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The architecture of Toronto is an eclectic combination of architectural styles, ranging from 19th century Georgian architecture to 21st century postmodern architecture and beyond. Initially, the city was on the periphery of the architectural world, embracing styles and ideas developed in Europe and the United States with only limited local ...
Old Toronto [40] James McDonnell Building 1842 79–81 King Street East St. Lawrence: Old Toronto [40] John F. Smith Building 1842 75–77 King Street East St. Lawrence: Old Toronto [40] Paul Bishop's House: 1842 363–365 Adelaide Street East Old Town: Old Toronto [40] Roblin's Mill 1842 1000 Murray Ross Parkway (The Village at Black Creek)
TOBuilt is a digital, crowd-sourced database of buildings, structures, heritage sites, and human-made landscapes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada maintained by the Toronto branch of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario. The database's initial catalogue was created by Robert Krawczyk in 2006.
Gothic Revival architecture in Toronto (47 P) H. ... Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Toronto" The following 180 pages are in this category, out of 180 ...
List of tallest buildings in Toronto This page was last edited on 15 August 2024, at 21:18 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...
Also known as the "First Toronto Post Office" (it was the fourth post office in York, but the first one to serve the settlement when it became Toronto in 1834), it is one of the earliest surviving examples in Canada of a building purpose-built as a post office; typical of small, early 19th-century public buildings, combining public offices and ...
The City of Toronto's Heritage Property Inventory is a list of buildings, structures, and properties in Toronto that are identified by the city, for the purposes of preserving their original facades and appearances. [1]
Designed by prominent Toronto architect Edward James Lennox, the building took more than a decade to build and cost more than $2.5 million (equals close to 53 million today). [3] Work on the building began in 1889 and was built on the site of old York buildings including the Lennox hotel. [5]