The street is packed. It’s a glorious Saturday, and I’m lost in the festival crowd, basking in the sun-drenched splendour of a summer afternoon. The faces and families number in the thousands — the mosaic of races and ethnicities that define a multicultural metropolis. Closed to traffic, the busy thoroughfare is animated by some 130 vendors as aromas of falafel, roasted corn, Hawaiian barbecue, Hakka, gyros and jerk waft sweetly through the air. On either side of the festivities, some of North America’s best restaurants line the street, their outdoor tables melding with the throng. Over 250,000 people gather here over the course of the three-day fair. This is Toronto’s beating heart.
Not everyone would agree. The annual Taste of Lawrence plays out well away from the city’s downtown, in the Wexford Heights neighbourhood within the suburban district of Scarborough. From behind a windshield, the 850-metre stretch that hosts the festival can flash by in a blur of eclectic strip malls lined with restaurants, nail salons and grocery stores, as well as churches and parking lots interspersed with the occasional apartment building. It’s far from the city’s largest galleries and museums, financial towers and upscale fashion boutiques — or a subway station. And the culinary scene is an approachable counterpoint to the high-end downtown destinations recently anointed with the city’s first Michelin stars.

For all that, it’s also a far cry from the white, upper-middle-class enclaves that still shape cultural perceptions of North American suburbs. As Taste of Lawrence demonstrates, the neighbourhood is anything but sterile and boring. “Our festival has always been a point of pride for us, as we showcase and celebrate the diversity of our community,” says Yani Zhao, the festival’s co-chair.
While landscapes of single-family homes and cul-de-sacs do characterize much of Scarborough’s built environment, the community is a vibrant hub of Caribbean, Chinese, African, European and South Asian immigrants, including one of the world’s largest communities of Sri Lankan Tamil expats, and white residents now make up less than 25 per cent of the population. As a child, I attended Czech language classes in a pocket of the district called Masaryktown, which boasts one of the country’s few such enclaves. In a city that aggressively markets itself as the most culturally diverse in the world, suburban communities like Scarborough, often overlooked, epitomize that aspiration.
After the Second World War, the trend of suburbanization remade North American cities. As new highways, shopping malls and subdivisions snaked across the continent — and swaths of inner-city neighbourhoods were razed to make way for them — middle-class white homeowners decamped for new suburban communities, leaving behind low-income, racialized urban cores. But “white flight” ran in more than one direction. An inverse trend accelerated toward the turn of the millennium: Young white residents returned downtown, and they slowly but surely gentrified the vibrant urban communities that contrasted their boring suburban roots.
It’s a deeply oversimplified narrative, but one that’s meaningfully shaped both our communities and our dominant cultural script of the urban–suburban divide: If cities were dangerous, diverse and dense, then postwar suburbs were safe, monocultural and white. It was never that simple. In her
After all, suburbia itself remains “a dizzyingly broad category,” Kolson Hurley writes. “The term refers to semi-rural areas where strip malls nibble at farmland and those where tall towers loom over the city line.” Today, over half of Americans live in such places, and racially diverse communities are now growing faster than predominantly white ones. “My suburban experience includes riding the bus as people chat around me in Spanish and French Creole,” Kolson Hurley notes, reflecting on her life in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, DC. “It’s living in a condo with no yard or garage, and having neighbours who hail from Tibet, Brazil and Kenya as well as Cincinnati.”

In fact, suburbanization is a global trend, and the most rapid development is occurring in the urban margins, according to Toronto-based scholar Roger Keil. “The urban century is really the suburban century,” Keil writes in
And this global phenomenon dates back millennia. Even some 5,000 years ago, notes Kolson Hurley, “the suburbs of Ur stretched miles beyond the city.” In ancient Rome, meanwhile, the peripheries were the site of both country house retreats and heavy, polluting industries like leather tanning and brick-making. Throughout medieval times, long before lawns and interstates, walled cities around the world often expanded by growing beyond their fortifications. Even the most stereotypically “placeless” cul-de-sac of faux historic North American McMansions occupies colonized Indigenous land — and cultural histories that stretch back thousands of years.
But the city proper used to be the first stop and ultimate destination for newcomers. In Manhattan, the
In Toronto, many of the inner-city neighbourhoods and older “streetcar suburbs” that served as immigrant hubs in the 20th century still retain elements of their Polish, Chinese, Italian, Jamaican and Portuguese cultures. But even as construction cranes and soaring condo towers remake an increasingly expensive downtown core, the region’s rapid population growth is especially concentrated in suburban environments; outlying municipalities like Milton, Brampton and Oshawa are now among the fastest-growing places in North America, while Vaughan and Markham — so-called “boomburbs” — are now categorized as cities in their own right. Even mid-century “suburbs” (a word that’s becoming increasingly nebulous) are growing more slowly than these outer counterparts; Scarborough, which has formed part of Toronto’s city proper since a 1998 amalgamation, is a prime example. It’s a pattern established well before the COVID-19 pandemic’s much-touted — though overstated — urban exodus.
And those in positions of power are eyeing further expansion. In November of 2022, Ontario passed Bill 23 (More Homes Built Faster Act), which has opened up

