Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Toronto Congress Centre (TCC) is an event, meeting and trade show complex in the former city of Etobicoke in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located near Toronto Pearson International Airport. It has over one million square feet (93,000 m 2 ) of exhibition space between two buildings, making it one of the largest facilities of its kind in Canada ...
On April 16, 2018, falling ice from the CN Tower punctured the roof of the nearby Rogers Centre stadium, causing the Toronto Blue Jays to postpone the game that day to the following day as a doubleheader; this was the third doubleheader held at the Rogers Centre. On April 20 of the same year, the CN Tower reopened.
Kep building collapse Kep, Cambodia: Tourist guesthouse under construction 36 dead, 26 injured [50] 2020 Palmerah West Jakarta four-story building collapse Jakarta, Indonesia: Building 11 injured [51] 2020 Collapse of Xinjia Express Hotel: Quanzhou, Fujian, China Hotel 29 dead, 42 injured 2020 Caprigliola bridge collapse: Caprigliola, Tuscany ...
The show outgrows the North Building of the MTCC and moves to the much larger South Building. August 24–26, 2007 Metro Toronto Convention Centre: 43,738 David Prowse, Malcolm McDowell, Dario Argento, Adrienne Barbeau, Herschell Gordon Lewis, Angela Bettis, Greg Nicotero, Basil Gogos, August 22–24, 2008 Metro Toronto Convention Centre: 44,500
The 1,232 seat, multi-purpose theatre is a self-contained venue within the Metro Toronto Convention Centre's North Building. The adjacent rooms host pre-and post-performance receptions. The theatre also hosts corporate events, a number of nationally televised award shows, community events and national and international TV specials.
The large St. Lawrence Market south building incorporates part of the 1845 Toronto City Hall building in its Front Street facade. The north side of the street is the St. Lawrence Market north building, the original market location, which was originally the Market Square. East of Jarvis Street, the street continues as a four-lane two-way street.
The rail yards were transferred to new locations north and east of Toronto. The main rail lines south of the centre were retained. The convention centre and hotel was completed in 1984, built by CN Real Estate designed by Architects Crang and Boake. In 1995, ownership was transferred to Canada Lands Corporation, an agency of the Government of ...
The tower is a part of the Toronto-Dominion Centre office complex; Tallest building completed in Toronto in the 1960s [8] [9] Bay Adelaide Centre West Tower 218 / 715 51 2009 Commercial The tower is a part of the Bay Adelaide Centre office complex; Tallest building completed in Toronto in the 2000s; Bay Wellington Tower 208 / 682 49 1991 Commercial