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Lakeview, Mississauga

Coordinates: 43°34′03″N 79°34′56″W / 43.56750°N 79.58222°W / 43.56750; -79.58222
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MattCooper5891 (talk | contribs) at 16:15, 21 June 2024 (Added in a blurb about the huge development taking place at the waterfront). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lakeview
Neighbourhood
View from the Waterfront Trail
View from the Waterfront Trail
Lakeview is located in Regional Municipality of Peel
Lakeview
Lakeview
Lakeview is located in Southern Ontario
Lakeview
Lakeview
Coordinates: 43°34′3″N 79°34′56″W / 43.56750°N 79.58222°W / 43.56750; -79.58222
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
Regional municipalityPeel
CityMississauga
Forward sortation area
NTS Map030M12
GNBC CodeFBVYM

Lakeview is a neighbourhood in Mississauga in the Region of Peel, centred on Lakeshore Road in the extreme southeastern corner of the city, along the shore of Lake Ontario, between the larger neighbourhood of Port Credit to the west and the Long Branch neighbourhood of Toronto to the east.

Lakeview was known for the 4 Sisters, the four smokestacks of the former Lakeview Generating Station. They were called the 4 Sisters because the generating plant actually had eight boilers and two boilers were 'sistered' to a common stack. The generating station was demolished in 2007, about a year after the four stacks were demolished, which occurred on the morning of June 12, 2006. At 493 ft each they were easily the tallest structures in the area.

Along the shore of Lake Ontario, Lakeview is the home of the Port Credit Yacht Club, Lakefront Promenade Marina, Arthur P. Kennedy Water Treatment Plant, and G. E. Booth (Lakeview) Wastewater Treatment Plant.

The area is also home to the Lakeview Branch Library, and two high schools: Cawthra Park Secondary School, and St. Paul Secondary School. (A third, Gordon Graydon Memorial Secondary School, closed.) Many parks run along Lake Ontario, including lit baseball diamonds used by many junior leagues.

History

Lakefront Promenade Park
MSSC offices at Enola Avenue in Lakeview

Lakeview is within the Mississauga Purchase of 1806, lands acquired by the Crown from the Mississauga First Nation. Portions of the eastern section of the Lakeview was part of the Colonel Smith Tract, which was added to lands Colonel Samuel Smith had acquired in 1801 in neighbouring Etobicoke. The area later became Toronto Township which was restructured into the Town of Mississauga in 1968.

Lakeview was the site of the Long Branch Armory, which included a rifle range, training facilities and the Long Branch Aerodrome, the first commercial air training airport in Canada. The airport was run by the Curtiss Aviation School, and was located west of the namesake Long Branch neighbourhood in Toronto. The Lakeview location is documented by the presence of Aviation Road running south off Lakeshore Road just west of Cawthra Road. The site is further acknowledged by a historic plaque.[1] The site was home for several arms and munitions manufacturing plants during World War II. One large munitions factory in Lakeview was staffed almost exclusively by women during the war.[2]

Long Branch Aerodrome

The Long Branch Aerodrome was a 100-acre airfield located on Lakeshore Road just west of Dixie Road. The Long Branch Aerodrome has the distinction of being the first Aerodrome in Canada and home to Canada's first aviator training school. It opened on May 20, 1915, by Curtiss Aeroplanes and Motors Company for the Royal Flying Corps. Aircraft such as the Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" soon became a common sight at the airfield, which included three aircraft hangars.

In January 1917, the newly designated Royal Flying Corps, Canada, the forerunner to the Royal Canadian Air Force, opened the RFC Training Centre at Long Branch. The Long Branch training centre also provided instruction on flying boats at nearby Hanlan's Point on the Toronto Islands, the first seaplane base in Canada. By July 1917, the flight school relocated to the Armour Heights Aerodrome. Long Branch became the Cadet Ground Training School for the Royal Flying Corps. Both the school and the aerodrome closed in 1919. During World War II, the former aerodrome served initially as Non-Permanent Active Militia's No 21 Training Centre and then as an army small arms training centre (Long Branch Rifle Ranges). After the war, the Lakeview Armoury was established on the site but was demolished in the 1950s.

Not the slightest trace remains of the airfield today. From 1962 - 2005, the waterfront portion of the property was the location of Ontario Power Generation's Lakeview Generating Station. In September 1969, a plaque was erected at the site to commemorate Canada's first Aerodrome.

