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Cathedraltown

Cathedraltown

FieldValue
nameCathedraltown
settlement_typeNeighbourhood
image_skylineFile:Cathedraltown Cathedral High Street.jpg
image_captionThe new urbanist Cathedral High Street in Cathedraltown, looking towards the Cathedral of the Transfiguration
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameCanada
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Ontario
subdivision_type2Regional municipality
subdivision_name2York
subdivision_type3City
subdivision_name3Markham
established_titleEstablished
established_date2006
area_footnotestags --
area_magnitude
area_total_km2
coordinates
elevation_footnotestags --
elevation_max_footnotestags --
elevation_min_footnotestags --
population_total3,000
population_as_of2006 est.
population_density_km2
population_demonym
postal_code_type
area_code_type

Cathedraltown is a planned neighbourhood with an estimated population of 3,000 in the City of Markham, just north of Toronto. Cathedraltown was named after the Cathedral of the Transfiguration, around which the neighbourhood was built.

Geography

Cathedraltown is bordered on the south by Major Mackenzie Drive, on the north by Elgin Mills Road, on the west by Highway 404, and on the east by Victoria Square Boulevard.

History

The land occupied by Cathedraltown was originally farmland owned by Romandale Farms, a breeder and exhibitor of Holstein cows. Stephen B. Roman, the late founder of Romandale Farms, built the Cathedral on land he donated. In the early 2000s, his daughter, Helen Roman-Barber, working with Donald Buttress, Surveyor of the Fabric Emeritus of Westminster Abbey, developed the design concept for Cathedraltown, based on European cathedral towns.

The neighbourhood's first residents moved in by 2006 with the completion of homes north of the Cathedral. Since then, single- and multi-family housing and mixed-use condominiums have been built to the west and south of the Cathedral.

Architecture and art

Cathedral of the Transfiguration

Designed under the direction of Donald Buttress, Cathedraltown reflects the Regency and Georgian architecture that was popular in London in the late 18th an early 19th centuries.

In July 2017 a statue of the cow Brookview Tony Charity was erected in Cathedraltown to some controversy. The statue is of a prize-winning cow that was owned jointly by Romandale Farms and Hanover Hill Farms, in the nearby town of Port Perry, where the cow resided. Romandale Farms donated the statue to honour Charity In October 2017, Markham City Council voted to search for a new location for the statue. , the statue has been taken down and placed in storage until a more suitable and accepted home for Charity can be found.

Public transit

The following bus routes serve the neighbourhood:

  • YRT Route #4 – Major MacKenzie
  • YRT Route #24 – Woodbine
  • YRT Route #25 – Major MacKenzie
  • YRT Route #80 – Elgin Mills
  • YRT Route #418 - Pierre Elliott Trudeau School Special
  • YRT Route #452 – Richmond Green School Special

References

References

  1. The population can only be estimated as the census tract is shared with other communities, and communities such as Cachet and Greensborough. Together, this census tract makes up a population of 5,414.
  2. "Cathedraltown...suburbia with a twist".
  3. Wheeler, Scott. (27 July 2017). "Cathedraltown cow just one of family developer's personal design cues". Toronto Star.
  4. "Will controversial cow sculpture be moooved?".
  5. (17 October 2017). "Markham cow statue to stay put, for now". The Toronto Star.
  6. Anderson, Kalli. (Jun 26, 2018). "Was a freak spring windstorm behind Charity the chrome cow's demise?".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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