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The Chelsea Hotel, Toronto is the largest hotel in Canada, [1] located at 33 Gerrard Street West in Toronto, Ontario. The 24 floor, 83.72 metres (274.7 ft) hotel contains 1,590 guest rooms and suites, with 5 basements and 18 elevators.
Gerrard Street is a street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.It consists of two separate parts, historically referred to as Lower Gerrard and Upper Gerrard. The former stretches between University Avenue and Coxwell Avenue for 6 km, across Old Toronto.
Designed by architect Philip Hubert, the 12-story hotel on West 23rd Street quickly became a long-term housing co-op for artists, musicians, poets, and other transient types.
Chelsea Hotel may refer to: Hotel Chelsea in New York City; Chelsea Hotel (Atlantic City) in Atlantic City, New Jersey "Chelsea Hotel No. 2", a song from the 1974 Leonard Cohen album New Skin for the Old Ceremony; Chelsea Hotel, a book of photographs by Claudio Edinger, published in 1983; Chelsea Hotel, Toronto
Main Street subway station is the eastern terminus of the route. CLRV departing High Park Loop. 506 Carlton (306 Carlton during overnight periods) is a Toronto streetcar route run by the Toronto Transit Commission in Ontario, Canada.
Crowds in the Upper Beaches wait to board the first Toronto Civic Railways streetcar on Gerrard Street in 1912. In 1909 Midway and Norway were officially annexed to the growing City of Toronto. [ 1 ] The Toronto Civic Railways would begin construction of a line stretching between Greenwood to East Toronto's Main Street.
Toronto is the centre of the largest local calling area in Canada, and one of the largest in North America. As of 2013, the following points in area code 905 were a local call to 416 in Toronto: Ajax-Pickering, Aurora, Beeton, Bethesda, Bolton, Brampton, Caledon East, Campbellville, Castlemore, Claremont, Georgetown, Gormley, King City, Markham, Milton, Mississauga (rate centres Clarkson ...
There are a number of remarkable century-old homes built on Simpson and Langley Avenues, the latter street named after Toronto's well-known early 20th century architect, and the former featuring the oldest Victorian houses in Riverdale.