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The clock (with four illuminated faces) was manufactured in England and installed by Alex Beath, veteran jeweller and watchmaker of Sudbury. [3] pg 32 The post office was demolished in 1959 [7] pg 197, replaced by F.W. Woolworth's building, which was also demolished 1998. Federal Building & Post Office -1915 - Sudbury Ontario: King Edward Hotel
The Union Hotel is a boutique hotel located in Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located on the northern side of Toronto's Union Station, after which it is named. The hotel originally opened in 1933 as the Strathcona Hotel. The hotel underwent renovations in 2023 and reopened in 2025, adopting its present name.
Elm Place, Greater Sudbury, Ontario. Elm Street Entrance. The Elm Place Mall is a mall in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. It was built as part of the plan to demolish the Borgia Neighborhood in Sudbury in the 1970s. It was bought in the early 2000’s by Vista Hospitality, and is as of 2017 being managed under Robert Green. [1]
The downtown of Sudbury is bounded by Ste-Anne Road/Davidson Street (1909) [1] pg 12 to the north, Douglas Street (1909) [1] pg 13 at Brady (1905) [1] pg 6 /Elgin Street at Howey Drive to the south, Kitchener Street to the east and Alder Street to the west, and includes one of the city's largest concentration of retail businesses and offices.
A proposed development from a private-sector Sudbury group named Le Ledo Inc. which sees the Ledo reimagined as a 150,000 sq ft (14,000 m 2) mixed-use commercial facility. The envisioned project is an adaptive reuse of the Ledo Hotel, with the addition of a 14-storey tower to be used as either a hotel or for residential purposes.
The Ford Hotel was a historic hotel in central Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was one of five hotels in the R.T. Ford & Company hotel chain and was identical to the Ford Hotel, Buffalo and Ford Hotel, Montreal. [1] The 750-room hotel consisted of three 12-story wings connected at the rear by a perpendicular spine atop a one-story base contained ...
According to the Financial Post the next hotel to open in the building was a ″temperance hotel″. [5] In 1921 the hotel bore a large sign saying ″Hotel Spadina″. Toronto Sun columnist Mike Filey speculated that the 1917 change of name from the Zeigler Hotel to the Hotel Spadina was to counter prejudice against German names during World ...
Walden (Canada 1996 Census population 10,292) was a town in the Canadian province of Ontario, which existed from 1973 to 2000.Created as part of the Regional Municipality of Sudbury when regional government was introduced, the town was dissolved when the city of Greater Sudbury was incorporated on January 1, 2001.