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A warm welcome to our new fellows and associates! This
guide provides general orientation on a range of topics, academic and
non-academic. It provides links to helpful electronic resources for further
information related to the
Institute, as well as to the
University of Toronto and the City
of Toronto. A printed guide, with more detailed information,
is available from the office of the Treasurer.
Research fellows, associates, and guests are encouraged to familiarize
themselves with the Institute’s organizational
structure and to consult members of staff for assistance.
Institute Services and Facilities
ACCOMMODATION
The Institute does not provide accommodation for visiting fellows. Like
any major city, Toronto’s occupancy rates for rental housing vary
considerably from year to year. It is best to plan well in advance of
arrival on campus. However, a short list of accommodation used by
previous Institute fellows is available. Please write for further details.
The Institute is located on the campus of
University of St Michael's College.
Visiting fellows interested in living in residence at the college
should contact
the Office of the Dean of Students
to inquire about availability as soon as possible (telephone 416 926 7127).
They should mention their affiliation with PIMS, as fellows will be
given priority over outside residents.
In the past, most PIMS fellows have been accommodated in Teefy House,
a small graduate floor located in the south end of the Queen's Park Building.
Useful information on residential accommodation may
be found at the University of Toronto’s
Student Housing site, as well as the pages devoted to both
new and visiting faculty at the Faculty
Housing information site.
The following websites for rentals in and around Toronto may also prove
useful:
Apartmentcorner, PMRentals,
RentHome,
Rent Canada, Rentershotline,
SoYouWanna,
TorontoRenter, Trivest
Development, and ViewIt. Visiting fellows
should also find useful the nonprofit site devoted to
Ontario Tenants Rights, which
provides information on tenants' legal rights, finding affordable housing,
discrimination, and apartment security.
In
addition, the classified ads in the University
of Toronto Bulletin, and local editions of The
Toronto Star and The
Globe and Mail can provide further assistance.
BENEFITS AND SERVICES
Please refer all questions relating to financial matters to the Treasurer,
and enquiries regarding visas to the Registrar .
General information about many issues of concern
to non-Canadian residents, such as visas, UHIP (University Health Insurance
Plan), child care, cost-of-living, income tax, etc may be found at the
International
Student Centre website.
ACADEMIC PROGRAMMES
The Institute’s academic programmes, including its post-doctoral
Licence programme and the various fellowships offered, are described in
detail in the Academics
section of this site. Please refer all enquiries regarding admission,
requirements, academic meetings (including the Interdisciplinary Research
Seminar), and issues of policy to the
Registrar.
OFFICES AND FACILITIES
As far as possible, visiting scholars are assigned offices in the Institute
building or in the Library for the duration of the academic term. Please
refer all questions regarding offices and facilities to the Treasurer.
Offices are sparely furnished, but are not equipped with computers. High-speed
internet access, however, is available (see below). Telephone service
is provided by the University
of St Michael’s College. For further information, please
consult the Institute Directory. Detailed
instructions about voice mail are available from the
Institute Secretary.
INSTITUTE EVENTS
Over the academic term, the Institute hosts a variety of endowed and guest
lectures and other meetings of interest to research fellows. The
Centre for Medieval Studies in the University of Toronto also
holds several events in the Laurence K. Shook Common Room at the Institute.
In the autumn and spring, the Institute holds its open meetings of Council,
when all visiting fellows and their guests are encouraged to attend, and
each March brings a distinguished medievalist to deliver the Gilson
Lecture. For a comprehensive and up-to-date listing, please
consult the Calendar.
LIBRARIES
The Institute library is housed on the fourth floor of the John M. Kelly
Library at St Michael’s College. Its collections of printed books,
manuscripts, and microfilms is non-circulating; admittance is by pass
only. For additional information about hours, access, and a guide to the
collections, see the Library
section on this site.
All visiting fellows have access to the University of Toronto library
system, a network of over forty libraries
that together make up the largest academic library in Canada. The
Robarts Library, across Queen’s Park, houses the social sciences
and humanities research resources; the Gerstein
Science Information Centre serves the science and health science
disciplines. The Institute’s collections in reference works, manuscripts,
and early printed books are complemented by the resources of The
Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, the Fine
Art Library, as well as the Centre
for Reformation and Renaissance Studies. College libraries
on the St George campus are rich in several related disciplines: philosophy
and religion are especially well served by the collections at
St Michael’s, Emmanuel,
and Trinity
colleges; classics, literature, and art by the
E.J. Pratt Library at Victoria College. Registered users of
the library system also have access to an impressive and growing range
of electronic
resources, from reference works and full-text e-journals to
online databases. Surveys of electronic resources are provided in “Terra
cognita,” elsewhere on this site.
Access to the Robarts stacks and borrowing privileges at all libraries
are restricted to card holders. To obtain a photo library card (also known
as a TCard), take a copy of the letter of appointment issued by the
Registrar to the Reader Registration desk on the main floor of the Robarts
Library. The TCard may also be used to purchase photocopies and computer
printing at libraries across campus.
