Ad
related to: castle bay caravan park portpatrick street in torontovisitacity.com has been visited by 100K+ users in the past month
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tommy Thompson Park (Leslie Street Spit) on the Toronto waterfront; Humber Bay Shores Waterfront Park — a park linking City-owned Palace Pier Park and Humber Bay Park East on the south side of Marine Parade Drive to Park Lawn Road in Etobicoke; TRCA briefly managed part of Rouge Park before it was transferred to Parks Canada.
216–232 Queen Street East Moss Park: Old Toronto 6 Rupert Simpson House 1889 Richardsonian Romanesque 2 Wellesley Place Church and Wellesley: Old Toronto 18 Toronto Hydro Dynamo House 1889 532 Bay Street Downtown Yonge: Old Toronto Trinity-St. Paul's United Church: 1889 Henry Langley & Edmund Burke: 427 Bloor Street West Harbord Village: Old ...
Queens Quay is a prominent street in the Harbourfront neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [1] The street was originally commercial in nature due to the many working piers along the waterfront; parts of it have been extensively rebuilt in since the 1970s with parks, condominiums, retail, as well as institutional and cultural development.
Castle Bay (Mi'kmawi'simk: Apji'jkmujue'katik; Scottish Gaelic: Bàgh a' Chaisteil) is a community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in the Cape Breton Regional Municipality on Cape Breton Island. The original Mi'kmaq placename, Apji'jkmujue'katik, means, "place of the ducks."
In 1931, James Stanley McLean constructed "Bay View" (now known as McLean House), a house overlooking the Don Valley with a view south down to Toronto Bay, on the edge of Moore Park [3] and ultimately this led to the road becoming known as Bayview Avenue. Bloor Street Viaduct looking from east side of Don Valley to west.
The Esplanade now begins as a two-lane street at Yonge Street, south of Front Street, north of the railway viaduct. To the north is the Meridian Hall with the "L Tower" condominium tower wedged in behind. Going east, both sides of the street are lined with late 20th-century or early 21st century mid-rise and high-rise condominium projects.
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.
The Canada Permanent Trust Building (now known as "The Permanent") is an 18-storey office building located at 320 Bay Street, in downtown Toronto. It was designed by the architect Henry Sproatt and completed in 1930. [1] The building was constructed as the headquarters of Canada Permanent.
Ad
related to: castle bay caravan park portpatrick street in torontovisitacity.com has been visited by 100K+ users in the past month