In March 2020, Hugh’s Room Live was locked out of its Roncesvalles home by a landlord demanding rent increases the non-profit music venue couldn’t sustain. Property taxes had jumped 59% over three years. The math didn’t work. Just days later, COVID-19 shut down the entire live music industry.

For most venues, the timing would have been catastrophic. For Hugh’s Room, it was oddly fortuitous.
“It was a bit of a blessing,” says Michael Booth, Executive Director of Hugh’s Room Live. “The landlord was stuck with a venue and no revenue for COVID, rather than us being stuck with a lease obligation and no revenue to meet it.”
What followed was a three-year search for a permanent home—one that wouldn’t subject the venue to the same market pressures that had forced the closure. The answer came not from traditional real estate financing, but from the community itself.
Through a combination of community bonds, traditional donations, and creative financing, Hugh’s Room purchased 296 Broadview Avenue, a former church building in East Chinatown. By June 2023, they owned the building. Two months later, they were presenting shows.
Now, Hugh’s Room is running a traditional fundraising campaign—targeting $250,000 to match a $328,000 grant from the Canada Cultural Spaces Fund for full accessibility renovations starting June 29, 2026. In the first two months of the campaign, they’ve raised about half the target, with most of that coming in the last few weeks.
It’s a remarkable comeback story for a venue that has defined Toronto’s folk and roots music scene for 25 years. But as Hugh’s Room enters what Booth calls its “second chapter,” it faces a challenge that has nothing to do with financing or programming: convincing Toronto that the city doesn’t end at the Don River.
The Geography Problem No One Wants to Talk About

Hugh’s Room is now more accessible by transit than its Roncesvalles location ever was. Three streetcar lines converge at Broadview and Gerrard. It’s a shorter trip from Union Station. And yet, the perception barrier remains.
Booth is direct about the challenge.
“There’s this ‘my Toronto’ mindset, and I get it,” he says. “But if we’re on the other side of the river and you’re from the West End, suddenly we’re somewhere in eastern Scarborough—even though we’re actually closer to downtown than the old place was, and we’re on three transit lines.”
The mental geography of the city doesn’t match the physical reality.
“This area just isn’t in people’s mindset as a community to go to from another neighbourhood,” Booth explains. “If you live around the university or Queen West or Parkdale, you have a sense of where things are and what’s happening over there—what’s going on in the Junction, what’s happening around Dufferin and Dundas. But this area doesn’t have that.”
Wedged between the more established Danforth to the north and the rapidly gentrifying Riverside to the south, this stretch of Gerrard Street East has remained conspicuously absent from conversations about Toronto’s emerging neighbourhoods.

