While the CNE only lasts for a few weeks at the end of the summer, many major permanent buildings and other structures have been built over the years. Most are used for other purposes throughout the year. , a military installation that predates Exhibition Place. The west end of the grounds is the original site of exhibitions and the oldest buildings are located here. There are five purpose-built fair buildings designed by architect G. W. Gouinlock: the Horticulture Building, built in 1907; the Government Building, built in 1912; the Music Building, built in 1907; the Administration Building, built in 1905; and the Fire Hall/Police Station, built in 1912. Just south of Dufferin Gate is Centennial Square, a green space with a bandstand. The Ontario Government Building was added later in 1926. The Bandshell, modeled after the famed Art Deco Hollywood Bowl was built in 1936, replacing a 1906 bandstand. North of the Bandshell is Bandshell Park, a large open green space for gatherings. Near the Bandshell is the 1790s
Scadding Cabin, the only building dating to the 1879 inaugural exhibition. There are two large fountains; the
Princess Margaret Fountain and the Shrine Monument Fountain south of the Bandshell. To the west of Bandshell park, the former International Building site is now a parking lot, and there is a parking lot in the north-west corner of the site. The central block contains more recent 1950-1960s buildings, which are all replacements for earlier buildings, and are larger than the buildings to the west: the Better Living Centre (exhibition space), the Queen Elizabeth Building complex (theatre, exhibition and administration sections) and the Food Building. The BMO Field soccer stadium, built in 2007, is situated on the site of the 1947 Grandstand and the 1961 Halls of Fame building. South of BMO Field is a large open parking lot and midway area. The CNE plans to make the area a public square, and move the parking underground. South of the central section are two pedestrian bridges over Lake Shore Boulevard to the Ontario Place complex. The east block was the most active area of military usage and retains the only military building left on the site, the Stanley Barracks Officers' Quarters, dating to the 1840s. The area is a mix of buildings, including the older Coliseum, Horse Palace and newer buildings. The section is dominated by the exhibition complex of the Enercare Centre, Coliseum and the Industry Building. The Horse Palace (which adjoins the Coliseum and is used for equine shows and quartering), the Automotive Building (which was once used for car shows and is now a conference centre) and the General Services Building are all older exhibition buildings dating from the 1920s. The new "Hotel X" project includes a display of foundations of New Fort York which once occupied part of the site.
Sports venues Exhibition Place was also home to Exhibition Stadium, which was built out of the fourth Grandstand by adding two extra wings of seats. The original grandstand had been constructed in the late 1800s and was re-modelled, replaced, or destroyed over the years. It served as home to the CFL's Toronto Argonauts between 1958 and 1988 and the
Toronto Blue Jays (AL) between 1977 and 1989. The two teams left for SkyDome (now Rogers Centre) in 1989. After it lost many stadium concert tours to Rogers Centre, and many other outdoor concerts to the nearby
Budweiser Stage (then known as Molson Amphitheatre) at Ontario Place, its usefulness was at an end. The stadium was demolished in 1999 to serve as parking and allow a more sprawling midway. However, on October 26, 2005, the City of Toronto approved the construction of a 20,000 seat soccer stadium (BMO Field) on Exhibition Place land.
