Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Exposure time: 1/200 sec (0.005) F-number: f/9: ISO speed rating: 100: Date and time of data generation: 16:33, 23 September 2012: Lens focal length: 18 mm: Orientation: Normal: Horizontal resolution: 72 dpi: Vertical resolution: 72 dpi: File change date and time: 16:53, 23 September 2012: Y and C positioning: Co-sited: Exposure Program: Normal ...
Old City of Toronto N 60 Woodbine-Lumsden: East York N 94 Wychwood: Old City of Toronto N 170 Yonge–Bay Corridor Old City of Toronto Bay Street, Financial District: N 100 Yonge–Eglinton: Old City of Toronto Chaplin Estates: N 151 Yonge–Doris North York N 97 Yonge–St. Clair: Old City of Toronto N 27 York University Heights: North York Y 31
10 Toronto Street Toronto ON 43°38′59″N 79°22′34″W / 43.6498°N 79.3762°W / 43.6498; -79.3762 ( Toronto Street Post Office / Bank of Canada
Early 19th century Toronto was a town of a few thousand people. Most of the rest of the region that today makes up the city was rural farmland dotted with small villages. Some towns such as Norway have disappeared leaving only a few traces, but many others, such as Malvern and Wexford have become well known neighbourhoods in the Toronto suburbs ...
Rosedale is a neighbourhood in central Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was formerly the estate of William Botsford Jarvis, and so named by his wife, granddaughter of William Dummer Powell, for the wild roses that grew there in abundance. [2] It is located north of Downtown Toronto and is one of its oldest suburbs.
Old Town is a neighbourhood and retail district in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was the first of Toronto's named neighbourhoods, having acquired the moniker no later than 1815, at which time the original town of York was expanding. The old neighbourhood was referred to as "Old Town" by residents, and the new neighbourhood as "New Town ...
The west side of the bay is the location of the Ashbridge's Bay Wastewater Treatment Plant, Toronto's main sewage treatment plant and the second largest such facility in Canada. [ 10 ] A large willow tree on the estate, planted in 1919 and a well-known feature of the Leslieville neighbourhood, was felled by high winds in 2016.
Rochdale was the largest co-op residence in North America, occupying an 18-storey student residence at Bloor St. and Huron St. in downtown Toronto.It was situated on the edges of the University of Toronto campus, near to Yorkville, Toronto's hippie haven in the 1960s and early 1970s.