
https://t.co/COoFM6SK96 — HïMY SYeD 🍥 City of Labyrinths Project (@LabyrinthsDOTca) April 28, 2019
“Thank-You to @HiMYSYeD for the “Unofficial Labyrinth” in our local Fairmount Park splash-pad..! Good to see a little Maze-Runner enjoying it in the Sunshine. Sometimes the BEST things in #ParkTO break the rules a little. 🤫” – Mark J. Richardson
Young one walking the Labyrinth I painted during October 2015 in the Wading Pool in Fairmount Park in East End Toronto . . . View this post on Instagram A post shared by David Bosworth (@bosworth.david) on Mar 16, 2016 at 1:15pm PDT
Our local wading pool can now be walked as a labyrinth when it's not being waded as a pool! A post shared by Peggy Feltmate (@peggyfeltmate) on Jan 15, 2016 at 4:43pm PST
Toronto & Vancouver City of Labyrinths is a Project to create public Labyrinths within walking distance of every Torontonian & Vancouverite.
Intended to create safe walking spaces for both play and contemplation.
Labyrinths are placed in parks, public spaces, during neighbourhood street parties or major urban festivals like Pedestrian Sunday Kensington Market in Toronto or Car Free Days in Vancouver.
HiMY SYeD – Labyrinth Maker & Project Co-ordinator
Traditional: recognizes lands traditionally used and/or occupied by the People or First Nations in parts of the country.
Ancestral: recognizes land that is handed down from generation to generation.
Unceded: refers to land that was not turned over to the Crown (government) by a treaty or other agreement.
Labyrinths are made on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples –
Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish),
Stó:lō and
Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh)
and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Nations.
Labyrinths are made in traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of
the Kwantlen,
the Katzie,
the Semiahmoo
and Tsawwassen First Nations.