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Next tab will go to the map. Use this link to skip the station map.The Surprising New Hamilton: Where To Go and What To Do
Hamilton is hot right now. Not too long ago, this Southern Ontario city was still seen as the gritty, smokestacked steeltown that Torontonians bypassed on their way to the picturesque Niagara wine region. Now, they’re moving there en masse. And last January, I happily joined the exodus.
Hamilton Now
Hamilton has so much more to offer us lapsed Torontonians than just affordable starter homes, a lower cost of living, and easier access to nature. For the past 10 years, the city has been undergoing a dramatic yet organic transformation—as the once-dominant manufacturing sector went into decline in the early 2000s, so too did inner-city rents, creating favourable conditions for Hamilton’s art, food, and music scenes to flourish. Downtown, you’ll find a thriving urban centre that boasts big-city amenities—great restaurants, a tightknit network of galleries, unique independent businesses—without the congestion, two-hour wait lists, or attitude.
Getting there
Hamilton is just 60km west of Toronto, and you can get there by a direct train service between the two cities (operated by GO Transit). The trains are scheduled during weekday rush hours: mornings from Hamilton’s GO Centre and West Harbour stations; afternoons from Toronto’s Union Station. (Outside of those times, trains from Toronto terminate at Aldershot, with a short, 10-minute shuttle-bus connection to Hamilton.)
My suggestion: grab a Friday-afternoon train out of Toronto and see if you can hit all my favourite spots in 48 hours—by which point you’ll be so tired and hungover (but with that weekend-well-spent glow), you’ll blend in perfectly with all the zombie-eyed workers heading back to T.O. on Monday morning.
James Street North
A big part of what’s made my transition from Toronto to Hamilton so easy is the revitalization of James Street North, the downtown artery that, over the past decade, has become the city’s cultural hub. It reminds me of Toronto’s once-fabled Queen West strip back in the late ‘80s, when it was a hodgepodge of quirky shops, cool watering holes, and old-school eateries.
On the second Friday night of every month, James is taken over by Art Crawl, where the street’s many storefront galleries all host their exhibit openings on the same night, creating a lively street-party atmosphere that feels like a more civilized, less chaotic alternative to Toronto’s annual Nuit Blanche. James’ eclectic retailers—like the art-supply store/gift shop Mixed Media, mod-furniture emporium Chaises Musicales and civic-pride souvenir slingers The Hamilton Store—also get in on the action, by staying open late and/or hosting sidewalk sales, while boho cantina The Brain and fusion-friendly snack bar MERK provide cozy settings for a post-promenade nightcap. And each September, the monthly Art Crawl is upsized into the annual Supercrawl, which shuts down James Street for a weekend of outdoor live music, food trucks, vintage-clothing vendors, and interactive art installations—attracting over 100,000 people.
Restaurant Row
King William Street is like James Street North’s little brother, with the two roads connected by the mammoth, six-storey Lister Block, a long-neglected 19th-century architectural marvel that was transformed into a retail and office complex in 2012. That redevelopment has breathed new life into King William’s restaurant scene, which once catered primarily to pre-show diners heading to the nearby Theatre Aquarius, but has become a mecca for premier casual nosh. The self-explanatory (and similarly vowel-resistant) HAMBRGR serves elevated takes on their namesake fast foods, while at The Mule, specialty tacos—like a Mexican take on the Big Mac—are served with a side of booming ’90s hip-hop. And soon, King William will be graced by The French, the hip sister bistro to beloved west side gastropub The Aberdeen Tavern.
Frantic City Sounds: Hamilton’s Music Scene
From ’70s punk pioneers Teenage Head (who famously dubbed their hometown the ‘Frantic City’) to current golden boys the Arkells, Hamilton has a reputation for producing bands as tough as the steel pumping out of its factories. But in recent years, the international success of electronic artists like Junior Boys and Jessy Lanza has shown the world there’s much more to this city than blue-collar rock. Whether it’s steely synth-pop, soulful roots music, avant-garde noise, or Syrian-infused hip-hop, Hamilton supports its own—it’s not uncommon to see crowds turn up for the local opener, and then clear out of the club before the hyped out-of-town headliner comes on.
The city’s venues are emblematic of the scene’s diversity. HAVN, the intimate gallery space is ideal for watching psychedelic-folk and experimental-electronic artists in silent reverence, with audiences seated on the floor, kindergarten-style. And though it hosts everything from book launches to charity events, the exposed-brick environs of Mills Hardware also lure top touring acts to perform in Hamilton’s classiest, club-size concert venue.
Located a few blocks west of the downtown core, The Casbah is a local institution whose couch-lined, rec-room ambience is reflective of the anything-goes booking policy. (One recent bill featured Toronto dub-funk alchemists Doomsquad supported by a ‘50s-style doo-wop girl group from South Korea called the Barbarettes.) And across the road, on the fringe of the student-swarmed Hess Village club district, you’ll find Doors Pub, a hybrid taqueria/concert venue that believes the best way to work a taco through your digestive system is to rattle your intestines with live thrash bands. (It just goes to show that, while steel may no longer be Hamilton’s defining export, there’s always room here for more heavy metal.)
But these are just the proper venues—concerts in Hamilton can pop up in warehouses, recording studios, even people’s homes. Keep tabs on roving local promoters Strangewaves for a gateway into Hamilton’s fertile underground scene.
These are my favourite things to do in Hamilton by night. Upcoming posts will take you into neighbourhoods more conducive to daytime adventures. I’ll also show you how to experience Hamilton’s many natural wonders—they don’t call this place the waterfall capital of Canada for nothing…
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