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This is a list of stations with services provided by Via Rail. [1] ... Montreal Central Station: QC ... Toronto Union Station: ON
Joint station used by both railways designed in the New England Colonial style. B&H service ended in 1931, though LE&N service continued until 1955. The station stood vacant for 3 years before being demolished in 1958. Due to its location, the station site was never redeveloped, and the ruins of the station's foundations are still visible. [53 ...
Toronto–Niagara Falls Toronto – Niagara Falls: April 1, 1978 January 18, 1992 Renamed as General Brock: November 23, 1997 December 9, 2012 Service continued by the Maple Leaf and Lakeshore West line: General Brock: January 19, 1992 November 22, 1997 Name dropped Toronto–North Bay Toronto – North Bay: April 1, 1978 January 14, 1990 Maple ...
Montreal, Laval, and Longueuil: Societé de Transport de Montréal: 4 heavy rail metro lines (running on tires) O-Train: Ottawa: OC Transpo: 2 light rail lines Toronto Subway: Toronto and Vaughan: Toronto Transit Commission: 3 heavy rail metro lines Toronto Streetcar System: Toronto: Toronto Transit Commission: 11 streetcar lines Vancouver SkyTrain
The most used station on the line is Kingston, due to Montreal, and Toronto stations being on their own subdivisions. The Kingston subdivision primarily runs along the north shore of Lake Ontario. From Toronto’s Union station to Pickering junction, in west Pickering, where the Kingston sub intersects with the York sub, the line is known as ...
Honoré Beaugrand, Quebec author and mayor of Montreal: Yes (2018) 6 Jun 1976 Côte-Vertu: Boulevard de la Côte-Vertu: Notre-Dame-de-la-Vertu (Our Lady of Virtue), 18th-century name for the area: Yes (2010) 3 Nov 1986 Du Collège: Rue du Collège: Collège Saint Laurent, former ecclesiastical college, now Cégep de Saint-Laurent, local cégep ...
Montreal Central Station (French: Gare centrale de Montréal, IATA: YMY) is the major inter-city rail station and a major commuter rail hub in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Nearly 11 million rail passengers use the station every year, [ 7 ] making it the second-busiest train station in Canada, after Toronto Union Station .
Station Code Location Coordinates Platforms Parking Fare zone Opening year (for GO service) All Union Station: UN: 65 Front Street, Toronto: 17: 0: 2: 1967 Lakeshore West: Exhibition: EX: 100 Manitoba Drive, Toronto