Exhibition Stadium (former stadium) The CNE has been host to four grandstands since its inception. The third grandstand, designed by G. W. Gouinlock, was built in 1907 and had a capacity of 16,000. It burned down in 1946, subsequently leading to the construction of the fourth (known as
CNE Grandstand), built in 1948. Designed by
architects Marani and Morris, this building was the first of what would prove to be several
Modernist buildings built on the CNE grounds, its distinctive and bold cantilevered truss roof dominating the grounds for over 50 years. It initially housed 22,000 people, but was expanded over the years to a maximum of 54,000 in order to accommodate the additional seating required for major professional sports teams who made CNE Grandstand their home. It became the home base for the Toronto Argonauts football team, and later, to the Toronto Blue Jays baseball team. Architect Bill Sanford designed the alterations for baseball in 1976. A stock car race held on the grounds marked a historical race; on July 18, 1958,
Richard Petty made his
NASCAR Grand National Series debut at Exhibition Stadium. In addition to sports, CNE Grandstand was the stage for many entertainers over the years. Famous comedians who were featured there included
Bob Hope,
Victor Borge, and
Bill Cosby. Similarly, many well-known musical acts made an appearance at the venue, ranging from
Duke Ellington,
Guy Lombardo,
Benny Goodman,
The Beach Boys (appearing there 11 times between 1974 and 1990),
The Monkees,
Sonny & Cher, to
Melissa Etheridge,
The Who,
Simon & Garfunkel,
Sinéad O'Connor,
Billy Idol,
Nine Inch Nails and
Tina Turner. After the grandstand was demolished, open-air concerts during the CNE have been held at the Bandshell. The Blue Jays and Argos left the open-air Exhibition Stadium for the retractable roofed Skydome (now, the Rogers Centre) in 1989. By that time it was recognized that the building was beginning to visibly decay, and was little used in its final decade of existence. Though it was the earliest of the modernist-style buildings on the grounds, it was the only one not to become a historically listed building. It was finally demolished in 1999.
BMO Field (current stadium) is an outdoor field located at Exhibition Place. In 2007, the open-air BMO Field
soccer-specific stadium was constructed on the site of the former Exhibition Stadium and the Canada Sports Hall of Fame buildings. The Hall of Fame building had been vacated by the Hockey Hall of Fame and was demolished to make way for the stadium. The stadium was built to host
Toronto FC, the Major League Soccer (MLS) team as well as the
Canadian national soccer team. Capacity is approximately 31,000 people. It opened on April 28, 2007, the start of the 2007 MLS season. Under the FIFA-sanctioned name "National Soccer Stadium", it was the center-piece venue for the 2007
FIFA U-20 World Cup. It was expanded for the 2015 season and had a new roof installed for the 2016 season. In conjunction with the stadium construction, Princes' Boulevard was re-routed to the south of the stadium.
Coliseum The Coliseum (1922, now part of the Enercare Centre complex) is an indoor arena. It is an example of Beaux-Arts design by City architect George F. W. Price and renovated by Brisbin Brook Beynon, Architects. Its main entrance was originally to the north, and the building was remodelled with a Modernist façade main entrance to the south in 1963. The original façade was restored when the Enercare Centre was built. It is home to the
minor league Toronto Marlies professional ice hockey team during the winter months. Every November, it is used for the "Royal Horse Show" component of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair annually in November.
OVO Athletic Centre was completed in 2016. In another partnership with Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, the new OVO Athletic Centre (originally known as the Biosteel Centre) was completed in 2016 at the west end of Exhibition Place on parking lot lands. The facility is a practice facility for the Toronto Raptors
National Basketball Association team. It has two basketball courts. The facility displaced some parkland, including a
baseball diamond on the site used for a CNE tournament.
Exhibit buildings Better Living Centre building opened in 1962. One of the Modernist buildings on the site, the original purpose of the Better Living Centre was to introduce new ranges of consumer goods to the baby boomer generation, making it a "space of encounter between consumer and product". For many people attending the CNE, the building hosted their first encounters with such technologies as
colour television,
transistor radios or
home computers. It also became the place where people would expect to see the latest models of various consumer goods, ranging from
vacuum cleaners to kitchen appliances. The building's stark modernist architecture, made up of large white forms, a vast flat roof and harsh angles, suited its futurist themes. The building was designed by architects Marani, Morris and Allan and was opened by Toronto mayor
Nathan Phillips on August 17, 1962. It was built on the former site of the Manufacturers' building, which burned down in 1961. The new building replaced the exhibit space of the Manufacturers' Building and the General Exhibit Building. The CNE no longer uses the Better Living Centre for its original purpose of introducing consumers to the latest and greatest products during the CNE. Instead, it has been divided in two. One-half hosts the CNE Casino for the month of August, while the other half is the "Farm, Food and Fun" pavilion during the CNE. The building is used at other times of the year for special events. It hosts an indoor amusement park during March Break and a Hallowe'en exhibit "Screamers" during the month of October.
