Dröm Treatment Space

Illustration in black ink on white background of a 3 candle candelabra with heart votive in the center with painted florals

2930 Dundas Street West

Toronto, Ontario

M6P 1Y8

Canada

photo of treatment space interior hallway with a dried pine bundle in window

Location Details

photo of treatment space with massage table in foreground and intake table by window in soft evening light

Dröm is a home-based practice, situated in a spacious, quiet and thoughtfully-curated treatment studio. 

Upon your arrival, please ring the doorbell and your therapist will come to greet you. Please arrive no earlier than 5 minutes before your scheduled appointment time to allow for transitions between clients. For safety reasons, the exterior door on Dundas Street West is locked. 

If you anticipate needing more time to climb the stairs or additional assistance, please contact your therapist by email so we can arrange accommodations prior to booking.

photo of intake table with spring bouquet and Windsor chair
photo of exterior entrance of 2930 Dundas Street West in the Junction Triangle

Land Acknowledgement 

Dröm is located in what is known as Toronto, a place with names in many Indigenous languages. One origin for this city’s name is the Mohawk word T’karonto, meaning “the place in the water where the trees are standing”. T’karonto has long been a cultural crossroads and is part of the traditional territory of many Nations, including the Wendat and Tionontati (Petun) First Nations, the Haudenosaunee, and most recently the Mississaugas of the Credit (of the Anishnabeg Peoples). This land has been governed by the Dish With One Spoon inter-nation peace agreement for a thousand years, and in recent times by the Williams Treaty and Treaty 13. 

I vow to live by the spirit of these agreements, in deepening consciousness of my responsibilities to this land that nourishes, teaches and shapes me, and of the gifts I have to give in this web of relationships. 

In acknowledgment of the ongoing harms of colonization, and the ways that the medical system is complicit and active in colonial violence, I redistribute the equivalent of my professional membership fees each year to local Indigenous sovereignty, land defense and mutual aid efforts.