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Kensington Market is a distinctive multicultural neighbourhood in Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Market is an older neighbourhood and one of the city's best-known. In November 2006, it was designated a National Historic Site of Canada .
There are currently 103 FSAs in this list. There are no rural FSAs in Toronto, hence no postal codes should start with M0. However, a handful of individual special-purpose codes in the M0R FSA are assigned to "Gateway Commercial Returns, 4567 Dixie Rd, Mississauga" as a merchandise returns label for freepost returns to high-volume vendors such as Amazon and the Shopping Channel.
Kensington-Chinatown Old City of Toronto Alexandra Park, Chinatown, Grange Park, Kensington Market: N 6 Kingsview Village-The Westway Etobicoke Kingsview Village and Richview: Y 15 Kingsway South Etobicoke The Kingsway: N 147 L'Amoreaux West Scarborough L'Amoreaux, Leacock, and Bridlewood: N 114 Lambton Baby Point York Baby Point and Old Mill: N 38
Where, prior to World War II there used to be over 30 synagogues in the area in and Kensington Market, Spadina Avenue and Bathurst Street south of Bloor, today only four remain as many of the older buildings were sold when congregations relocated north of St. Clair Avenue in the 1950s and 1960s following the migration of the Jewish population ...
The No. 8 Hose Station is a small fire hall that is a Toronto landmark. It is located on College Street at Bellevue and marks the northern end of Kensington Market and serves the Chinatown area at Spadina and Dundas.
The Chinese Spadina began in the 1970s after the departure of Jewish Toronto (1920s to 1960s) from the area. It supplanted an older Chinatown centred on Dundas Street West and Elizabeth Street, which was disrupted when New City Hall was constructed in the early 1960s. Just west of the avenue in this area is the famed Kensington Market.
Longo's market situated in Path. The utilization of the tunnel network as retail space began in the mid-20th century. The network of underground walkways expanded under city planner Matthew Lawson in the 1960s. Toronto's downtown sidewalks were overcrowded, and new office towers were removing the much-needed small businesses from the streets.
The Toronto Christmas Market has been an annual outdoor tradition run within the Distillery District since 2010. [8] The market includes "Santa's house", an Indigo pop-up shop, pet photos with Santa, a Ferris wheel and themed entertainment each day.