Enercare Centre The Enercare Centre (1997), along Princes' Boulevard, has seven exhibit halls with of space. The new building, first known as the National Trade Centre, took over the location of the old TTC streetcar loop and CNE entrance and the open space vacant since the Electrical and Engineering Building was demolished. It is interconnected with the Coliseum and the Industry Building to the north to provide one large, configurable exhibition space. Home to the
Toronto International Boat Show, the National Home Show, the One of A Kind Show, and the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. Designed by architectural teams
Zeidler Partnership Architects and Dunlop-Farrow Architects. During the exhibition, the building houses international product displays and animal shows.
Food Building The CNE Food Building (1954) was built to replace the original
Pure Food Building (c. 1922 and demolished 1953). It was designed by Richard A. Fisher. Water cascades down the windows of the east and west entrances to the building. At the main entrance and west entrance, bronze fish sculptures were created by Toronto artist Jean Horne in the reflecting pool. The building is used during the CNE for booths run by various restaurants and food companies. The Food Building is used for storage during the rest of the year. The Modernist building was the first embodiment of this architectural movement on the CNE grounds. Compared to the Pure Food Building, the contemporary building featured higher ceilings and wider aisles, to enable better circulation and comfort for CNE guests. The Food Building's Modernist features include its windowless walls, white pre-cast panels with a broomed finish on the face, and troweled borders. The Food Building was designed to showcase the products of Canada's food industry, from Laura Secord chocolates to Maple Leaf meats, and Red Rose tea, all of whom had permanent booths in the building. When the Food Building opened, an stainless-steel pylon graced the south entrance of the building. The inspiration for the pylon came from Trylon, a signature structure at the 1939 World's Fair in New York City. The needle was an integral part of the new Food Building's design. However, over time, rust and decay eroded the tall pylon and it was dismantled in 1975.
Queen Elizabeth Building , who became the
Queen of Canada in the same year. The Queen Elizabeth Building complex (1956) was originally named the Women's Building but was rededicated to the new Queen of Canada. The building is composed of three sections: the two-storey administration building, the
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, and a one-storey exhibition hall. The structure is clad in brick and the roof is of a unique folded-plate cast-concrete design. It was designed by architect
Peter Dickinson and architectural firm Page + Steele Inc. It was renamed in honour of a royal visit. The offices were once occupied by the CNE Association and Board. The theatre, which has 1300 seats, has been used for radio, variety, and fashion shows and hosts stage productions and concerts. The exhibition hall, which is a large uninterrupted exhibit space is used year-round and is home to arts, crafts, and hobby vendor displays during the CNE.
The Scadding Cabin This one-room cabin is located adjacent to the Fort Rouillé Monument and the CNE Bandshell. It is not only the oldest building on the grounds, but the
oldest building in Toronto. It was built by the
Queen's York Rangers in 1794 on behalf of
John Scadding, who served as clerk (essentially, an executive assistant) to the first
lieutenant governor of Upper Canada,
John Graves Simcoe. The original cabin was disassembled from its original site and rebuilt by the York Pioneers, along with an adjacent cabin made out of new logs, on the current site, just in time for the original Toronto Industrial Exhibition in 1879. is Toronto's oldest standing structure. Erected in 1794, it was moved to its present site in 1879. Scadding was given a plot of land from what is now just north of Gerrard Street East, south to the waterfront. The cabin was built close to the Don River's east side, on what is now part of the
Don Valley Parkway, just south of
Queen Street East. Scadding sold the property in 1818 to William Smith. In 1879, his son William Smith offered the cabin to the
York Pioneers, a local historical society. Around this time, someone mistook the information concerning the original owner for the cabin, leading to it being erroneously called "The Governor Simcoe cabin". John Scadding's youngest son,
Henry Scadding wrote an early history of York/Toronto and set the record straight on who the original owner of the cabin was. When he died in 1901, the York Pioneers renamed it "The Scadding Cabin", in honour of this son of the original owner, who had also been a past president of their society. It is a squat, two-storey
log cabin with low ceilings, designed to retain the heat from the fire in winter close to its occupants. It is said that John Graves Simcoe, who was over tall, had to stoop in order to enter the building. The building as it now stands is little changed from its original construction. Apparently an additional extension that would have appeared to the south of the building was not moved. The second cabin constructed next to it by the York Pioneers was built using wood that was too green, and it was demolished a few years after construction. Over the years some of the timbers have been replaced, and the cabin was remounted on a stone foundation in the late part of the 20th century. Inside the cabin are furnishings appropriate to a house in
Upper Canada in the 1830s, and some known to have belonged to Simcoe.
