In 1914, the property ( at that time) was known as Ranelagh Park, owned by Colonel Harold Bickford. Bickford built Bickford House, a 33-room,
Arts and Crafts-style manor house on the property. In 1921, the property was sold to the
Roman Catholic Church's Foreign Mission Society and renamed the China Mission College. In 1923, it was purchased by Richard Veech Look, who lived with his family at the mansion until 1927, when he was transferred to Quebec. The property was vacant until 1932, when it was purchased by
Rosa Breithaupt Hewetson. In August of that year, Hewetson married
Herbert Spencer Clark in a ceremony on the estate. For a honeymoon, the couple chose to go on a motor trip to the United States to "visit co-operative organizations similar to the type in which they are both keenly interested." Both were directors of the Robert Owen Foundation, which was founded that year, an organization that supported the development of co-operative organizations and was named after utopian socialist
Robert Owen. The couple chose to reside in the mansion, and there fostered the arts, turning the property into an artist colony, modelled after
Roycroft in East Aurora, New York, a centre of the Arts and Crafts movement. By the time of the
Second World War it had become The Guild of All Arts. Across their property, the Clarks built homes and workshops for artists, such as The Studio, which was assembled out of a garage and a stable from different parts of the grounds; it accommodated those practising
batik,
woodworking,
weaving, and
metalworking. The Clarks also began collecting architectural elements from demolished buildings and erecting them in the gardens of the Guild as
follies. In 1934, the Clarks bought Corycliff, a house on five acres of property near the Bluffs, from the artist Rody Kenny Courtice. Over time, the Clarks bought surrounding farms. The property eventually amounted to , bounded by Lake Ontario to Kingston Road, and from Livingston Road to Galloway Road. As more people were attracted to the artistic community on the bluffs, the Clarks made additions to the Guild in 1941 and 1942, as well as various pieces of artwork, including 14 by
Sorel Etrog. The Guild Inn proved so popular as a lakeside resort and artisans' community that in 1965 a six storey, 100 room addition and a swimming pool were added, plus further renovations in 1968. In 1978, the
Government of Ontario and
Metropolitan Toronto (Metro) purchased the Guild Inn and property for and continued its operation as a hotel. The inn's fortunes declined. By 2001, the hotel and restaurant were closed, leaving only the park remaining open to the public, while new tenants were sought. A non-profit group called Artscape approached the city with a proposed strategy for a cultural precinct on the Guild Inn site, which was met with interest. More concrete plans came, however, in September 2008, when the city approved a plan by
Centennial College to operate a hotel, restaurant, and conference centre on the site for use in the school's hospitality courses, as well as to act as a location to house the college's Cultural and Heritage Institute. Though a fire on December 25, 2008 destroyed The Studio, preparations for Centennial's development continued, and the city in January 2009 approved the demolition of the hotel tower. Centennial College eventually abandoned the plan to renovate the Inn as too costly. A second plan proposed by Centennial College to demolish the inn and build student housing was rejected. In 2014, the City of Toronto developed a management plan for the hotel, park and gardens. While this was done, the development proposal was under review. The project was expected to cost , with CA$5 million coming from the City of Toronto. The project demolished two wings of the Guild Inn and refurbished the original central block. The refurbished building and meeting venue opened in May 2017. Image:Guild Inn - Toronto.png |The demolished 1965 hotel block extension to the Guild Inn. File:Toronto Star pyramid.jpg |Some ruins of Toronto Star building Derelict Guild Inn.jpg |The hotel prior to refurbishment File:Guild Park and Gardens (38433008876).jpg |Meeting facility incorporating the restored Guild Inn. ==Guild Park and Gardens==