Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The public art installed at the station by Gem Campbell Terrazzo & Tile [6] is titled From Here Right Now, consisting of a variety of trompe-l'œil illustrations on the walls and floors created by Toronto artist Panya Clark Espinal. [7] This led travel magazine BootsnAll to declare Bayview one of the 15 most beautiful subway stops in the world ...
Hockey Knights in Canada: Charles Pachter: Two-part installation depicting the Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs squaring off from opposite sides of the subway tracks, with the Canadiens on the northbound side and the Leafs on the southbound side. The station served the Maple Leaf Gardens when it was the main hockey arena in Toronto ...
More images: The Audience: 1 Blue Jays Way, Rogers Centre, Toronto: 1989: Michael Snow: Sculpture: Steel, heavy foam, fibreglass, gold paint: Each figure ~6.1m in height [8] More images: Bitter Memories of Childhood: Holodomor Memorial Parkette, Exhibition Place: 2018: Petro Drozdovsky Memorial: Bronze: 5 feet tall [9] [10] [11] More images ...
The Toronto subway is a system of three underground, surface, and elevated rapid transit lines in Toronto and Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, operated by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC). It was the country's first subway system: the first line was built under Yonge Street with a short stretch along Front Street and opened in 1954 with 12 stations.
Runnymede is a subway station on Line 2 Bloor–Danforth of the Toronto subway in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located just north of Bloor Street West , spanning the block east of Runnymede Road to Kennedy Avenue, with bus platforms at the surface level and entrances at both ends.
The Toronto Transit Commission's 70.5-kilometre (43.8 mi) subway is Canada's oldest rapid transit system, having opened as the "Yonge subway" in 1954. [18] It is also Canada's busiest system, with 1,603,300 average weekday riders. [19] It is an intermodal system, with three subway lines providing service to a total of 70 stations, the most of ...
The original signage uses the Toronto Subway Font, with the station name sandblasted onto the walls in large type and painted in the same colour as the strip of black tiles by the ceiling. The flooring is the same basic pattern of terrazzo that appears at most Bloor–Danforth line stations: repeating grey squares separated by strips of aluminum.
Lansdowne is a subway station on Line 2 Bloor–Danforth of the Toronto subway in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.The main station entrance is located just north of Bloor Street on Lansdowne Avenue, with a secondary unstaffed entrance on Emerson Avenue.