contact us at fourthstreetlakewindow@gmail.com

We have a long way to go yet to get the same amenity that other road ends in South Etobicoke already have.

Petition .......


  • We, the undersigned, petition the City of Toronto to create a waterfront parkette at the southern end of Fourth Street on the publicly owned, unassumed road allowance as envisioned in the former Borough of Etobicoke’s “Windows on the Lake” initiative.
  • We demand the same waterfront feature that the residents of Lake Crescent and Miles Road in Mimico enjoy at their road end “lake windows”.
  • As reflected in the City of Toronto’s “Official Plan”, public visual and physical access to the lake at every opportunity is our “lakeshore” community’s heritage as well as the right of Waterfront Trail users and other City of Toronto residents.

  • 1994 Etobicoke "Windows on the Lake" parkette plan for Fourth Street