Mimico is the established lakefront pocket of south Etobicoke bounded by Royal York Road along the east, Lake Shore Boulevard West threading through the south, and the Humber Bay shoreline along the south-east. Interior streets include Mimico Avenue, Stanley Avenue, and Superior Avenue, with the Mimico GO station anchoring transit and Amos Waites Park along the lakefront. The neighbourhood mixes 1910s-40s original brick and frame builds, mid-century renovations, and a growing band of newer Humber Bay-edge condominiums. Glass work here ranges from renovation-scale frameless showers in heritage stock to lake-exposure railings on lakefront condo terraces and vanity mirrors, with every install carrying our 5-year workmanship warranty.
What Mimico homes ask of glass
The Mimico housing stock spans more than a century. The original 1910s-40s brick and frame builds dominate the inland streets and are deep into second- or third-generation renovation. The mid-century infill on the lots closer to Lake Shore Boulevard West sits in a steady renovation cycle. The newer 2000s-onward Humber Bay condominiums along the south-east edge have brought a different glass brief — lake-exposure terrace railings and unit-scale frameless showers in tighter footprints.
Major corridors anchoring the neighbourhood include Royal York Road along the east, Lake Shore Boulevard West along the south, and Mimico Avenue as the central east-west collector. The Mimico GO station along Royal York is the transit landmark, and Amos Waites Park along the Humber Bay shoreline is the public lake-edge landmark.
Frameless shower enclosures in Mimico
The Mimico primary ensuite shower zone in a heritage house renovation is typically 1.3 to 1.6 metres long with a curbless entry. In a Humber Bay condominium unit, the wet zone is often smaller — 1.1 to 1.4 metres — because the floor plate is tighter. Frameless shower glass in heritage stock is most often a two- or three-panel run with 10 mm tempered as the standard. In condominium units, a single fixed plus a swing in 10 mm tempered is the most common configuration. Panel heights are 2.0 to 2.3 metres in houses and 2.2 to 2.4 metres in newer condominium units. Templating in heritage Mimico is patient work because the 1910s-40s walls are not square — out 8 to 12 mm over a 2.2 metre panel height is common, and we shim, taper, or notch at fabrication. Pricing for Mimico shower enclosures sits in the mid range, with the upper range applying on condominium units that spec low-iron Starphire to match adjacent unit upgrades.
Glass railings in Mimico
Glass railings in Mimico split two ways. In heritage houses, interior stair railings are the main category, replacing original wood-and-spindle systems with frameless or top-railed glass on a 2.5 to 4 metre run. We base-shoe anchor to the stair stringer and confirm the floor framing at template — many 1910s-40s Mimico floor systems use narrower joists than current code. In Humber Bay condominium units, the dominant railing brief is the unit-terrace guard — typically a 3 to 6 metre run with lake exposure on the south or south-east elevation. Those terrace runs get 12 mm tempered as a minimum, with laminated glass specified on the highest-exposure sections facing the lake. Condominium railing replacements work within building rules and typically require board approval coordinated by the homeowner through the property manager.
Custom mirrors and partitions in Mimico
Vanity mirrors in Mimico heritage renovations are typically 1.5 to 2.0 metres on the vanity wall — smaller than the rebuild scale because the underlying footprint is more compact. In condominium units the mirror is often a single 1.4 to 1.8 metre piece set to the unit wall. We cut to the wall, polish all visible edges, and back-mount with adhesive and concealed clips. Sconce locations are cut through the glass on the wider walls. Heritage openings are often not true-square, and we cut to a template captured on-site rather than to a square nominal dimension.
Powder-room mirrors on the heritage homes are often cut to non-square arched or stepped openings where the original wall meets the door head trim, and we cut to a template captured on-site.
Why a recent install in Mimico matters
A recent install in Mimico was a Humber Bay condominium terrace railing on a south-facing unit. The terrace ran 4.8 metres with full south exposure to the lake. The structural brief called for a base-shoe anchored guard at code height, and the building rules required matching the existing tinted glass spec on adjacent units. We specified 13.52 mm laminated tinted glass to match the building standard, base-shoe anchored into the existing terrace structure with new flashing tied into the membrane. Condominium work in Mimico isn’t faster or slower than house work — it is just more about coordinating with the building.
Have a project in Mimico?
We do free in-home consults across the GTA. Call 416-897-0767 or message [email protected].
Areas we also serve nearby
- New Toronto / Long Branch — adjacent south-west along Lake Shore
- Stonegate-Queensway — adjacent north
- Sunnylea — north
- Old Mill — north-east
- Etobicoke pillar
- Port Credit — Mississauga lakefront neighbour west
- Frameless shower enclosures
- Glass railings
FAQs about glass work in Mimico
Do you serve Mimico?
Yes. Mimico sits inside our core Etobicoke service area. We’ve worked across the neighbourhood from Royal York Road south along Lake Shore Boulevard West, and through the Humber Bay condominium corridor along the lake.
How long does a frameless shower take in a Mimico heritage renovation?
About two to three weeks. Template 45 minutes once tile is set. Fabrication 10 to 14 business days. Install a half-day on a two- or three-panel run.
What glass thickness do you recommend for a Humber Bay condominium terrace railing?
12 mm tempered as a minimum on a base-shoe system. 13.52 mm laminated on sections with full lake exposure. Specific spec is driven by the building’s existing standard, which we coordinate at template.
Do you work with condominium board approvals in Mimico?
Yes. Most Humber Bay buildings require board approval and a building-approved installer. We prepare the documentation the homeowner submits, work within the building’s window-replacement protocol, and coordinate access through the property manager.