At the same time, however, such stark dichotomies shouldn’t dictate our perceptions of the suburbs that have existed for generations. While we certainly shouldn’t build more single-family sprawl, we must understand and appreciate the complexity and nuance of what’s already there.
Let’s look beyond the stereotypes. Are all suburbs car-centric? Across Toronto, many low-density suburban environments boast
Overall, North American suburban communities are now (relatively) poorer and more diverse than they were in the 20th century; they are no longer defined by patterns of white flight from the city. Here, Toronto’s peripheries offer another lesson. David Hulchanski analyzed the geography of income inequality in his seminal

Our economic systems are reflected in — and reinforced by — geography. In the 21st century, the spatial manifestation of capital shapes cities and suburbs around the world. Banks, financial institutions and billion-dollar companies are selectively clustered in select urban centres — but the peripheries provide the labour force that supports them, from housekeepers and servers to mechanics and cooks. The urban geography of online retail offers a particularly acute manifestation of inequality: High-spending urban consumers are served by a wealth of fulfillment centres and warehouses on the outskirts staffed mostly by low-income pickers, drivers and attendants from marginalized communities. From Chicago to Los Angeles to Calgary,
Linguistically and culturally, the suburbs have historically been defined (mostly by city-championing urbanists) in relation to their urban counterparts, but we’re finally understanding the peripheries on their own terms. A newfound appreciation for the possibilities inherent in suburbia is coming to the fore. Roger Keil is leading an academic reappraisal: As editor of the Global Suburbanisms book series, Keil has helped to introduce a range of perspectives that complicate our understanding of the periphery. But the books are also paired with a more playful, public-facing collection of postcards that translate seemingly “placeless” suburban milieux into iconic moments. “They are generic, but they are also specific,” says Keil. “They mark points in time. The Irish kid on the bike at the outskirts of Dublin after the financial crash, the mansion in Brossard [Quebec] in the rue Leningrad, the obscene graffiti in the outskirts of Belgrade in front of Tito’s suburbia.”
Suburban space is also the focus of the recent “Housing Multitudes” exhibition at the University of Toronto’s Daniels Faculty of Architecture. Co-curators Michael Piper and Richard Sommer eschewed top-down urbanist visions of “rebuilding” or “fixing” Toronto’s suburbs. Instead, their thinking is rooted in an understanding of how local malls and green spaces shape social dynamics. And, to address housing access on a grassroots level, the exhibition explores community-based economies that allow individual landholders to gradually adapt their lots, whether by building garden suites or subdividing a single-family home into multi-generational triplexes, as “citizen-developers.” The ReHousing project, as it’s called, is a collaboration between the University of Toronto, TUF Lab and LGA Architectural Partners.
Informed by landscape architect Fadi Masoud, the exhibition’s analysis of ecology is particularly impressive, drawing attention to suburban lawns and backyards, which are surprisingly diverse — partially thanks to intrepid immigrant gardeners. Envisioning new green-filled passages through existing cul-de-sacs and subdivisions, the sensitive landscape concept calls for a porous network of spaces to knit together pedestrian and plant life in communities that were planned for the car.

Alongside these speculative proposals, the communities themselves have already brought many changes to the street scale. Toronto’s
The public sector is gradually becoming involved in a number of community-led initiatives already underway. A partnership between Access Alliance Multicultural Health and Community Services and the City of Toronto,
From an airplane window, the political economy of capital flows and consumption is inscribed into the landscape. But a top-down view — whether from a plane or a planning department — inevitably misses individual experience. At street level, in homes, restaurants, houses of worship and public spaces, communities are much more than the spatial and socio-economic variables that shape them. To anyone looking to understand a place, urban or peripheral, residents are the real experts. Ultimately, the most meaningful re-evaluations of suburban spaces emerge from those who live there.
A sensitivity to hyperlocal culture defines Esmond Lee’s
Lee’s emphasis on the complexity of social life forms a counterpoint to the prevailing stereotypes. “We can all imagine what urbanism looks like, or what an idealized rural life on a farm looks like, but there aren’t images that produce equally complex spaces on the urban peripheries,” he says. “You look up ‘suburbs’ and you get stock images of cookie-cutter houses — but typology is a really reductive way of looking at communities and people.”
In this regard, the hit 2021 film Scarborough, directed by local auteurs Shasha Nakhai and Rich Williamson, is a tour de force. Based on Catherine Hernandez’s 2017 novel of the same name, the documentary-style coming-of-age story follows a trio of children in the eponymous corner of Toronto — one that seldom sees the big screen. In my favourite scene, we follow Sylvie, a spirited young Indigenous girl, as she walks to the dollar store. On the way, she meets a man painting a mural, a kindly restaurant worker, an unscrupulous but friendly neighbour and, finally, her gentle, avuncular Ojibwa babysitter. All of them greet her by name. It’s a vignette that plays out across the urban fabric, from sidewalks and storefronts to parking lots. But more fundamentally, it plays out among neighbours, friends and acquaintances. In other words, a community — which is something we conjure wherever we are.
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