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Covering several city blocks right in the heart of downtown Toronto, the Eaton Centre is one of Toronto’s busiest tourist attractions. It is the second biggest mall in Canada (after the West Edmonton Mall) and gets more annual visitors than the Las Vegas Strip. Built in 1977, the Toronto Eaton Centre is a remnant of the Canadian department store chain Eaton’s. At one time, Eaton’s was the largest department store retailer in Canada, but it went bankrupt in the 90s. Today, there are only two malls with the Eaton name still in Canada, one in Toronto and one in Montreal, with the Toronto Eaton Centre being the larger of the two.  
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[[Datei:Kanada_Toronto_Kanada_Toronto_Berczy Park_3.jpg|750px|thumb|left|A fountain in Berczy Park © Goethe-Institut Montreal]]
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Wedged between two converging streets and tucked away behind the Gooderham Building, Toronto’s famous flatiron building, is the small, almost triangular Berczy Park. This little neighbourhood green space is named after William Berczy, one of the founders of Toronto.
  
In the 1960s, Eaton’s owned the land where the Eaton Centre is currently located, but it was mostly used for warehouses and mail order buildings. Wanting to make better use of the location, Eaton’s decided to build a shopping complex there instead. The project was approved in 1972, and Eaton’s hired the German-Canadian architect Eberhard Zeidler to design the mall.
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Berczy was born Johann Albrecht Ulrich Moll in Bavaria, located in current-day southern Germany, in 1744. He grew up in Vienna and spent time in Italy and England, where he worked as a painter. While in England, he heard about the opportunity to settle and develop land in America. After recruiting peasants from northern Germany to assist in colonisation, Berczy moved with his colonists to Pennsylvania in 1792. Unfortunately, upon arrival, the land owners refused to provide Berczy and his settlers with the land and supplies they were promised, so they decided to try again in Upper Canada. John Graves Simcoe, often credited as the founder of Toronto, was Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada at the time. He felt the then-capital of Upper Canada, Niagara-on-the-Lake, was too close to the US-Canadian border considering possible hostility between the United States and Britain. Simcoe temporarily moved the capital to the north shore of Lake Ontario to a site he named ‘York’. This would eventually become Toronto, but was undeveloped wilderness when selected for its strategic location.
  
Zeidler was born in Germany near the current Czech border in 1926. After the Second World War, he trained in the Bauhaus school of architecture in the German Democratic Republic before escaping to West Germany. There he designed factories and medical buildings until he immigrated to Canada in 1951. He joined the architecture firm Blackwell and Craig in Peterborough, Ontario, which was renamed Craig, Zeidler and Strong in 1963 when it moved to Toronto. The firm still exists and is now called Zeidler Partnership Architects.
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In 1794, Simcoe offered Berczy and his colonists a large land grant north of Toronto in what is now Markham. In exchange, they would do the work to establish the new town of York. As part of their agreement, Berczy and his group were given a year to build Yonge Street from the York area north to Lake Simcoe. In addition to clearing a large stretch of Yonge, the settlers built several of Toronto’s earliest houses, mills, and stores, as well as a bridge across the Don River. However, because of the number of projects and a shortage of supplies, they were unable to complete the agreed length of Yonge Street within the year. Simcoe demanded that the land in Markham be returned to the government because of their failure to finish the job on time.  
  
Zeidler’s training in the Bauhaus style made him aware of building technology, and his work is known for using technology as a central theme, such as in the McMaster University Health Sciences Centre, where steel trusses and ducts are exposed. Another major element of his work is the use of generous atriums. This can be seen in the interior of the Toronto Eaton Centre, which was designed as a multi-story galleria. When the Eaton Centre opened, it was considered revolutionary in shopping centre architecture, influencing many other malls built at the time throughout North America.  
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After arguing his case to no avail, Berczy ended up moving to Montreal, where he restarted his painting career. He lost a lot of money in his colonisation efforts, so the last years of his life were difficult, but artistically he flourished. His portrait of the Mohawk leader Joseph Brant (c. 1807) hangs today in the National Gallery of Canada. In fact, he is often remembered more for his work in the arts than for his role in Toronto’s settlement. Berczy Park ensures his contributions to early Toronto are not forgotten.
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[[Datei:Kanada_Toronto_Kanada_Toronto_Berczy Park_2.jpg|750px|thumb|left|Berczy Park in Toronto © Goethe-Institut Montreal]]
  
