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An RC drift car from Redcat Racing, the Lightning EPX Drift is a 1:10 scale drift-spec’d car that has a lot of similarities to the Thunder Drift we mentioned earlier.
In April 2013, the Gimli Glider was offered for sale at auction, by a company called Collectable Cars, [9] with an estimated price of CA$2.75–3 million. [27] However, bidding only reached CA$425,000 and the lot was unsold. [28] According to a website dedicated to saving the aircraft, the Gimli Glider was scrapped in early 2014.
The Canadian province of Ontario has a significant number of ghost towns. These are most numerous in the Central Ontario and Northern Ontario regions, although a smaller number of ghost towns can be found throughout the province.
Corktown is an older residential neighbourhood in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The neighbourhood is south of Shuter Street, north of the Gardiner Expressway, east of Parliament Street, and west of Don River to the east. Corktown contains many vacated industrial buildings, some now used for movie production, and others repurposed for ...
Since the City of Toronto was then located in the Canada West area of the Province of Canada, "Toronto" gave way to "Canadian" in the club's name. [6] The first clubhouse was established in a building owned by Sir Casimir Gzowski, near the present site of Union Station. After a short tenancy, the club moved to a one-storey building erected on a ...
Davisville is a fairly wealthy neighbourhood. Approximately 33% of Davisville's households earn more than $60,000 per year, which is more than double Toronto, which has an approximately 16.2% of its households earning more than $60,000 per year. [3] Davisville has a higher percentage of Canadian citizens than Toronto according to the 2006 ...
A De Grassi Street sign. Autumn trees lean over De Grassi Street. De Grassi Street is a side street located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.It was named after Captain Filippo "Philip" De Grassi, an Italian-born soldier who immigrated to Canada with his family in 1831 and settled in York, Upper Canada.
The Ontario Heritage Foundation placed a plaque near the site of the disaster on its 50th anniversary. [22] The hull of Charles A. Reed, Toronto's wooden-hulled fireboat, was damaged by the fire's extreme heat, triggering city council to seek to replace her with a more powerful, modern, steel-hulled vessel. [23]