Music and entertainment venues Bandshell with a modern canopy extension in 2007. The
Art Deco shell was erected in 1936. Inspired by the
Hollywood Bowl, the Art Deco-styled
Bandshell on the CNE grounds was built in 1936 according to designs prepared by the Toronto architectural firm of Craig and Madill. It is situated on the west side of the grounds, and over the years has been host to many famous acts, including Guy Lombardo,
Louis Armstrong,
The Guess Who, and
Joni Mitchell. More recently the likes of
Susan Aglukark,
Moxy Früvous, and
Bob Newhart have played the open air venue. The adjacent park is known as Bandshell Park. In the north-east corner is the
Exhibition Place Carillon. To the south-east of the bandshell is the "
Garden of the Greek Gods" collection of sculptures.
Queen Elizabeth Theatre The Queen Elizabeth Theatre, opened in 1956, is a 1,250-seat auditorium, and is a part of the Queen Elizabeth building complex. It is leased to the operator of the
Mod Club in Toronto and it is used for concerts and shows throughout the year.
Gates and monuments Dufferin Gates The Dufferin Gates is the westernmost ceremonial entranceway to the CNE grounds. Named after
Lord Dufferin, the original set of gates to the CNE grounds was named in his honour, situated at the bottom of
Dufferin Street, also named after the same person. The original gateway was erected in 1895 and was superseded by a more permanent, ornate Beaux-Arts style triumphal arch built in 1910, and officially re-opened by Lord Dufferin in 1914. With the construction of Toronto's
Gardiner Expressway in 1956, the 1910 gates were demolished in order to make way for the roadway. In their place, a modernist-style
parabolic arch was erected south of the previous gates in 1956, designed by architect Philip R. Brook. The current arch is built around a steel frame and concrete, with brick at the base. It is high and spans in width. It is similar in design to the much larger
Gateway Arch in
St. Louis,
Missouri, but predates it. The star decoration that hangs from the top of the arch was added during Canada's centennial celebrations in 1967. The Gate is a listed heritage structure. A plaque from the
Ontario Heritage Foundation commemorating the history of the CNE can be found just inside the gate.
Princes' Gates serves as Exhibition Place's eastern ceremonial entrance. The monumental Princes' Gates were officially opened by Princes Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII), and Prince George (later the Duke of Kent), on August 31, 1927, during that year's CNE. The gates were built in the Beaux-Arts style to celebrate the 60th anniversary of
Canadian Confederation and were originally to be called
The Diamond Jubilee of Confederation Gates. The name was changed when it was found that the princes were touring Canada the year of its dedication. The first to pass through the gate was a parade of 15,000 veterans in the annual Warriors' Day Parade.
Fort Rouillé Monument A large
obelisk, built in 1887, marks the spot where the original French-built Fort Rouillé was erected in 1750 and 1751. Its construction was ordered by the Marquis de la Jonquière, then governor of
New France, in order to further establish a French presence in the area, and to intercept the trade of Indians travelling towards an English fur-trading post in present-day
Oswego. It was a small palisaded fort with a bastion at each of its four corners, and containing five main buildings: a corps de garde, storeroom, barracks, blacksmithy, and a building for the officers. A drawing purported to date from 1749 shows the fort adjacent to Lake Ontario, whereas today it is situated on top of a small hill a hundred metres or so from the lake's current shoreline. The fort was abandoned and burned by the French garrison in July 1759, who were retreating from invading English forces. Vestiges of the fort remained for many years afterwards, and it was the site of a firefight in the War of 1812. The site was graded over and sodded in preparation for the establishment of the Toronto Industrial Exhibition in 1879. The grounds were excavated in 1979 and 1980 by the
Toronto Historical Board, and again in 1982 by the Youth Committee of the Toronto
Sesquicentennial Board. The outline of the original fort has been marked out in concrete around the obelisk. Two commemorative plaques — one in English, and one in French — are attached to the base of the obelisk, placed there by the Ontario Heritage Foundation. To the north, a third plaque commemorates the excavation done on the site, and to the west, a fourth plaque commemorates a visit to the site by
Bertrand Delanoë, mayor of
Paris, on September 6, 2003.