E–MAIL AND INTERNET ACCESS
With the proliferation of web-based e–mail, and the continuing availability
of e–mail via telnet, visiting fellows may find that it is more
convenient to retain their existing institutional or generic e–mail
accounts. However, e–mail is also provided by UTORMail,
the University of Toronto’s institutional e–mail service.
Off-campus access to restricted online resources is now available through
a new service called my.access.
All offices in the Institute and the PIMS Library are wired for internet
access via the UofT computer network
(NOTE: dial-up access via modem is not available). Any standard ethernet
card may be installed on your computer; network cards may be purchased
at the Campus
Computer Shop. The IP address and other network settings required
may be obtained from the Treasurer.
Access to the network is controlled by Computing and Networking Services.
Questions regarding network settings and computer configuration may be
referred to the staff at Workgroup
Technology Support (telephone help line 416 946 4009). Advanced
users can find helpful information at World
of Windows Networking.
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
The Scotiabank
Information Commons, located on the first floor of Robarts
Library, provides a range of technical resources and services such as
software licensing and distribution, as well as video and multimedia services.
The Information Commons Help Desk provides telephone,
e–mail, and walk-in technical support on licensed software.
The barcode on a valid TCard (see above) may be required to verify university
association. The
Resource Centre for Academic Technology supports the use of
emerging technologies in teaching, learning, and research. The
Classroom Technology
Support Group maintains an inventory of audiovisual equipment
for teaching.
The University of Toronto
Various colleges, libraries, and services within the University
of Toronto have already been mentioned above. New fellows are
urged to consult the university’s many web pages for further information;
see “Terra
cognita” for a conspectus of campus sites and services.
Two navigational aids, in particular, may be worth keeping in mind: the
constantly expanding list of campus websites
and the very helpful campus maps
including those of the St George Campus, as well as special maps of the St Michael's College campus.
The City of Toronto
Toronto is rich in services and cultural resources. An idiosyncratic perspective
is provided by the following notes. General information about services
in the city can be found at 211Toronto.ca
and the Toronto pages of Servpro.ca.
Official sites of the City
as well as of Toronto
Tourism provide valuable ancillary information on. Environment
Canada’s website gives detailed information about Toronto
weather. Links to attractions, events, and shopping can be
found at Toronto.com
and at the Toronto
Life website. Where.ca
provides a guide to travel and principal points of interest across major
Canadian cities, including Toronto.
TRAVEL
The website for the Toronto
Pearson International Airport provides details about all daily flights,
both Arrivals and
Departures. For
inter-city rail transit, consult Via
Rail; for travel by bus, see Greyhound
Lines of Canada. City
maps are now available on the web. Toronto is well-served by a network
of buses, streetcars, and subways run by the Toronto
Transit Commission (TTC). Like many other North American cities, Toronto
has an extensive (literal) underground: PATH
provides a map of the walkways below the canyons of commerce downtown.
Suburban transit outside the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) is provided by
GO Transit.
SHOPPING AND COMMERCIAL SERVICES
The Institute is close to a range of shopping in mid-town Toronto. The Manulife
Centre at 55 Bloor Street West contains Valumart, a reasonably sized grocery store,
as the LCBO for wines and spirits,
both a
regular store and Vintages,
among many other shops and services.
The centre is connected underground to the Cumberland Terrace shopping mall,
which terminates at the Hudson Bay Centre,
whose principal tenant is The Bay,
one of the country's main department stores. Several other areas for shopping are within
walking distance of the Institute, including Yorkville.
Office supplies can be purchased at the
Grand and Toy
store at Bloor and Avenue Road, or at Staples further south on University Avenue.
There are two outlets close by for Canada Post, one at the Manulife Centre, the other
at the Colonnade. within walking distance of the Institute that provide most
services. The closest UPS
full-service store is at Bay and St Joseph Streets. Full and self-service locations of Fedex
are also within close proximity (use the Institute's postal code to find the closest location).
Toronto boasts of several superior markets: especially worthy of note are
The St Lawrence Market at Front Street (a short walk from Union subway station),
Kensington Market (between College and Dundas Streets, west of Spadina),
and the more recently arrived Whole Foods.
GALLERIES AND MUSEUMS
The Art Gallery
of Ontario (AGO) is the single largest gallery in the city and in
the region. Several galleries and museums are within walking distance
of the Institute: visitors may wish to explore, in particular, the Egyptian,
Chinese, and Graeco-Roman collections of Royal
Ontario Museum (ROM) and delftware, European porcelain, and pre-Columbian
artifacts at the Gardiner Museum
of Ceramic Art. The Universitys art collections are housed principally
in the J.M. Barnicke Art Gallery
at Hart House, and the University
of Toronto Art Centre, which also houses the Malcove Collection of
medieval art. Contemporary art can be found at The
Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery. The Textile
Museum of Canada and the gallery at Goethe
Institute Toronto are but two of the citys many specialized
galleries. Option Art provides
links to over thirty local-area galleries. For a comprehensive listing
of galleries, please consult the Virtual
Museum Canada website.
