Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Westmount Commons, also referred to as Westmount Mall, and formerly known as Westmount Shopping Centre, [1] is a shopping centre located in London, Ontario. It is located at 785 Wonderland Road South at the northwest corner of Wonderland Road and Viscount Road.
Wellington Street in downtown London viewed from city hall. Wellington Road / Highway 401 interchange: London's downtown gateway. Wellington Road is a 15.6-kilometre-long (9.7 mi) major arterial road which forms a key route for both local and out-of-town traffic between St. Thomas, Highway 401 and London's downtown core. It runs in a north ...
Wonderland Road is a major north-south arterial road in London, Ontario, designated as Ontario Highway 4 between Highway 401 and Sunningdale Road. Outside of the City limits, the road extends north into Middlesex Centre as Middlesex County Road 56 and south into Southwold. It is one of the busiest roads in London, carrying over 43,000 vehicles ...
The district includes the northwest part of the City of London.. In 2003, it was defined to consist of the part of the city lying north and west of a line drawn from the western limit of the city along Dingman Creek, Southdale Road West, Wharncliffe Road South, Commissioners Road East, the Canadian National Railway, the Thames River, Wharncliffe Road North, Oxford Street West and Wonderland ...
Masonville Place (known locally as Masonville or Masonville Mall, and corporately styled as CF Masonville Place) is a two-storey regional shopping mall located in London, Ontario, Canada, at the southeast corner of Fanshawe Park Road and Richmond Street. The mall contains over 130 stores, several restaurants, and a food court.
In 2017, The Pickle Barrel reportedly generated CAD$50 million annually from restaurant sales and catering, and had to date catered over 1.2 million events. [ 3 ] In 2020, its Downtown Toronto location in The Atrium on Bay closed after four decades due to the COVID-19 pandemic , fewer people coming downtown as a result, and the lack of a patio ...
This page was last edited on 14 January 2025, at 00:11 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Two villages named Petersville and Kensington once stood where downtown London now is. [29] Petersville was founded by Samuel Peters in 1853. [30] Kensington was founded around about 1878. [31] Petersville and Kensigton were amalgamated on 4 March 1881 to form London West. [32]