Booth uses a telling phrase to describe it.
“This neighbourhood has been trapped in amber for a long time. It hasn’t changed much in 30 years, but it’s starting to.”
He pauses, then adds: “We’re in between the Danforth and Riverside. Something’s going to click or break here at some point.”
A Legacy That Runs Through the Riverboat and Mariposa
Hugh’s Room’s story begins long before 2020, and its roots run deep in Toronto’s folk music history.
Richard Carson founded the venue in 2001 in memory of his brother Hugh, a folk music fan who died of cancer in 1999. For 16 years, it operated on Dundas West in Roncesvalles, hosting Canadian icons like Gordon Lightfoot, Joni Mitchell, and Sylvia Tyson alongside international legends like Pete Seeger and Judy Collins.
The venue’s legacy connects directly to Toronto’s folk music lineage—the Riverboat, the legendary Yorkville club where many of these artists got their start in the 1960s and 70s, and the Mariposa Folk Festival, which Booth has been involved with since 1985.
“Hugh’s Room’s history really reaches right back to the Riverboat and Mariposa’s time in the city,” Booth says. “Our publicist actually worked at the Riverboat in the 70s. Many of us have worked for Mariposa for years. It’s all part of that ecosystem—the legacy of Gordon Lightfoot and Joni Mitchell and Neil Young and everybody who got their start here in the 60s and 70s.”
In 2017, facing mounting financial pressures, the venue closed and reformed as a non-profit charity. But by 2020, those pressures had become insurmountable. The landlord Booth describes as “erratic” was demanding rent increases far beyond what the operation could sustain.
During the three years between losing their Roncesvalles location and purchasing 296 Broadview, Hugh’s Room operated as a touring presenter, using partner venues like Tranzac, Revival, and 3030 Dundas West to keep relationships with artists alive.
“We kept supporting artists while bringing back live music to our dedicated—and very patient—audiences, all while continuing our search for a new home,” Booth says.
Community Bonds: How 2,000 People Bought a Building
The financing solution that made 296 Broadview possible came from former board chair Brian Iler, who had pioneered the use of community bonds in Toronto for non-profit housing and cultural spaces like the Centre for Social Innovation.
The purchase was funded through a combination of community bonds, traditional donations, and creative financing. A few dozen initial bond purchasers in the first series, combined with over 1,000 traditional donors, raised over $1 million toward the purchase—alongside a vendor take-back mortgage from Broadview Faith Temple and private lending.
Community bonds function like traditional bonds—investors lend money at a fixed interest rate for a set term—but they’re secured by the property itself and offered specifically to people who want to support the mission, not just earn a return.
A second bond series in 2024 raised $1.3 million to pay off the private lender. The result: except for a small amount left on the transferred mortgage from the church, all of Hugh’s Room’s debt is now owed to the community, and they have equity in about half the building.
It gave Hugh’s Room something it had never had in 25 years: ownership—and insulation from the rent increases that killed the original location.
The timeline was remarkably compressed. They closed the purchase at the end of June 2023. Then came the hard work.
“We pushed forward to get a show on the stage by September 20th,” Booth recalls. “We still had our old PA and our old gear, and we brought back people who had worked at the old place. It was a very different model than before—the old location had been a restaurant with a separate club vibe. But we decided to focus on the concert hall and music side.”
Last year, Hugh’s Room presented approximately 170 shows. Combined with a thriving rental business—music schools, recitals, and other arts presentations—the venue hosted roughly 220 event nights in 2024.

The Accessibility Campaign: Opening New Doors
The accessibility fundraising campaign—targeting $250,000 to match the Canada Cultural Spaces Fund grant of $328,000—isn’t just about removing barriers for patrons. It’s about unlocking entirely new revenue streams.
Booth is frank about the business case.
“I’ve had organizations come and say they want to rent here—they want to do things in the space—but they can’t because we’re not accessible,” he explains. “We can’t host statutory meetings or polling stations for federal or municipal elections when it’s a Monday and we’re dark. By policy, they’re not allowed to use anything that the public needs 100% access to in buildings that aren’t accessible.”
The venue will close for two months starting June 29, 2026, for renovations. When it reopens, it will be able to host public meetings, polling stations, school programs, and daytime community events.
Booth sees the accessibility project as both a moral imperative and a strategic evolution.
“That’s going to open up even deeper ties with the community. We’ll be able to host things in here that we simply can’t do now, in addition to providing accessibility to a larger portion of our audience.”

The demographic reality is unavoidable. Hugh’s Room’s core audience is aging.
“Our audience does skew older. And as the boomer generation moves into their 80s, social isolation becomes an issue. We want to be that place where folks can come and get in—no problem—get to the washrooms, be comfortable,” Booth says. “When we first opened, people were asking, ‘Oh, you have seats, right? You don’t have to stand?’ There are so many concert halls that do not cater to that audience.”
The venue occupies a unique niche in Toronto’s live music ecosystem—smaller than soft-seat theatres like Massey Hall, but more intimate than 1,000-seat venues. At 200 seats, it serves artists who have outgrown 80-person clubs but aren’t yet filling major concert halls.
Booth sees this as both an opportunity and a responsibility.
“There are lots of 80-person holes in the wall, and lots of 1,000-seat theatres. But there’s not a lot of places like this. So it’s really important that we are accessible, especially as the population ages and some of those people have a little more disposable income and a little more time.”
The One-Person Operation Running 220 Events
Hugh’s Room brings 170 shows annually to Broadview and Gerrard, with doors typically opening at 7pm. That’s roughly 150-200 people, multiple nights per week, creating predictable foot traffic patterns. Yet the venue has limited capacity to formalize partnerships with nearby restaurants and retailers.
When asked about coordinating with local businesses, Booth doesn’t dodge the question.
“Our challenge, frankly, here is capacity. I’m the only full-time person. I have a marketing development coordinator who’s part-time, and she’s very much focused on the development side right now because we’re raising money for accessibility.”
The venue does have some organic partnerships. The website lists nearby restaurants. Prohibition on Queen Street offers discounts for ticket holders. Oji Seichi ramen—which Booth calls “the best ramen in town”—and the newly reopened Bakerrae bakery at 326 Broadview get regular referrals for artist meal buyouts.