Shrine Peace Memorial was erected in 1930 by the
Shriners. This monument, depicting a winged angel holding aloft a crown of olive branches and standing upon a globe held aloft by female
sphinxes, was presented to the people of Canada on June 12, 1930, by the Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (better known as the
Shriners) as a symbol of peace and friendship between the United States and Canada. It is also meant as "an ongoing reminder that
Freemasonry actively promotes the ideals peace, harmony, and prosperity for all humankind". It is situated immediately south of the Bandshell, and is the focal point of the surrounding rose garden.
Other buildings and structures • The
Automotive Building (1929), was designed by local architect
Douglas Kertland in the Art Deco style. It is a two-storey building, in size. The internal plan is a large open space with a mezzanine on the second floor surrounding the main floor. It was originally constructed for the display of automobiles during the CNE. Management of the building was turned over to private management in 2009 and renovated to house the Allstream, now the Beanfield Centre meetings facility. The open floor was converted to a ballroom, claimed to be largest in Toronto, which can be sub-divided in two. The original glass roof over the open floor was replaced with a new ceiling. The second floor mezzanine saw the addition of 20 meeting rooms. • The
Fire Hall & Police Station (1912) is a
Tudor Revival building, designed by G. W. Gouinlock. It is used by
Toronto Police Service, Toronto Fire Services and Toronto EMS during the CNE. • The
CNE General Services Building was built in 1901 as the Strachan Avenue Power Station and turned over to
Ontario Hydro in 1910. It has been enlarged several times. Since 1959 it is a CNE Building and is now used to house the CNE Archives and various trades as well as a power substation. was built in 1911 and has housed a
Medieval Times dinner theatre since 1993. • The
Government Building was also known as the Arts, Crafts and Hobbies Building. It is a
Beaux-Arts structure that was built in 1911. Designed by G. W. Gouinlock, it is similar in style to the Horticulture Building. Since 1993, the building has been used by
Medieval Times as the Toronto location of its chain of
dinner theatres. • The
Horse Palace (1931) was built to provide stables for the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. The
Art Deco building, designed by City architect James John Woolnough, was considered the best equestrian facility in
Canada when it was built. Its façade has been described as one of the finest Art Deco buildings in the City of Toronto and possibly in the province and/or nation. The Art Deco elements of the Horse Palace include a hard-edged angular composition, cubist forms and strong horizontal and vertical planes. The low-relief sculptured friezes of horses located on the exterior of the building are also indicative of the Art Deco style of design. It is also the permanent home of the Toronto Police Service Mounted Unit, a branch of City of Toronto Animal Services and a riding academy. • The
Horticulture Building, designed by G. W. Gouinlock, was built in 1907 to replace the Crystal Palace. It is similar in style (
Beaux-Arts) to the Government Building, but without the towers at the sides. The building was used as a temporary morgue the day after a fire destroyed the
SS Noronic in 1949. It houses the Toronto Event Centre. • The
Music Building (1907) was constructed as the
Railways Building, designed for the
Grand Trunk and
Canadian Pacific Railways by CNE architect G. W. Gouinlock. In 1968, the building was used for music competitions and soon became known as the Music Building. It was nearly destroyed by a fire in 1987 however the exterior was restored to its original condition. It is built in a
Beaux-Arts style. It houses the Toronto Fashion Incubator. was built in 1926 and is used as a banquet hall and event space. • The
Ontario Government Building (1926) houses the Liberty Grand banquet hall and events building. The
Beaux-Art structure was designed by
Chapman and Oxley. It formerly housed exhibits about Ontario. • The
Press Building, originally named the Administrative Building at its inception in 1905, until 1957 it was home to the CNE Association. In 1957 it was renamed the Press Building and it became the headquarters for the various media that would attend and report upon the annual fair. Additional telephone and press wire equipment was installed to handle the demand placed on it by the media. More recently the building has returned to its original function as home to the administrators of the CNE. This building was designed in the
