
Our modern urban infrastructure is so pervasive that most of it goes virtually unnoticed. But every once in a while, something appears just out of place enough to make you stop and wonder what it's doing there. For example, an electricity meter strapped to a light pole directly above a pedestrian "push to cross" button, its familiar flat disk spinning slowly and recording usage of, um, what exactly?
Since first puzzling over that meter at Kingston Road & Celeste Drive earlier this year, we've been noticing a lot more of them in odd locations. Some of the places deemed to require monitoring include the edge of a forested park, a hydro pole with big fat conduits leading to a small grey box, and a lamp post with no obvious connection to anything (all pictured above). Unlike meters at cellular or broadcast transmission towers, these don't seem to be associated with any particular structure or electricity consumer. So what are they measuring, and for whom? It's a mystery to us.
Photos by Val Dodge.


you could always nip over to the toronto life magazine website and ask the urban decoder.
Perhaps Hydro has meters on a small number of street lights as a sample. Then they multiply the metered results by the number of actual street lights for billing. Just a guess.
i would guess there's a pipeline underground nearby and these measure the pressure
Mind control, seriously.