Toronto’s entertainment district isn’t the Entertainment District

The problem with giving a neighbourhood a name like the Entertainment District is that, with the name comes the assumption that the neighbourhood will always represent its moniker. But in Toronto, the Entertainment District is changing, and the entertainment venues are moving outside the neighbourhood’s borders. Will the Entertainment District have to change its name?

Little disclaimer first: The Entertainment District is still FULL of entertainment. It’s home to the TIFF Lightbox, the CN Tower, Rogers Centre and Air Canada Centre, Ripley’s Aquarium and a ton of theatres. But the Entertainment District was, once, the go-to spot for Toronto’s best high-class nightlife.

Back in the mid-2000s, the Entertainment District was in its prime, with something like 90 bars and nightclubs within its borders. At the time, the area was rowdy to say the least, and with so many clubs packed together like too many testosterone-jacked meatheads in a Beetle on a nine-hour road trip, things got out of hand. The bars would all close at about the same time, spilling their drunk hooligans onto the streets into a swirl of hormones, clouded judgment and, often, rage.

It brought complaints, arrests, injuries and, yes, even deaths.

In 2006, city councillor Adam Vaughan was elected, in part, on a platform to improve the situation in the Entertainment District. Four years later, in 2010, regulations were put into place on bars and nightclubs in the area, and several cleared out the liquor chests, boarded up the doors and left the strip.

Back in 2011, the National Post wrote that the face of the Entertainment District would soon be changing, and the Star echoed the sentiment.

http://news.nationalpost.com/posted-toronto/the-party-winds-down-for-the-entertainment-district

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2011/05/30/death_of_clubland.html

Big names in nightlife like Fez Batik, Money and Inside are now gone and have been converted for more wholesome purposes. Recent estimates indicate about one-third are left, while the entertainment options in the Fashion District next door have exploded.

Nowadays, some of the bigger nightclub destinations in downtown Toronto are Bier Markt, Tattoo, Nocturne and Toika – all located in the Fashion District.

The “entertainment” portion of the Entertainment District is by no means dead, but it isn’t what it once was. What do you think, should the neighbourhood’s name be changed?

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Born on the Prairies, Erin Cardone grew up knowing there was more to life than canola fields and AAA Alberta Angus. So she escaped, living in Europe and Australia, white-knuckling it through plates of calf brains and raw horse meat, and learning languages she can't remember anymore. After a stint as a jaded, skeptical journalist, she changed tack and began writing rather awesome blogs and showing businesses that advertising is dead, so long live social media, with her businesses Legendary Social Media. She now splits her time between various Canadian cities, Costa Rica and wherever else the wind blows.

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