Kerr Hall is a series of four buildings in a square, surrounding Ryerson Community Park, on the campus of Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University) in Toronto, Canada. Kerr Hall is on the site of the former Toronto Normal School. All but a portion of the Normal School's front façade was demolished in the late 1950s to enable the construction of:
Kerr Hall East: 340 Church Street and 60 Gould Street.
Kerr Hall West: 379 Victoria Street.
Kerr Hall North: 31 and 43 Gerrard Street East.
Kerr Hall South: 40 and 50 Gould Street.
The current building was built from the early 1960s to 1969 and designed by architect Burwell R. Coon. Until 1963, Kerr Hall surrounded the site of the Toronto Normal School.[1][better source needed]
The middle of Kerr Hall is the tree-lined Ryerson Community Park, also known as the Quad.
The northwest corner of Kerr Hall North houses The Theatre at The Creative School, formerly Ryerson Theatre. The 1,237-seat auditorium is used for "live productions, lectures, product launches, convocations, fashion shows and film shoots".[2] It also hosts screenings of films during the Toronto International Film Festival.[2]
Not all four of Kerr Hall's buildings connect to each other[7] on all floors. You cannot pass through the Theatre.
Google Maps offers indoor maps for all four floors of Kerr Hall, plus the basement. Many room numbers are omitted from the map, and the entire 100 level of Kerr Hall West is also missing.[8]
Google indoor maps provide static floor plans; they can also provide spoken walking directions[9] to selected rooms inside a building. Google Maps can use Wi-Fi trilateration in order to determine a user's position; it can achieve an indoor accuracy of between 5–15 meters[10] in many commercial and institutional buildings.
^Grant-Moran, Robin (October 4, 2022). "Jera Wolfe, 146 National Ballet School dancers bring uniqueness to Fall For Dance North". The Globe and Mail. p. A13.
^McGrath, Paul (November 26, 1979). "Japan makes good music but not history". The Globe and Mail. p. 14.
^"THEATRE". The Globe and Mail. November 30, 1977. p. F6.