In the 1970s, Yonge and Bloor looked very different from the intersection many Torontonians know today.
At the time, the area was lined with strip clubs, adult theatres, and body rub parlours — a reality the city largely tolerated until Yonge Street was temporarily transformed into a car-free public space each summer. As larger crowds gathered, concerns around drinking, prostitution, and public disorder intensified. Newspapers began referring to the area as “Sin City,” while police described the summer experiment as an “84-day orgy of lawlessness.”
By the late 1970s, the pedestrian program had ended and the city began aggressively reshaping Yonge Street’s image and nightlife culture.