Fresh The site of the Guvernment was first converted into a nightclub in 1984 as
Fresh Restaurant and Nightclub by Tony and Albert Assoon, two of the four Assoon brothers who had simultaneously been running the successful and influential
Twilight Zone after-hours club at 185 Richmond Street West in Toronto's
Entertainment District. However, Fresh did not do well and was quickly sold by late 1985.
RPM The space returned almost immediately as
RPM under the ownership of Murray Ball, an artist who had formerly fronted the Toronto-based punk/new-wave band
The Dishes before turning to
hospitality entrepreneurship on the Toronto nightlife scene having successfully run The Copa in
Yorkville on behalf of its owner –
Tom Kristenbrun's Chrysalis Group. Initially, TK played Mondays (billed as 'Psychedelic Mondays'), Thursdays ('Disco Thursdays'), and Saturdays ('
dance‐music Saturdays' blending
house,
funk, and
new wave), while Sheppard was hired away from his popular
alt-rock Sunday-night gig at The Copa to recreate the same energy at RPM. TK's Monday nights quickly began gaining in popularity, attracting patrons with an eclectic
rock mix covering a wide range of old and new from
The Four Horsemen,
AC/DC, and
Jimi Hendrix to
The Doors and
Nirvana.
The Guvernment The declining RPM and The Warehouse venues were taken over in late 1995 by
Charles Khabouth. Following extensive renovation, he renamed RPM as
The Guvernment, reopening in September 1996. Initially kept, The Warehouse name got changed to
Kool Haus by late June 2001. Khabouth revamped RPM by installing a series of smaller lounges and bars within the complex. A sound system was designed for the main room by
audio engineer Steve Dash and remained throughout the club's existence despite various renovations. Khabouth credited the system as one of the best in the city and would call Dash up from the United States to tune the room's mixer when required. In December 2014,
John Digweed released a live recording of his final set at The Guvernment from two months prior. Annually, The Guvernment / Kool Haus venues would host "full-complex" events where all seven rooms that made up the complex were accessible. These events were held on long weekends and special occasions and sometimes went as late at 10AM. Some of these events included 'Labour of Love', 'Decadence', 'Freedom', 'Thriller', and the nightclub's anniversary party. On these nights, various international electronic music artists performed in the different themed rooms hosting upwards of 10,000 guests.
Closure and demolition In parallel with the Toronto-wide condo boom that had been on since early 2000s, the rumours and speculation about the imminent sale of The Guvernment's attractive Queen's Quay East lakefront location to property developers and subsequent closure of the nightlife complex had circulated for years. With the rampant trend of downtown Toronto buildings that house nightclubs being sold and then demolished to make way for condominiums, the
Toronto Star reported during April 2013 about The Guvernment's fate already being sealed in the same manner. The official confirmation occurred over a year later when, on 1 May 2014, The Guvernment's parent company,
INK Entertainment, announced plans of closing the entertainment complex effective 31 January 2015. which outbid INK and also bought out the rest of the block in preparation for what was expected to be a massive
condo development. According to the club's owner Charles Khabouth, the venue had already been slated to close a year earlier, but did not due to his company putting up a legal fight: "We fought tooth and nail, spending a lot of money on legal fees, and ending up not being able to stretch it much more than a year...I knew about it and delayed it as much as I could". He further promised a series of farewell events leading up to the closure. On Sunday, 25 January 2015, The Guvernment hosted its final event with
deadmau5 as the headliner. Resident DJ Mark Oliver along with Khabouth played the final track,
Patrick Cowley's mix of "I Feel Love" by
Donna Summer. Following a month-long dismantling that commenced immediately after the final night, the complex began demolition in late February 2015. Khabouth has indicated his intention to build a bigger venue of approximately 100,000 square feet to replace the Guvernment while admitting that it would probably have to be outside of downtown Toronto due to difficulty of finding a suitable property of that size in the heart of the city. In late March 2015, at a presentation attended by Toronto mayor
John Tory, The Daniels Corporation announced plans of building a C$700 million development named City of the Arts that is to include two mid-rise commercial towers, two sky-high residential ones and post-secondary academic space. ==See also==