Then there’s Derek Antonio at Pop Music, the vinyl record shop across the street, who made a business decision based on Hugh’s Room’s arrival.
“Derek told me he signed his longer-term lease when he found out we had bought this building and were coming in,” Booth says. “And I know some of our artists who come from out of town have gone over there and left some money with him.”
But these are individual relationships, not systematic coordination. There’s no pre-show dining package program, no passport for ticket holders, no formalized network.
Booth is matter-of-fact about it.
“We haven’t really had the opportunity to go around and have a good chat with everyone. It’s been on my list for a little while. As we get into the spring and come out of the accessibility campaign, hopefully I’ll get a little more time for that kind of community work.”
The Audience Challenge: Getting Toronto to Take Risks

Even when people make the trip east of the Don, Hugh’s Room faces another hurdle. Toronto audiences, Booth has noticed, are surprisingly conservative about unknown artists.
“Where we struggle is with some younger, maybe lesser-known artists—artists from more diverse communities,” he explains. “I think Toronto audiences, and I think this applies not just to live entertainment but to restaurants and retailers, are a little conservative. People are very wary of spending their hard-earned money on something they’re not sure of.”
Legacy acts sell out easily. The Arrogant Worms, 81-year-old folk legend Valdy—these shows fill the room. But emerging artists struggle to draw crowds despite Hugh’s Room’s curatorial reputation.
Booth sees it as a trust issue the venue needs to overcome.
“If we book them, that’s about brand trust, which we do have a lot of. But I still sometimes struggle with this. If you like a great legacy artist and you come to that show every year, you’re going to like this other artist, even though you haven’t heard of them. We think they’re good enough to put on here.”
He tries to encourage audiences to take chances.
“I tell people, look, if you see someone who looks interesting, take that chance. It’s not going to be bad. We don’t book bad shows. We never have. If we book them, they’re worth seeing.”
On the Cusp of Something New

Despite the challenges, Booth remains optimistic. The venue’s Google Maps reviews are overwhelmingly positive, attendance is steady, and the accessibility campaign has raised about half its target in two months. More importantly, he’s increasingly hearing from locals who are happy the venue is in the neighbourhood.
“Many nights, people say, ‘Oh yeah, I just live four or five blocks away. I used to go to the old place and I stopped because it was on the other side of town,’ or ‘I’m new to the neighbourhood and we’re so happy to have this here,'” Booth says. “And those are people who are also frequenting these restaurants and other businesses around here as well.”
The signs of neighbourhood change are becoming more visible. Bakerrae has reopened after closing its Upper Beaches location. New restaurants are opening on Gerrard. Papered-over windows suggest renovations in progress at other storefronts.
“When I see Bakerrae coming in, a couple new places opening on Gerrard, some place with papered-over windows that looks like it’s doing work—I don’t know what’s going in there yet—that gives me some hope,” Booth says.
He reflects on what this moment represents for both the venue and the corridor.
“It does feel like we’re on the cusp. A second chapter for Hugh’s Room, but also on the cusp of something new in a neighbourhood that’s probably one of the last neighbourhoods in the older part of the city to kind of break out and become a place that people go to.”
For Booth, the goal extends beyond the venue’s own success. Hugh’s Room isn’t just trying to survive—it’s trying to be a catalyst.
“If we can be a leader in that, or if we’re bringing people in who wouldn’t normally come to this neighbourhood and that creates some change and growth the way it has in other parts of the city—that would be great. We could not ask for more than that.”

Dustin Fuhs is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of 6ix Retail, Toronto’s premier source for retail and hospitality industry news. As the former Editor-in-Chief of Retail Insider, Canada’s most-read retail trade publication, Dustin brings over two decades of expertise spanning retail, marketing, entertainment and hospitality sectors. His experience includes roles with industry giants such as The Walt Disney Company, The Hockey Hall of Fame, The Canadian Opera Company, Starbucks Canada and Blockbuster.
Recognized as a RETHINK Retail Top Retail Expert in 2024, 2025 and 2026, Dustin delivers insider perspectives on Toronto’s evolving retail landscape, from emerging brands to established players reshaping the city’s commercial districts.
