Yesterday
angel80 asked for some greenery in my photos, and after I left class this afternoon I realized tht there was plenty of greenery: flowers, not only daffodils, in bloom, with small light-green leaves emerging from innumerable tree buds into soft blue brightness. The campus of the Victoria University in the University of Toronto, one of several schools constituting semi-autonomous organizations within the wider University of Toronto, was especially photogenic with its abundant greenery and (mostly) old stone buildings.
Annesley Hall, an all-female residence of the University of Toronto and a National Heritage Site, is located just to the south of the Gardiner Museum, dedicated to ceramics.
The recently restored Birge-Carnegie Library, located at the intersection of Queen's Park and Charles Street West, began its life as Victoria University's library, briefly housed the archives of the United Church of Canada and Victoria University, and is now facing an uncertain future as to what role it will play next.
Victoria University's Old Vic building (in brown stone with spires) is framed beautifully alongside handsome churches and condos and greenery and university buildings with black patina, with Northrop Frye Hall (Victoria University's main administrative centre) to the right, Emmanuel Hall (a United Church of Canada theological college) to the left,
The back of the Birge-Carnegie Library and the Isabel Bader Theatre are strangely pastoral.
Annesley Hall, an all-female residence of the University of Toronto and a National Heritage Site, is located just to the south of the Gardiner Museum, dedicated to ceramics.
The recently restored Birge-Carnegie Library, located at the intersection of Queen's Park and Charles Street West, began its life as Victoria University's library, briefly housed the archives of the United Church of Canada and Victoria University, and is now facing an uncertain future as to what role it will play next.
Victoria University's Old Vic building (in brown stone with spires) is framed beautifully alongside handsome churches and condos and greenery and university buildings with black patina, with Northrop Frye Hall (Victoria University's main administrative centre) to the right, Emmanuel Hall (a United Church of Canada theological college) to the left,
The back of the Birge-Carnegie Library and the Isabel Bader Theatre are strangely pastoral.



