On a typical weekday morning, thousands of commuters pour out of the subway at Yonge and Dundas. For decades, they heard "Dundas Station." Today, they hear TMU.
It's a small change that points to something much larger. Across the downtown core and beyond, Toronto Metropolitan University is in the middle of the most significant expansion in its history—building upward, outward and inward, reshaping not only what its campus looks like, but what it can offer the students, researchers and communities it serves.
Within the next few years: a 21-storey residence tower will more than double on-campus housing. A new medical school is taking root in Brampton. The Lincoln Alexander School of Law is getting a permanent home. A landmark student wellbeing centre is under construction. And Canada's largest transit system now carries the university's name at TMU Station.
Together, these projects signal the kind of institution TMU is becoming—ambitious, connected and deeply woven into the fabric of the city it calls home.
A campus growing with the city
Life in downtown Toronto has long been part of the campus experience. TMU's buildings sit among office towers, retail corridors and residential streets. Students cross busy intersections on their way to lectures. But the scale and pace of development underway now signals a new phase, one in which the university's identity is becoming inseparable from the city around it.
"This moment is about positioning the university for the next generation," says TMU President Mohamed Lachemi. "We are investing in spaces that reflect who we are today—an urban, innovative institution focused on access, community impact and student success. These projects are not just about buildings; they're about creating the environment our students need to thrive."
The transformation is unfolding simultaneously in multiple directions: vertically in the downtown core; outward into neighbouring regions; and deeper into student services.
The TMU School of Medicine was designed by Canadian architecture firm Diamond Schmitt, working in collaboration with the Indigenous-owned design firm Two Row Architect. Photo: Alyssa K Faoro
TMU’s Brampton campus is training physicians where they’re needed most—in one of Ontario’s most underserved regions. Photo: Alyssa K Faoro