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Queens Quay is a prominent street in the Harbourfront neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [1] The street was originally commercial in nature due to the many working piers along the waterfront; parts of it have been extensively rebuilt in since the 1970s with parks, condominiums, retail, as well as institutional and cultural development.
Queens Quay is an underground streetcar station of the Toronto streetcar system in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Along with Spadina station and Union station , it is one of three stations open overnight to support late-night streetcar routes .
The Walter Carsen Centre for The National Ballet of Canada [1] is a building at 470 Queens Quay West on the waterfront in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The lower levels house the headquarters of the National Ballet of Canada and the ballet's rehearsal space.
Harbourfront Centre is a cultural organization on the waterfront of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, situated at 235 Queens Quay West. Established as a crown corporation in 1972 [dubious – discuss] by the Government of Canada to create a waterfront park, it became a non-profit organization in 1991.
RBC WaterPark Place is an office complex designed by WZMH Architects and located at 88 Queens Quay West in Toronto, Canada.. Home to the Royal Bank of Canada, it features a 31-storey tower with 930,000 square feet (86,000 m 2) of space and developed by Oxford Properties outside the traditional financial core of the city. [1]
Queen's Quay Terminal is a condominium apartment, office and retail complex in the Harbourfront neighbourhood in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.It was originally built in 1927 as a marine terminal with office, warehouse and cold-storage facilities.
It is south of Bay Street and Queens Quay in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Toronto Island Ferry Docks were renamed the Jack Layton Ferry Terminal in 2013 to honour Jack Layton, who served as a Toronto city councillor, and was later leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP) and leader of the Official Opposition.
It was the first new Toronto streetcar route in many years, and the first to employ a dedicated tunnel, approximately 600 metres (2,000 ft) long. The route starts with an underground loop at Union station, runs south along Bay Street to the underground Queens Quay station, then turns west and emerges onto Queens Quay.