'Leaning' building in Kensington Market may collapse: police

A building in Kensington Market is leaning toward the sidewalk and may collapse, Toronto police and fire crews said on Friday. The building is located at Dundas Street W. and Augusta Avenue, police said.  (Jérémie Bergeron/CBC  - image credit)
A building in Kensington Market is leaning toward the sidewalk and may collapse, Toronto police and fire crews said on Friday. The building is located at Dundas Street W. and Augusta Avenue, police said. (Jérémie Bergeron/CBC - image credit)

Toronto police say a two-storey building in Kensington Market is "leaning" toward the sidewalk and may collapse.

The building is located at Dundas Street W. and Augusta Avenue, police said. Police and fire crews are on scene.

Dundas Street is currently closed from Augusta Avenue to Denison Avenue, and the area around the building has been cordoned off, with fire crews evacuating occupants from the building and from adjoining units.

Toronto Fire said they received reports about the leaning building around 10 a.m.

A construction crew working across the street from the building noticed it moving and called 911, Deputy Fire Chief Jim Jessop said.

The front facade has partly collapsed and the roof structure is compromised, he said. Fire crews have established a collapse zone, he said.

Jessop said Toronto Building is also on the scene and will work with the building's owner to determine how to bring it down in a controlled demolition, if it does not collapse by itself first.

"One way or another, that portion of the building will be brought down at some point today," Jessop said.

Fire crews working to disconnect hydro and gas

Fire crews are working with Toronto Hydro and Enbridge Gas to ensure hydro and gas are disconnected from the building in case it collapses without engineer controls, Jessop said.

They stretched out a couple hose lines in front of the building as a precaution, in case it collapses by itself before hydro and gas are disconnected, he said.

It's hard to tell how long it would take for the building to collapse in an uncontrolled manner. However, he said he has noticed the facade continue to move since arriving at the site. There are no reports of injuries.

Toronto Building will conduct an investigation with the owner after the building comes down to determine the reason for the collapse, Jessop said.