How to Build a River
Toronto's Port Lands and the Journey to Climate Resiliency
Aevo UTP (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 8. September 2026
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-4875-6293-9 (ISBN)
Description
How to Build a River, through photographs and incisive, contextualizing essays, ventures behind the construction hoardings of the Port Lands Flood Protection project to reveal the transformation of hundreds of acres of polluted brownfields into a new public park, a new river and a site for future housing.
Awarded to photographers Vid Ingelevics and Ryan Walker in 2019, the commission resulted in an illuminating series of photographs that explore key themes and historical contexts of this legacy-building endeavour. Central to this project was the construction of a new wider, naturalized mouth for the Don River as well as a new public park on this former brownfield site. Additionally, the photographs explore the necessary demolition of many existing industrial buildings, the involvement of First Nations, the excavation of the new river valley and the complex bio-engineering techniques involved, archeological discoveries during the excavation, the re-naturalization of the site and, most recently, the opening of a significant section of Biidaasige Park to the public in July 2025.
The photographs and accompanying essays invite readers to look closely at how cities can be reimagined in response to a changing climate. They reveal the social, historical, and environmental stories behind this landmark transformation of Toronto's waterfront and contemplate the importance of documenting publicly funded projects of this scale.
Awarded to photographers Vid Ingelevics and Ryan Walker in 2019, the commission resulted in an illuminating series of photographs that explore key themes and historical contexts of this legacy-building endeavour. Central to this project was the construction of a new wider, naturalized mouth for the Don River as well as a new public park on this former brownfield site. Additionally, the photographs explore the necessary demolition of many existing industrial buildings, the involvement of First Nations, the excavation of the new river valley and the complex bio-engineering techniques involved, archeological discoveries during the excavation, the re-naturalization of the site and, most recently, the opening of a significant section of Biidaasige Park to the public in July 2025.
The photographs and accompanying essays invite readers to look closely at how cities can be reimagined in response to a changing climate. They reveal the social, historical, and environmental stories behind this landmark transformation of Toronto's waterfront and contemplate the importance of documenting publicly funded projects of this scale.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Canada
Publishing group
University of Toronto Press
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
200 colour illustrations, 5 colour maps, 25 colour figures
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
1 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4875-6293-9 (9781487562939)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Vid Ingelevics is a visual artist, independent curator, writer, and professor emeritus at Toronto Metropolitan University in the School of Image Arts.
Ryan Walker is a lens-based artist and educator specializing in documentary storytelling, whose work has been exhibited internationally and has appeared in The Guardian, Bloomberg, The Globe and Mail, and more.
Ryan Walker is a lens-based artist and educator specializing in documentary storytelling, whose work has been exhibited internationally and has appeared in The Guardian, Bloomberg, The Globe and Mail, and more.