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View of College Street, 1897 Eaton's College Street Store under construction, 1930; until June 1931, Carlton Street ended at Yonge Street. College Street takes its name from the University of Toronto, originally King's College. Between Spadina Avenue and Yonge Street, College marks the southern boundary of the original 1827 land grant for the ...
Toronto Bible Training School 1898 (110 College Street, Toronto; 1898) Toronto Bible Training School Main Hall 1898 (110 College Street, Toronto; 1898) Tyndale's logo until 2012. The Toronto Bible Training School was founded in 1894 by a group of brethren under the supervision of Elmore Harris pastor of Walmer Road Baptist Church. [4]
College Park from the northeast corner of College and Yonge Street, 2022. College Park is a shopping mall, residential and office complex on the southwest corner of Yonge and College streets in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. An Art Deco landmark, the building was initially known as Eaton's College Street. It was operated by Eaton's from 1930 to 1977.
The Royal Cinema is a theatre that was opened in 1939.. College Street was fully laid out in the area by 1900 and the area was filled with buildings from the early 1900s. College Street is fronted by two- and three-storey buildings, with commercial uses on the ground floor and residential or storage uses on the upper flo
The centre houses a number of different student services, including the main campus bookstore, career centre, and health clinic. The ornate building is located at the northwest corner of St. George and College Street streets in a building that was formerly the home of the Toronto Reference Library.
In 1972, ICS moved to its current location on College Street in Toronto, and had added several faculty and had begun granting master's-level certification in philosophy. [6] In 1980, ICS began to develop a doctoral programme in co-operation with the Free University of Amsterdam.
University Avenue was originally made up of two streets, College Avenue and University Street, and separated by a fence, but it was eventually removed and the streets were merged. [1] The merged street ended at Queen Street until 1931, when it was extended southward to Front Street. [2] After World War Two the avenue was transformed.
The Grand Foyer at the Eaton's Seventh Floor in 1931. The floor was designed by French architect Jacques Carlu.. In 1930, the Eaton's department store chain, at the time Canada's dominant retailer, opened "Eaton's College Street", an imposing Art moderne store at the intersection of Yonge Street and College Street.