Yonge–Dundas Square
Sankofa Square, formerly Yonge–Dundas Square before 2025, is a public square and outdoor venue at the southeast corner of the intersection of Yonge Street and Dundas Street East within the Garden District in the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The square was conceived in 1997 as part of a revitalization of the intersection and the stretch of Yonge Street. Since its completion in 2002, the square has held many public events, performances and art displays, establishing itself as a prominent landmark in Toronto and one of the city's prime tourist attractions.
Surrounding the square are other major landmarks, including the Toronto Eaton Centre, Ed Mirvish Theatre, and the 33 Dundas Street East building. The square is accessible from the Toronto subway at TMU station and is connected to Path, Toronto's underground pedestrian walkway. The square is continuously illuminated by large billboard screens and corporate logos, which has led to comparison of the square with Times Square in New York City, Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo, and Piccadilly Circus in London.
Central to the Downtown Yonge entertainment and shopping district, the square is owned by the city and is the first public square in Canada to be maintained through a public–private partnership. The intersection is one of the busiest in Canada, with over 100,000 people crossing the city's first pedestrian scramble daily.
History
In 1996, a partnership between the Downtown Yonge Business and Resident Association and the City of Toronto was formed, known as the Yonge Street Regeneration Project. Its objectives were "to create a renewed sense of place, attract additional retail and entertainment development to the area and to improve its appearance and safety". The centrepiece was a new square at Yonge and Dundas.In 1998, Toronto City Council approved the expropriation and demolition of the buildings on the site and the construction of the square. The square is a joint project of the city, residents, the McGill Granby Association, the Downtown Yonge Business and Resident Association, and the Downtown Yonge Business Improvement Area, an association of local businesses. This effort was conceived and spearheaded by Arron Barberian of Barberian's Steak House, Robert Sniderman of The Senator restaurant and Councillor Kyle Rae. Ron Soskolne was retained in 1995 to lead the planning of the regeneration project and went on to serve as the chair of the Board of Management for the first decade of the square's operation.
Brown + Storey Architects designed the square. In 1999, the square's design received the Award of Excellence for Significant Building in the Design Stage by Canadian Architect magazine, in recognition of it being an outstanding example of contemporary architecture. The next year, Architecture magazine commended the square as "a new form of urban space with great presence... pushes the limits of invention and originality". In 2006, the square's Wi-Fi hotspot, set up by Wireless Toronto, was voted the best in the city.
Some claim that the intersection is the busiest in Canada, with over 56 million people passing through annually. The square's development is cited as modelling New York's Times Square, Tokyo's Shibuya district, and London's Piccadilly Circus. To manage the volume of pedestrians, a pedestrian scramble was installed in August 2008.
Sankofa Square frequently serves as a venue for public events connected to the city's cultural festivals, including NXNE, the Toronto International Film Festival, Luminato, Nuit blanche and Pride Week. On June 29, 2014, the square hosted the official closing ceremonies of WorldPride.
Official renaming
Controversy arose over the namesake of Dundas Street, Henry Dundas, whose amendments to William Wilberforce's abolitionist parliamentary motions delayed the full abolition of slavery in the Slave Trade Act 1807. Dundas felt that there was not yet enough support in the House of Commons and House of Lords for the British Empire to do so and that it would be ineffective also. Britain would later vote to fully abolish slavery with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.Toronto City Council voted in 2021 to rename Dundas Street and other civic assets named after Dundas, including Yonge–Dundas Square. While a new name was set to be chosen by April 2022, it was not until December 2023 that City Council approved "Sankofa Square". This name, a Ghanaian term from the Akan people, refers to the act of reflecting on and reclaiming teachings from the past.
Opinion pieces in the National Post, The Hub and The Globe and Mail criticized the renaming, arguing that the new name was unrelated to Toronto history and the decision selectively applied historical scrutiny by targeting Henry Dundas while adopting a name associated with societies that engaged in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. A January 2024 poll reported by CTV News found that 71% of Toronto residents surveyed opposed the renaming, a level of public disapproval the pollster described as unprecedented in their polling experience.
