Toronto Road Closure

Street festivals to shut down Toronto roads this weekend

This weekend is a doozy for road closures across Toronto. Pride events will be taking over city streets alongside a number of other music and food festivals. It's the ideal weekend to ditch the car and hit the streets. 

Here's what you need to know if you plan on driving in the city this weekend.

TD Toronto Jazz Festival

The annual jazz music festival will result in road closures until June 30. Roads affected include.

  • Queens Park Cres. between Charles St. West and Bloor St. West will be closed on June 21 at 6 a.m. until June 24 at 6 a.m.
  • Cumberland St. between Old York Ln. and Bellair St. will be closed from June 21 at noon until June 30 at midnight.
Junction Summer Solstice

Dundas St. West from High Park Ave. to Indian Grove will be closed from June 22 at 5 a.m. until June 23 at 2 a.m for the street festival.

Fairbank Summerfest

Eglinton Ave. West from Dufferin St. to Ronald Ave. will be closed on June 22 at 2 a.m. until June 24 at 2 a.m for the street festival.

Thrill of the Grill

Danforth Ave. will be closed from Broadview Ave. to Playter Ave. on June 22 from 3 p.m. until midnight for the food festival.

The Queensway Buttertart Festival

Local streets around Queensway Park will be closed on June 22 from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m for the buttertart celebration.

This includes Avon Park Dr. between The Queensway to Cochrane Dr., Cochrane Dr. from Cochrane Court to Smith Cres., and Smith Cres. from Cochrane Dr to The Queensway.

Lead photo by

Toronto Jazz Festival


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Canadians can get gift card in Ticketmaster class action and here's who is eligible

Here's what the new Bank of Canada interest rate cut means

2025 declared 'the year of digging' for $27 billion Ontario Line

Here's why one guy kept making Avatar references at Toronto City Hall meeting

Locals impatient about Toronto venue under repair for ages with no end in sight

Lawsuit filed after deaths of Toronto mother and son on trip to Dominican Republic

Controversial Toronto project will make traffic even worse than initially thought

Ontario Child benefit can get parents almost $1,700 per kid every year