Articles

  • Nov 12, 2024 | broadview.org | Nathan Abraha

    The idealized image of the dinner table — shared laughter among family and friends over a homemade meal — has often been seen as society’s gold standard for gathering. Yet looking back at my own life, cherished nights around the dinner table were few, a reality I share with a growing number of Canadians. According to a 2018 Statistics Canada report, 30 percent of Canadians ate all their meals alone.

  • Oct 15, 2024 | azuremagazine.com | Nathan Abraha

    Madrid’s Iconic Estadio Santiago Bernabéu Enters a New Sporting Era Still home to legendary club Real Madrid, the soccer venue has been artfully refurbished into a mixed-use cultural hub. Posted Oct 15, 2024 SHARE We rely on advertising revenue to support the creative content on our site. Please consider whitelisting our site in your settings, or pausing your adblocker while stopping by.

  • Aug 29, 2024 | spacing.ca | Ian Darragh |Nathan Abraha |John Lorinc

    Every week this summer Francesca Bouaoun has launched her kayak at Ontario Place to check on the trees. They’re a stand of 850 trees planted 54 years ago by landscape architect Michael Hough on the West Island of Ontario Place that has become a mature forest, home to birds, foxes and rabbits, and 12 species endangered or at risk. A birder and supporter of Ontario Place for All, Bouaoun likes to kayak on Lake Ontario in the evening when the water is calm.

  • Jul 25, 2024 | spacing.ca | Trent Weston |Nathan Abraha |John Lorinc

    This isn’t your typical house slated for demolition. The lawn isn’t wildly overgrown, and the structure isn’t dilapidated. Instead, 91 Barton Ave. is bustling with activity, a sense of rebirth fills the air, and with it the promise of creative freedom . It’s not the situation that is typically found when a changing of the guard takes place – when old homes become new ones.

  • Jul 4, 2024 | spacing.ca | John Lorinc |Nathan Abraha |Ian Darragh

    In a city that loves to make, but not execute, plans and then overthink, but not solve, problems, there’s surely no better illustration of this twin-set of frustrating civic habits than the recently released 25-year Toronto Island Master Plan, which has done an absolutely masterful job of missing the proverbial forest for the trees. The two-volume plan took four years to gestate, clocks in at 228 pages and has over 100 recommendations.

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