Citing costs, in December 2023, Toronto opted to keep Dundas' name for the street, but to rename Yonge–Dundas Square, the Dundas and Dundas West subway stations, and the Jane–Dundas branch of the Toronto Public Library.
In May 2025, the Toronto Transit Commission board approved a proposal to change Dundas station's name to TMU station. It will be named after the nearby Toronto Metropolitan University, which will fully cover the cost of renaming the station.
An official grand opening for the new name was held on August 23, 2025. The grand opening featured Caribbean short films, live music, an artisan and vendor market, and basketball clinics presented by the Toronto Tempo and Toronto Raptors.
Design
Sankofa Square is bordered on the north by Dundas Street East, on the east by Victoria Street, and on the west by Yonge Street, and on the south by a street named Dundas Square. It is in area. It is an irregular pentagon in shape. The angled northeastern side of the square along Dundas St, is known as the hypotenuse, which features a structure supported by 11 round concrete pillars. This creates an industrial urban aesthetic, which, being to the north, casts no shadows on the rest of the space. The other three sides are square.The square is on a slight incline, which architects Brown + Storey have said was intended to evoke a theatrical stage. It is made with modular raised square textured granite slabs, features a diagonally running zinc canopy along the northern hypotenuse of the "square", a movable plinth which serves as a stage for concerts and other performances, a row of lighted fountains set directly into the pavement, a row of small trees along the southern edge, a transparent canopy over the plinth, and an entrance to TMU subway station below. A series of low, circular stone planters was added to the western side of the square in the summer of 2005.
Fountains
The centrepiece of the square is the array of fountains designed by Dan Euser of Waterarchitecture. Two rows of ten fountains are spread out across the square's main walkway so that visitors have the opportunity to walk through or around the fountains. Unlike many other city fountains, the square's fountains are meant for waterplay and include a sophisticated filtration system that keeps the water at or above "pool quality" water. According to Euser, the water is treated to maintain health standards for waterplay. According to facility administrator Christine MacLean, the granite that was chosen for the entire space has non-slip properties for the safety of those running through or playing in the fountains. Each of the ten water fountains consists of a stainless steel grille with 30 ground nozzles under it.The entire rock surface is of a very dark colour and effectively absorbs sunlight, thus creating a warm surface on which to rest. The water runs under the dark rock slabs and is thus heated by them, so that the fountain water is solar heated. Three curved lighting masts along the south edge of the square, made of hollow structural steel, have a high-gloss white finish that contrasts with the rough non-slip texture of the black granite, and each support six mercury vapour arc lamps that create evening light that comes from approximately the same directions as natural sunlight does during the day.
The fountains comprise a dynamic art installation and water sculpture in which the 600 water jets are programmed to vary, dynamically, over time. The fountains usually operate 24 hours a day. Other than the aquatic play area in front of the Ontario Science Centre, the square is Toronto's only 24-hour waterplay area, open all day and night except during special events, maintenance, and other exceptions. The fountains usually run from around mid-April to the end of October, making this one of two aquatic play areas in Toronto that opens very early in the season and closes very late in the season.
To reduce costs, only the middle channel can be animated, but the outer two channels can still be globally controlled. The outer two channels are often used to set a background level while the middle channel animates, typically for eight-second intervals. The directionality imposed by the middle channel's sequencer encourages bathers to run west rather than east. Moreover, the sequencer makes the bathing experience optimal for joggers who run west at exactly 20 km/h.
Architects Brown + Storey, fountain creator Dan Euser, the firm that initiated the bidding, former Councillor Kyle Rae, and the management of the square have all confirmed that waterplay was one of the intended uses of the space. The fountains are intended to appeal to children and adults, and there is evidence that has been realized.
Because many people drink from the ground spray nozzles, and since water play is one of the intended uses, the water is tested daily, between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m., by the Toronto health department. The water is treated with bromine, which many bathers prefer to chlorine. There are three separate water treatment facilities, one for each group of ten west-most nozzles in each grille, another for the middle row of ten in each grille, and a third for all of the east-most nozzles. The water that runs into the grilles travels west, under the raised floor of the square's slabs, to the treatment facility under the west end of the waterplay area.