Bob went underground looking for lunch.
Not metaphorical lunch. Real lunch. Something warm, possibly wrapped in paper, ideally involving fries.
It was a Saturday, and Bob figured the Toronto PATH would be a safe bet. After all, on a weekday this place hums like a beehive in a suit factory—lawyers, bankers, students, tourists, all orbiting food courts like planets around a shawarma sun.
Instead, Bob walked into… silence.
Tables stood perfectly aligned, chairs pushed in, stools stacked like modern art installations. The food courts looked ready for business but abandoned by humanity. Lights were on. Menus were glowing. But the grills were cold, and the cash registers were clearly taking the weekend off.
Bob wandered from court to court like an urban explorer:
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No lineups
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No clatter of trays
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No confused people asking “Is this where the Thai place used to be?”
Just empty tables and the soft echo of his footsteps.
From a street photography point of view, it was gold.
The PATH on a Saturday becomes something else entirely. Without the crowds, you start noticing the design: the clean lines, the symmetry, the repeating patterns of wood, tile, and light. Chairs flipped upside down on tables looked like sculptures. Long communal tables stretched out like runways with no planes scheduled.
Bob took photos of:
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Rows of chairs patiently waiting for Monday
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Food court counters frozen in time
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Lights glowing over absolutely nothing
It felt like the city had stepped out for a coffee and forgotten to come back.
But here’s the problem with photographing an empty food court on a Saturday…
You still need to eat.
Bob could not buy lunch.
Not a sandwich.
Not a coffee.
Not even a sad cookie.
Every place was closed. The PATH, so dependable Monday to Friday, had quietly packed up and gone home for the weekend. Bob eventually surfaced back to street level, slightly hungrier but far richer in photos and observations.
And that’s the thing Bob loves about street photography—it isn’t always about people. Sometimes it’s about absence. About what a place looks like when its purpose is temporarily switched off. The Toronto PATH without workers is like a stage after the actors leave: all the props are there, but the story pauses.
Saturday in the PATH taught Bob two things:
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Always check if food courts are actually open
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Empty spaces tell stories too
Bob didn’t get lunch that day.
But he did get a reminder that the city changes personalities depending on the day—and sometimes, the quiet version is just as interesting to photograph.
Next time though… Bob’s bringing snacks.






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