The Eaton Centre remains perhaps one of Zeidler’s most visited buildings, but his resume includes: Ontario Place, the Queen’s Quay Terminal, Princess Margaret Hospital, and the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto; Canada Place for Expo 86 in Vancouver; and the MediaPark in Cologne, Germany. Zeidler is one of Canada’s most successful architects, having won three Governor General’s Medals for Architecture, the Gold Medal of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada, and having been made an officer of the Order of Canada.{{#newBox:listbox}}
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== Address ==
 
== Address ==
'''Toronto Eaton Centre'''<br>
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''' Berczy Park<br>
220 Yonge St<br>
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35 Wellington St E <br>
Toronto, ON M5B 2H1<br>
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Toronto, ON M5E 1C6
== further information ==
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{{#newBox:listbox}}
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35VuvPvyxW0 Painting of the Berczy family]<br>
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== Further information ==
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35VuvPvyxW0 To the portrait of the Berczy family]<br>

Aktuelle Version vom 12. Oktober 2020, 15:47 Uhr

A fountain in Berczy Park © Goethe-Institut Montreal

Wedged between two converging streets and tucked away behind the Gooderham Building, Toronto’s famous flatiron building, is the small, almost triangular Berczy Park. This little neighbourhood green space is named after William Berczy, one of the founders of Toronto.

Berczy was born Johann Albrecht Ulrich Moll in Bavaria, located in current-day southern Germany, in 1744. He grew up in Vienna and spent time in Italy and England, where he worked as a painter. While in England, he heard about the opportunity to settle and develop land in America. After recruiting peasants from northern Germany to assist in colonisation, Berczy moved with his colonists to Pennsylvania in 1792. Unfortunately, upon arrival, the land owners refused to provide Berczy and his settlers with the land and supplies they were promised, so they decided to try again in Upper Canada. John Graves Simcoe, often credited as the founder of Toronto, was Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada at the time. He felt the then-capital of Upper Canada, Niagara-on-the-Lake, was too close to the US-Canadian border considering possible hostility between the United States and Britain. Simcoe temporarily moved the capital to the north shore of Lake Ontario to a site he named ‘York’. This would eventually become Toronto, but was undeveloped wilderness when selected for its strategic location.

In 1794, Simcoe offered Berczy and his colonists a large land grant north of Toronto in what is now Markham. In exchange, they would do the work to establish the new town of York. As part of their agreement, Berczy and his group were given a year to build Yonge Street from the York area north to Lake Simcoe. In addition to clearing a large stretch of Yonge, the settlers built several of Toronto’s earliest houses, mills, and stores, as well as a bridge across the Don River. However, because of the number of projects and a shortage of supplies, they were unable to complete the agreed length of Yonge Street within the year. Simcoe demanded that the land in Markham be returned to the government because of their failure to finish the job on time.

After arguing his case to no avail, Berczy ended up moving to Montreal, where he restarted his painting career. He lost a lot of money in his colonisation efforts, so the last years of his life were difficult, but artistically he flourished. His portrait of the Mohawk leader Joseph Brant (c. 1807) hangs today in the National Gallery of Canada. In fact, he is often remembered more for his work in the arts than for his role in Toronto’s settlement. Berczy Park ensures his contributions to early Toronto are not forgotten.

Berczy Park in Toronto © Goethe-Institut Montreal

Address

Berczy Park
35 Wellington St E
Toronto, ON M5E 1C6