Beaux-Arts style by architect G.W. Gouinlock, who went on to design several buildings on the grounds. A plaque dedicated to his work stands in front of the Press Building. It was once part of a formal plaza that originally boasted the Gooderham Fountain, also designed by Gouinlock, since replaced by the Princess Margaret Fountain in 1958. The Press Building, along with the nearby Fire Hall, Police Station, Railways (Music) Building, Horticulture, and Government buildings, are collectively designated Early Exhibition Buildings National Historic Site. Tours of the building are available. • The '''Officers' Quarters''' was a part of New Fort York and is the only remaining military building on the site. It is located along Lake Shore Boulevard to the west of the Automotive Building. Closed, it is planned to reopen with a pub and beer garden. It housed the Marine Museum from 1957 until 1998. under construction in 2017. •
Hotel X Toronto is a thirty-story hotel, located along Lake Shore Boulevard just west of the Automotive Building. The area was used as a parking lot for use during the CNE. It is divided into two buildings: the main hotel tower and a sports club building. Hotel X Toronto is a Silver "Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design" (LEED) certified project. •
Sky Ride, a cable car ride introduced at the 2012 CNE in the spirit of the
Alpine Way. •
ExPlace Wind Turbine, a 91-metre windmill belonging to WindShare co-operative, erected on December 18, 2002, is the first
wind turbine installed in a major North American urban city centre. The turbine production capacity helps displace up to 380 tonnes of carbon dioxide annually, which is the equivalent of taking 1,300 cars off the road or planting 30,000 trees each year.
Demolished buildings and attractions . •
Business Equipment Building, built in 1900. •
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame, built 1961 as the joint home of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame and the
Hockey Hall of Fame. The latter moved in 1993, and the Sports Hall was partially demolished in 2006, with remaining sections to be incorporated into BMO Field, a new soccer stadium. The building was designed by the architectural firm of Allward and Gouinlock, the successor firm to the firm of G. W. Gouinlock, which designed several of the older buildings. • The
Crystal Palace (later known as Transportation Building) was a large exhibit building on the site of the current Horticulture Building, dating to the 1850s. It was moved to the Exhibition Grounds and used for various displays. It was destroyed by fire in 1906. • The
Electrical and Engineering Building was built in 1928. The building was demolished in 1972 and the site is now occupied by the Enercare Centre. • The
General Exhibits Building, built in 1906, The site is now occupied by the Children's Midway. • The
Graphic Arts Building was located on the site of the current Queen Elizabeth office building. • The
Machinery Hall, located on the north side of the grounds, was one of the buildings demolished around 1960 for the Gardiner Expressway. • The '''Manufacturers' Building''' was a building used to house exhibits of household appliances, fixtures, and furnishings. Built in 1902, it burned down on January 3, 1961, and was replaced by the Better Living Centre. • The
Process of Manufacturing Building was built in 1905 was located behind the current Press Building and General Exhibits Building and demolished in the early 1960s. Now a parking area. •
Pure Food Building (later known as Food Products Building) - built in 1921 and replaced by current building in 1954 •
Stanley Barracks - 14 of 15 buildings were demolished in the early 1950s to make space for parking. •
Transportation Building (later known as International Building) burned down on August 24, 1974. It was on the west side of Bandshell Park. • The '''Women's Building''' was built in 1908 as an addition to the Manufacturers' Building and burned along with it in 1961. It had been converted to a restaurant in 1959. • original
Dufferin Gate - replaced by the current gate in 1959; previous gates built in 1895 and again in 1910. •
Gooderham Fountain - built in 1910 and replaced by the Princess Margaret Fountain in 1958. •
Mighty Flyer- a wooden roller coaster, built in 1953 by
Conklin Shows. It was a permanent fixture that lasted until 1992. •
Shell Oil Tower (later known as the Bulova Tower) = Built in 1955, it was demolished in 1985. The Shell Oil Tower was designed by 24-year-old George A. Robb, who had won a competition by Shell to design the tower. It was a see-through structure of glass and steel with an observation platform at above the ground. The tower was demolished to make way for the Indy race, which paid the cost of demolition. It had been closed the previous two years due to safety concerns. ==Race course==