Jane’s Walk | Noticing possibility in Mississauga City Centre

Noticing possibility in Mississauga City Centre, with Jes F and Rahul M

Saturday, 2 May 2026 | 12:00 p.m. | Contemplating Child sculpture, Community Common Park, 34 Princess Royal Drive at Living Arts Drive

Mississauga City Centre is a “vertical suburb around a mall”, a “triumph of bad policy over logic”. Its own mayor calls it “boring”. These may all ring true, especially from behind a windshield or an infinite scroll.

But what truths might exist alongside these portrayals—truths that might help realize a more livable, more neighbourly community? 

This walk is about the art of paying attention to possibility in Mississauga City Centre: possibility as it actually exists, as it waits for a slight nudge, and as it speaks to challenges faced by North American suburbs seeking to transition away from car dependency. It will feature conviviality in lesser-known parks and side streets, buried creeks waiting to be daylighted, and public facilities with the potential for civic activation.

A section of the walk will be devoted to Community Commons Park and the Living Arts Centre: two unique public spaces that are decried as “underutilized” by the present mayor and targeted for a $4 billion redevelopment. Another section of the walk will feature civic spaces around Celebration Square: as they have been variously transformed for the better, closed off or hidden from the public, or wait for people and government to take pride in these places.

Duration: 2 hours.

Walk start: Contemplating Child sculpture, Community Common Park, 34 Princess Royal Drive at Living Arts Drive, Mississauga.

Walk end: Same as walk start location.

Themes: Advocacy and politics, Architecture and Urban Planning, Arts and Culture, People and Communities

Accessibility: Stairs or other barriers, Breaks encouraged, Indoor stops, Washroom, There will be convenience stores and cafes along the route.

Attendees Identify You: We will have an orange Jane’s Walk sign.

Jane’s Walk | Water and time

Cooksville Creek, from microseasons to this millennium

Sunday, 3 May 2026 | 2:00 p.m. | John C. Price Playground to oldest(??) tree in Mississauga City Centre

Let’s take a walk along Mississauga’s Cooksville Creek, as an exercise in traveling deep, and not far across both time and space. Let’s have conversations about what brings us—people, peoples, and place; humans and nonhumans; ancestors and future kin—together; about portals to an alternate, actually-existing Mississauga; about inhabiting a place; and about water.

Duration:

2:00:00

Walk start:

John C. Price Playground, Little John Lane, off Dundas Street East.
Closest major intersection: Dundas and Hurontario.
Five-minute walk to 1 Dundas and 2 Hurontario MiWay bus routes.

Walk end:

Oldest(??) tree in Mississauga City Centre.
Closest major intersection: Burnhamthorpe and Hurontario.
Five-minute walk to 2 Hurontario, 26 Burnhamthorpe, 10 Bristol, and 20 Rathburn MiWay bus routes.

Route info:

Most of our route will be within a ten-minute walk (or less) from the 2 Hurontario and 3 Bloor MiWay bus routes.

Washrooms and vending machines will be available at a little past the midway point, at Mississauga Valleys Park.

Themes:

Environment and Sustainability, History and Places, Lived experiences and personal perspectives, People and Communities

Accesibility:

Uneven terrain, Stairs or other barriers, Breaks encouraged.

This walk is not a loop, though the start point can be reached from the end point using transit.

Attendees Identify You:

I will have an orange backpack.

Jane’s Walk | Water and time

Cooksville Creek, from microseasons to this millennium

Sunday, 4 May 2025 | 2:00 p.m. | John C. Price Playground to oldest(??) black walnut in City Centre

Let’s take a walk along Mississauga’s Cooksville Creek, as an exercise in traveling deep, and not far—across both time and space.

Let’s have conversations about what brings us—people, peoples, and place; humans and nonhumans; ancestors and future kin—together; about portals to an alternate, actually-existing Mississauga; about inhabiting a place; and about water.

Continue reading “Jane’s Walk | Water and time”