Small Arms Limited, Long Branch Arsenal

Adjacent to the west side of Marie Curtis Park (now Marie Curtis Park West or Lakeshore Park) in Lakeview is the former site of the Small Arms Limited Long Branch Arsenal. The Federal Government had owned the lands south of Lake Shore Road, between the Etobicoke River to just west of Cawthra Road, from the late 1800s into the early 20th-Century. The first land purchase was made in 1889 for a rifle range, to replace the one at New Fort York.[3] The military use was expanded for World War I, becoming the summer quarters for several regiments and a staging area for troops to go overseas.[4]

The Ordnance Branch of the Department of National Defence authorized the construction of a factory on the site in 1940. After transfer to the Department of Munitions and Supply, a Crown Corporation, Small Arms Ltd. was formed to operate the facility. By June 1941, the first five rifles had been produced. Huge quantities of British-pattern military small arms were manufactured there during the Second World War, including the No.4 MkI* Lee–Enfield bolt-action rifle, and the Sten submachine gun (or machine-carbine). Small Arms Ltd. ceased operations at the end of December 1945. Beginning January 1, 1946, operations continued as the Small Arms Division, Canadian Arsenals Limited under the Department of Supply and Services. The factory was closed June 30, 1976. The property was later used by Canada Post as a distribution centre.

The factory complex was demolished and the "Arsenal Lands" are now being used for the stockpiling of landfill for use in future aquatic park development. The lands are slated to eventually become part of Lakeshore Park. The buildings of the office complex at the foot of Dixie Road were saved for public use, while only the water tower remains from the factory complex.

Jim Tovey Lakeview Conservation Area

Since 2016, Credit Valley Conservation (CVC), in partnership with the Region of Peel and Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) – and supported by Cities of Mississauga and Toronto – have been working together to transform a degraded section of the Mississauga shoreline into a thriving 26-hectare waterfront conservation area that will connect people and wildlife back to nature.

The new Jim Tovey Lakeview Conservation Area (JTLCA) is becoming a hub for passive waterfront recreation, a hotspot for wildlife migration and a green oasis in the heart of the city.

To date, over 262,000 cubic metres of construction rubble and 1,483,600 cubic metres of excess soil has been reused to build the new landform and enhanced shoreline. CVC's restoration crews have planted over 76,321 wetland plants and 36,260 trees and shrubs by hand to provide food and habitat for wildlife.

The creation of JTLCA is a multi-year process that includes environmental assessment, engineering and design planning, permitting, landform construction, habitat restoration and Indigenous placemaking. The JTLCA will open to the public in 2025.

Lakeview Village

A brand new community is being developed along the waterfront called Lakeview Village.

"The Lakeview Village master plan calls for 1.9 million square feet of office and employment space, 8,000 units of midrise and highrise housing, 200,000 square feet for retail and restaurants, a 20-acre innovation district targeting employment, research and technology developers, and 45 acres of green space."

16,000 to 20,000 residents are expected to live in Lakeview Village.

Lakeview Community Partners includes TACC Construction Limited, Greenpark Group, CCI Development Group, Branthaven and Argo Development Corporation.[5]

Transportation

Lakeview Golf Course

Opened in 1907 and designed by Herbert Strong, the 18-hole city owned course is located just east of the Toronto Golf Club's course and bisected by Apple Creek.[6] The course has hosted the Canadian Open twice in 1923 and 1934.

Notable persons

See also

References

  1. ^ National Historic Plaque #1166
  2. ^ Benzie, Robert (12 March 2010). "Ontario honours women who won the war". The Star.
  3. ^ "Long Branch Rifle Ranges Served as Training Grounds for Canadian Soldiers". etobicokehistorical.com. Etobicoke Historical Society.
  4. ^ "Toronto Will Have Concentration Camp". The Globe and Mail. August 14, 2019. p. 1.
  5. ^ "Mississauga's Lakeview Village reaches milestone". Daily Commercial News. 2022-05-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  6. ^ "Lakeview". 25 September 2020.

Source Material: [1] - Historic Plaques of Peel, information provided by Eric Gibson, The Mississauga Heritage Foundation (2004), the personal recollections of Tim Baetz, resident of Midland area (2004), "History of Canadian Airports" by T. M. McGrath, Ontario Power Generation web site - www.opg.com/ops/lakeviewfinal.pdf & the personal recollections of the author (2004).

43°34′03″N 79°34′56″W / 43.56750°N 79.58222°W / 43.56750; -79.58222