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Stackt Market Gives Shipping Containers a New Lease on Life

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It’s a hard knock life for shipping containers on the high seas or riding the rails, but many of them can look forward to sunny retirements as custom dwellings, pop-up cafes and later this year, a mixed-use, all-season public market at Bathurst and Front streets.

Toronto Stackt market

Designed by LGA Architectural Partners’ Janna Levitt and Danny Bartman with Stackt founder Matt Rubinoff, the bustling Stackt Shipping Container Market will temporarily inhabit the site of a former smelting plant. After a two-year lease runs its course, the city-owned property will likely be converted into a public park. Until then, a total of 130 containers will welcome retail, restaurants and the odd artist’s space.

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The Bentway’s playful installation of 50 trees in shopping carts shines a light on climate resilience and green equity

In a city grappling with rising temperatures, accelerated development and increasing inequity in green space accessibility, Moving Forest arrives not as a solution, but as an invitation to rethink our relationship with nature. Designed by NL Architects as a part of The Bentway’s Sun/Shade exhibition, this outlandish yet purposeful installation transforms a fleet of 50 shopping carts into mobile vessels for native trees—red maples, silver maples, sugar maples and autumn blaze—that roll through some of Toronto’s most sun-scorched plazas, creating impromptu oases of shade and community.

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