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Warden Woods Mall or Warden Power Centre (1981–2005) at Warden Avenue north of St. Clair Avenue East near Warden station, Scarborough [12] was a full mall with three anchor stores (The Bay, Simpson's and a Knob Hill Farms grocery store) and later as clearance centre. It has since been demolished and replaced with townhouses.
Markham Street at London Street. Markham Street is a north–south residential street located in the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, one block west of Bathurst Street.Its northern end starts in the Seaton Village neighbourhood and it passes through Mirvish Village, Palmerston–Little Italy, Trinity–Bellwoods and ends at West Queen Street West at its south end.
Lee Van Grack Toronto has everything you want in a photogenic city. It has a long shoreline with lapping waves. It has the iconic CN tower that looms over a giant egg-shaped stadium. There are ...
Sears Canada originally operated as a full line Sears within the mall that opened on September 28th, 1977; then was converted to a Sears Home store (selling furniture and appliances; upper level as an outlet centre) and in recent years as a Sears Outlet Store. The location then closed in April of 2017, citing financial difficulties by ...
In 1958, "Honest Ed's" expanded west to Markham Street to encompass 6,000 square feet and in 1984, the Honest Ed's annex building was completed expanding the store east to Bathurst Street. [4] The main building was at 581 Bloor Street West and the annex at 760 Bloor Street West with the two connected by a walkway crossing Honest Ed Alley.
Market Village was a 325,000-square-foot (30,200 m 2) shopping mall in Markham, Ontario, Canada. [1] Opened in 1990 and expanded in 1995, the mall closed on March 1, 2018. [ 2 ]
A view of McCowan Road within Markham, Ontario. Photo taken from south of Steeles Avenue. The intersection at McCowan Road and McNicoll Avenue within Toronto. McCowan Road is a major north-south thoroughfare in the Greater Toronto Area, Canada.
Bay Street, formerly known as Bear Street, is supposedly a reference to a "noted chase given to a bear" by settlers in that area. [5] It is the centre of Toronto's Financial District and is often used as a metonym to refer to Canada's financial industry, similar to New York City's Wall Street in the United States.