[Rășcanu Update] Lesson 32: What Jane and Finch teaches us about city building


The Rășcanu Weekly Update

Lesson 32: What Jane and Finch teaches us about city building
By
Alex Rășcanu

Good morning,

Look around your neighbourhood.

Maybe it’s a gleaming condo corridor. Maybe it’s a quiet residential street. Maybe it’s a mix of towers and storefronts, cars and kids, parks and pavement.

Now ask yourself: Who planned this place? Who invested in it? And who is involved to make it a true community?

Every neighbourhood is shaped by decisions: political, economic, and social. But it's people who bring them to life.

Take Toronto's Jane and Finch, for example.

Planned in the 1950s and 1960s as a bold new “modern suburb” near York University, it was meant to be a mixed-income, transit-connected, thriving community. The government poured money into buildings, but not enough into what would make it thrive (schools, recreation, healthcare, transit, safety, jobs).

In just a few years, Jane and Finch went from hopeful promise to being labeled a "problem neighbourhood.” The planning and development process didn't reach its intended objectives.

And yet, what happened next is what makes Jane and Finch remarkable: residents stepped up. They created over 30 grassroots organizations to fill in the gaps. They organized, built community pride, and demanded dignity where institutions fell short.

This is not just Jane and Finch’s story. It’s Toronto’s story.

Every neighbourhood lives or dies by our collective choices: to invest, to care, to show up.
Our next tour invites you to walk through that history and ask: What kind of city are we building today?

📅 Event: ExperienceTO: Jane and Finch Historical Tour
📍 Start at: Toronto Public Library - York Woods Branch
🕐 When: 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, August 2nd


What You Can Do Today:

  1. Get curious about your city.
    Wherever you live, every neighbourhood has a story. Take a local history tour. Learn who initially shaped your neighbourhood, and who is now involved in this process.
  2. Start something where you live.
    A neighbourhood book exchange. A potluck. A youth mentorship program. The things that strengthen communities often begin small, and grow because someone cared enough to begin.
  3. Support communities doing the work.
    Organizations in Jane and Finch, like the JVS or Inner City Outreach, are proof of what community care looks like. Get involved. Or find your local equivalent and show up.

Neighbourhoods may thrive because they’re well designed, but the especially thrive when we choose to care for them.

See you on August 2nd at the Jane and Finch Historical Tour.

All the best,
Alex Rășcanu

P.S. If someone forwarded you this e-newsletter and you'd like to subscribe, you can do so here.

Connect: LinkedIn / X / Instagram / YouTube
1396 Don Mills Rd., Unit #B121, Toronto, ON M3B 0A7
Unsubscribe · Preferences

Alex Rășcanu

Community builder and revenue generator, for the common good. Subscribe to my weekly e-newsletter.

Read more from Alex Rășcanu
Alex R??canu

The Rășcanu Weekly Update Lesson 31: Man can endure almost any “how” of life if he has a “why”By Alex Rășcanu Good morning, I wonder what you're reading these days. Reading and deeply reflecting can stir up learning opportunities and positive outcomes. I'm currently part way through Victor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning" memoir. Victor Frankl was born in Vienna in 1905. He studied psychology and philosophy. After earning a doctorate in medicine in 1930, Frankl headed a suicide prevention...

Alex R??canu

The Rășcanu Weekly Update Lesson 30: Make your mark on your city, inspired by Toronto's first MayorBy Alex Rășcanu Good morning, Nearly two centuries later, what can William Lyon Mackenzie still teach us about building a better city? In my reading of his story, I find that one of his beliefs was that true democracy requires active civic participation, including fair elections, public debate, and citizen involvement, principles that are essential to good governance. When York became Toronto in...

Alex R??canu

The Rășcanu Weekly Update Lesson 29: Your impact isn’t measured by recognition, but by contributionBy Alex Rășcanu Good morning, While preparing for the Lawrence Park Historical Tour that's taking place on Saturday at 11:00 a.m., I got to research the person after whom the Alexander Muir Memorial Gardens (which is part of the tour) are named and realized that his is a story worth sharing. Alexander Muir is best known as the writer of “The Maple Leaf Forever,” a patriotic song composed in...