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  2. Bistro 990 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bistro_990

    The restaurant was a popular Toronto eatery for actors and other celebrities. [5] It was located on Bay Street near Wellesley, just opposite the elite Sutton Place Hotel, and near most of Toronto's other luxury hotels. [6] This district was also the centre of the annual Toronto International Film Festival for years. The Bistro had thus become ...

  3. Horseshoe Tavern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horseshoe_Tavern

    2006 - Hot Chip: Live At The Horseshoe, Toronto (recorded live 2005) 2006 - Loudness – Loudness In America 06 (concert film) 2006 - The Parkas: A Life Of Crime documentary / The Scars To Prove It E.P. (track "My Life Of Crime", recorded 2005) 2006 - Wolf Eyes: Live At Horseshoe Tavern, Toronto; 2006 - Wolf Eyes / John Wiese: Live Frying: Toronto

  4. List of lost buildings and structures in Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lost_buildings_and...

    Bank of Toronto 1913 1965 King and Bay (some stonework re-assembled at Guild Park) Land Registry Office [9] 1915 1964 Queen St W at Bay St, now Toronto City Hall Savarin Tavern 1919 1980 330 Bay Street (facade initially retained, later demolished) Maple Leaf Stadium: 1926 1967 Bathurst St at Fleet St National Building 1926 2009 333 Bay Street ...

  5. Brunswick House (Toronto) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_House_(Toronto)

    The Brunswick House was established by Benjamin Hinchcliffe, who had previously owned a series of hotels including St. George's at Yonge and Richmond and the Osgoode House at Queen and York. He used proceeds from selling land he owned on Chestnut Street to assemble a package of properties on which the construction of the Brunswick House began ...

  6. Temple Building (Toronto) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_Building_(Toronto)

    The building was located at Richmond and Bay Street. Upon its completion it was Toronto's tallest building, a title it would hold until the Trader's Bank Building was built in 1905. Foresters left the building in 1953 for a new building at 590 Jarvis Street at Charles Street (later as Metro Toronto Police HQ and demolished). [3]

  7. Bay Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_Street

    "Bay Street banker", as in the phrase "cold as a Bay Street banker's heart", was a term of opprobrium especially among Prairie farmers who feared that Toronto-based financial interests were hurting them. [5] Within the legal profession, the term Bay Street is also used colloquially to refer to the large, full-service business law firms of Toronto.

  8. List of east–west roads in Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_east–west_roads...

    Richmond Street absorbed Duchess Street and became a one-way road in 1958 as part of a process to build ramps to Eastern Avenue and the Don Valley Parkway. [18] Richmond Street is a westbound one-way street from Yonge Street to Strachan Avenue, and it is one-way eastbound from Niagara Street to Bathurst Street.

  9. Sterling Tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterling_Tower

    Designed by Chapman and Oxley, and completed in 1928, [4] the building was the tallest in the city for one year, until the construction of the Royal York Hotel.Henry Falk, a New York entrepreneur, was the builder responsible for Sterling Tower's construction along with local firm Yolles & Rotenberg.