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The Toronto statue stood for years inside the Main Store at Yonge and Queen streets. When the Main Store was demolished in the late 1970s to make way for the Toronto Eaton Centre, the statue was moved to the Dundas Street entrance of the chain's new flagship store. The Winnipeg statue stood for eight decades in the downtown store on Portage Avenue.
CF Toronto Eaton Centre, [2] commonly referred to simply as the Eaton Centre, is a shopping mall and office complex in the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is owned and managed by Cadillac Fairview (CF). It was named after the Eaton's department store chain that once anchored it before the chain went defunct in the late 1990s.
Woodbine Centre is a shopping mall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located at Rexdale Boulevard and Highway 27 in the Rexdale area of Toronto, across Rexdale Boulevard from Woodbine Racetrack. The mall has over 130 stores and is home to Fantasy Fair, a year-round indoor amusement park. The fair houses a Charles I. D. Looff carousel.
Universal Man is a sculpture by Gerald Gladstone located outside the Yorkdale Shopping Centre in North York, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, since 1994.The 6.5-metre (21 ft) bronze figure was originally located in a prominent location at the foot of the CN Tower, there located to "emphasize the human aspects of the project". [1]
St. Michael's College, University of Toronto: 1996: Joe Rosenthal Sculpture: Bronze: University of St. Michael's College [17] More images: Couch Monster: Art Gallery of Ontario: June 20, 2022: Brian Jungen: Sculpture: Bronze: 4m tall and 5.5m long Art Gallery of Ontario [18] [19] More images: Courante: Toronto Music Garden: Various Sculpture ...
South African War Memorial (Toronto) Statue of Al Purdy; Statue of Alexander Wood; Statue of Edward S. Rogers Jr. Statue of Elizabeth II (Toronto) Statue of George Brown; Statue of Glenn Gould; Statue of Jack Layton; Statue of James Whitney; Statue of John A. Macdonald (Toronto) Statue of John Graves Simcoe; Statue of John Sandfield Macdonald ...
The Main Store and the Annex, however, were the only two buildings open to the public. The two buildings were connected by an underground passageway open to both employees and shoppers. It was the first underground pathway in Toronto open to the public, and it is often credited as a historic precursor to Toronto's current downtown PATH network.
A statue of Al Purdy, sometimes called the Al Purdy Memorial, is installed in Toronto's Queen's Park, in Ontario, Canada. The sculpture was created by Edwin and Veronica Dam de Nogales, and unveiled in 2008.