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Toronto's Union Station is Canada's largest and most opulent railway station. The Montreal architecture firm of Ross and Macdonald designed the building in the Beaux-Arts style as a joint venture between the Grand Trunk Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway, with help from CPR architect Hugh Jones and Toronto architect John M. Lyle.
Union Station is the busiest passenger transportation hub in Canada, serving 250,000 people daily. It is a central hub for the Via Rail Corridor intercity service, the central hub for GO Transit commuter rail service for the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, and the terminus of the Union Pearson Express which connects to Canada's second-busiest transportation hub, Toronto Pearson Airport.
Ontario, Simcoe and Huron Railway: Toronto, Simcoe and Muskoka Junction Railway: GT: 1869 1871 Northern Extension Railways: Toronto Terminals Railway: CP/ GT: 1906 Still exists as a joint subsidiary of the Canadian National Railway and Canadian Pacific Railway: Trans-Ontario Railway: TOR 1996 1997 Ottawa Valley Railway: Vaudreuil and Prescott ...
Ottawa, Ontario O-Train [a] 63,500 Light rail: Line 1 Line 2 Line 4. 25: 35.5 km (22.1 mi) 16 27 km (17 mi) Greater Toronto Area, Ontario GO Transit rail services: 240,700 Commuter rail: Lakeshore West Lakeshore East Milton Kitchener Barrie Richmond Hill Stouffville. 68: 526.1 km (326.9 mi) 3 – Union Pearson Express: 11,500 (April 2019) [3 ...
Transportation in the Canadian city of Toronto forms the hub of the road, rail and air networks in the Greater Toronto Area and much of southern Ontario. There are many forms of transport in the city, including railways, highways, and public transit. Toronto also has an extensive network of bicycle lanes and multi-use trails and paths.
Map of the diamond. The West Toronto Diamond is a railway junction in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.It connects the Metrolinx Weston Subdivision, which carries the GO Transit Kitchener line, UP Express and Via Rail Corridor passenger services, to the CPKC North Toronto Subdivision, which is the Canadian Pacific Kansas City's main freight line across Toronto.
The Lakeshore West line is the oldest of GO's services, opening as part of the then-unified Lakeshore line on GO Transit's first day of operations on May 23, 1967. [4] The first train, numbered 946 left at 5:50 am from Oakville bound for Toronto, ten minutes before service began out of Pickering. [5]
In 1912, North Toronto voters relieved the railway of the requirement for double track. A legal decision at Osgoode Hall overrode the permission the Ontario Rail Board gave to the railway to build the diversion. However, after the Town of North Toronto was annexed by the City of Toronto in 1912, the dispute over double track continued between ...