MUSIC AND OPERA
Music of a wide variety of styles, genres, and periods is well represented
in Toronto. Close to the Institute, and on the other side of Queens
Park, is the University of Torontos Faculty
of Music, which through the academic term holds special concerts
of orchestral and chamber music, as well as offering several free concerts
in its Thursdays at Noon series. Hart
House, the Universitys cultural complex on the front
campus, provides a wide range of musical fare, and concerts sponsored
by the Royal
Conservatory of Music at 273 Bloor St West, off Avenue Road,
give listeners an opportunity to hear many young performers of outstanding
musical promise.
Standard repertoire and, on occasion, new works are performed during
the season at the citys principal companies, among them: the Canadian
Opera Company, Toronto Symphony Orchestra,
Opera in Concert, and the
Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. Innovative
programmes of poetry, letters, and song by The
Aldeburgh Connection, vocal and instrumental music from Amici,
and an outstanding series of string quartets from Music
Toronto provide the music of smaller rooms. Vocal and instrumental
recitals form the mainstay of the season at the Glenn
Gould Studio in the CBC Broadcast Centre, and chamber, orchestral,
and choral music at concerts held in the intimate acoustics of the George
Weston Recital Hall at the Toronto
Centre for the Arts in North York are often worth the 45minute
journey by subway from campus.
Contemporary music by a rostrum of Canadian and international composers
is the focus of New
Music Concerts, Toronto and Soundstreams
Canada. Devotees of early music will find themselves hard-pressed
to select from offerings by Sine Nomine,
the Institutes ensemble in residence, the Toronto Consort, and Tafelmusik.
Opera Atelier specializes
in lavish performances of opera and theatre of the Baroque.
THEATRE AND DANCE
Ancient Greek tragedy and comedy, Shakespeare, the annual Massey Lectures,
new Canadian plays, and childrens theatre are all to be found each
season at the Hart
House Theatre in the University of Toronto. The mainstream offerings
of the National Ballet
of Canada are supplemented by a host of smaller dance companies, among
them Canadian Stage Company,
Dancemakers. Classic
and new plays, often in performances of astonishing reach and imagination,
are found in the seasonal offerings of the SoulPepper
Theatre Company and Tarragon
Theatre. Productions more diverse and eccentric may be found at Théâtre
Français de Toronto and Theatre
Passe Muraille
BOOKSTORES
Academic book addictions of various sorts may be abetted in part by the
large selection of titles at the University
of Toronto Bookstore, in the Koffler Centre at 214 College
St, and by The Bob Miller Bookroom at 180 Bloor St West, at Avenue Road.
The ubiquitous and monopolistic Chapters.Indigo
has two stores close to PIMS, one at 55 Bloor St West in the ManuLife
Centre, the other at 110 Bloor St West. The independent chain of Book
City (with a convenient location at 501 Bloor St West, at Bathurst) provides
some leavening to these commercial offerings.
David
Mirvish Books and Nicholas Hoare at 45 Front St East remain
two of Toronto's finer stores for art books.
An astonishing array of hard-to-find and out-of-print titles are to be
found at Atticus
Books on Harbord Street, a block from the Robarts Library.
Abelard
Books, Contact
Editions, D & E Lake, Ltd.,
and Hugh Anson-Cartwright
are only a few of the citys many used and antiquarian bookstores
(for a comprehensive listing see The
Antiquarian Booksellers Association of Canada). A distinctive
selection of books on art may be found at David
Mirvish Books and the bookstore of the Art
Gallery of Ontario; an imaginative mix of books and journals
in cultural studies, philosophy, poetry, is the mainstay of Pages Books
and Magazines at 256 Queen St West.
RESTAURANTS
There are few cuisines or culinary fashions and distractions that remain
unrepresented in Toronto. Toronto
Lifes online guide to the citys many restaurants
remains authoritative. Also useful are MenuPalace,
Taste Toronto and TorDine:
Torontos Best Guide to Dining
EXCURSIONS
Tourist attractions in the city are legion: a limited selection would
perforce include the ever-dominant CN Tower
and lugubrious Ontario
Place, as well as the more salubrious Harbourfront
Centre. Excursions a few hours from the city can bring more
wide-ranging satisfactions. Visitors to the city may wish to travel in
particular to the McMichael
Canadian Art Collection in Kleinberg; the Toronto
Zoo in outlying Scarborough, Ontario; the Royal
Botanical Gardens in Hamilton; or to the Wings
of Paradise, the butterfly conservatory in Cambridge, Ontario.
The Wineries
of Ontario now provide mature fare for both seasoned oenophile
and apprentice taster.
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario is also the home of the Shaw
Festival , one of the largest repertory companies in North
America, and the only theatre in the world devoted to plays written by
Bernard Shaw and his contemporaries. The dramatic works of Shakespeare
form the cornerstone of the venerable Stratford
Festival in Stratford, Ontario. Some half-dozen plays by the
Bard, as well as other contemporary works, are performed at the Festivals
four theatres between April and November each year.
Visitors travelling farther afield may also wish to consult the the websites
of the Federation
of Ontario Bed and Breakfast Accommodation and BBCanada.com,
bed-and-breakfast online, for further information.
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