flooding and closures have limited access to the Toronto Islands with ferry service resuming and attractions reopening later in the season. Infrastructure work continues tie to a larger waterfront development initiative, including plans for new housing and destination spaces that could influence access and future park facilities. Officials emphasize safety and area-by-area permitting during the restart.
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A historic gathering place, the Don River will be at the heart of a new community home to more than 15,000 people and a a destination for all to visit and explore. In January 2025, all orders of government invested nearly $1 billion to accelerate new housing and waterfront destinations and create ways to move around the inner harbour. What this means for the island: we can start to build infrastructure, new homes and destinations.
www.waterfrontoronto.caToronto Island Park is now open to the public for the first time this summer.
globalnews.caMayor John Tory warned Torontonians Friday that flooding could keep Toronto Island Park off limits to the public until late June.
www.cbc.caToronto Islands videos and latest news articles
globalnews.caSome Toronto Island businesses haven't seen a single customer all summer. As ferry service resumes Monday, they're frantically preparing for a short season, mourning their losses (bye bye, carousel) and trying to recoup some revenue.
www.cbc.caToronto is so starved for housing that towers are being planned on an island that doesn't even exist yet, technically speaking.
dailyhive.comWhile it’s certainly not unusual for a city to get a new restaurant, condo, museum or festival, it’s not every day that you hear about a brand new island–let alone one with a destination park–opening up. In Toronto, however, a new island is indeed in the works, and once it’s complete, it will be home […]
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